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Am I Being Manipulated? Take the Quiz Now

Ready to Test for Manipulation? Try the Manipulative Quiz and See if He's Controlling You

Editorial: Review CompletedCreated By: Xzavier Herrera-HinrichsUpdated Aug 28, 2025
2-5mins
Profiles
Paper art illustration for manipulation quiz on a golden yellow background

The Am I Being Manipulated Quiz helps you spot signs of control, guilt trips, and emotional pressure in your relationships. Get quick clarity and simple next steps; you can also check your own patterns with the Am I manipulative? quiz or learn about tactics in the gaslighting quiz .

A coworker keeps adding tasks to your plate after you already agreed to help with one. How do you respond?
I say I can only do the original task and invite them to reprioritize with me.
I ask for a clear list and deadlines so I can verify what was actually requested.
I take on the extra tasks to keep things smooth, even if it stretches me.
I ask them to put requests in writing and note who asked and when before I agree.
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A salesperson says the discount expires "right now" if you do not buy. Your move:
I thank them and decline, keeping my decision timeline.
I ask to see the terms in writing and what happens if I wait a day.
I accept the deal to avoid missing out and feeling difficult.
I request the contract via email and take screenshots for my records before deciding.
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A friend apologizes, then adds, "But you know you're sensitive." What do you do next?
I name the issue and ask for an apology without the qualifier.
I replay the conversation and ask clarifying questions about what they meant.
I let it slide to keep the peace and change the topic.
I note the pattern and keep a dated note of what was said and how I felt.
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Your gut says a story doesn't add up, but you have no proof yet. You:
Pause decisions and state I will revisit after I verify details.
List specific points of confusion and ask for concrete examples.
Assume good intent and go along so it doesn't become a conflict.
Cross-check with messages, calendars, and a neutral third party.
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During a meeting, someone talks over you. What happens next?
I calmly say, "I'm finishing my point," and continue.
I watch for a second instance to confirm the pattern before responding.
I let them go ahead and hope to circle back if time allows.
I note who interrupts and when to bring up with the facilitator later with examples.
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A family member uses guilt like, "After all I've done for you..." You respond by:
Naming the guilt script and stating what I can and cannot do.
Asking what exact help they want and what timeline they have in mind.
Agreeing this time and telling myself I'll be firmer next time.
Writing down the request, my response, and any shifts in their story over time.
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A manager praises you then loads you with a weekend deadline. Your approach:
I appreciate the praise and decline the weekend work if it's not feasible.
I ask what will be deprioritized if I accept and request the scope in writing.
I accept and plan to catch up on rest later to remain a team player.
I request the request via email and confirm expectations publicly to avoid shifts.
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Your roommate "forgets" chores but remembers your slip-ups. You decide to:
Set a simple system and a consequence I can enforce kindly.
Track missed chores for two weeks to discuss with specifics.
Do more yourself to avoid arguments and tension at home.
Create a shared log with dates and photos before proposing changes.
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A date pushes for faster commitment than you want. You handle it by:
Naming my pace and sticking to it without defending it.
Asking what specifically feels urgent to them and observing their actions next.
Agreeing to more time together to avoid disappointing them.
Keeping records of plans made/kept and noting any pressure after I set a limit.
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A friend gives a lavish gift then hints you now owe them favors. You:
Thank them and clarify that gifts do not create obligations for me.
Ask what they had in mind and compare to what was discussed before the gift.
Return the favor soon to balance the scales and avoid awkwardness.
Document the exchange and any implied strings to spot a pattern.
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You notice apologies come only when others need something. Your next step:
Reset access based on consistent behavior, not apologies.
Map apology timing to requests to test your hunch.
Accept apologies at face value to maintain goodwill.
Save messages and screenshots to compare words and actions over time.
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Plans keep changing last minute in a group chat. You will:
Share my availability window and stick to it.
Ask who is confirmed, by when, and what location is final.
Stay flexible and go with whatever works for most people.
Request confirmations in the chat and mute until details are pinned down.
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Someone says you misremembered a conversation you're sure you documented. You:
State I have notes and will refer to them before continuing.
Ask for their recollection point by point to compare specifics.
Apologize for any confusion and move on to smooth things over.
Pull up the record and invite a review of what was said versus done.
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A teammate takes credit for your idea in a meeting. Your move:
Re-state the idea and add, "as I shared in last week's draft," calmly.
Ask the team to review the version history to assign next steps clearly.
Let it go; recognition matters less than team harmony to me.
Email a recap citing timestamps and contributors to set the record straight.
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Your partner uses silent treatment after disagreements. You decide to:
State I'm available to talk when they are and disengage until then.
Ask what they need to re-engage and by what time we'll reconnect.
Bridge the gap by apologizing first, even if I'm unsure what went wrong.
Note duration and triggers to identify if it's a control pattern.
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A colleague contradicts themselves in emails versus meetings. You:
Address the discrepancy and ask them to confirm in writing.
Create a side-by-side list of statements to clarify the mismatch.
Assume it's a misunderstanding and adapt quietly.
CC relevant stakeholders and attach both records for alignment.
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Your calendar is full and a friend asks for a big favor this weekend. You:
Say no without apology and offer another time if I want to.
Ask what exactly they need and how long it will take, then decide.
Say yes and reshuffle my plans to avoid disappointing them.
Confirm the ask in text and set clear start and end times if I accept.
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A supervisor minimizes your concern as "just stress." You respond:
Restate the impact and request a specific change or support.
Ask for measurable criteria to define the issue together.
Drop it to avoid sounding dramatic at work.
Follow up in writing summarizing the concern and requested next steps.
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A relative shares private details you asked them to keep confidential. You:
Revoke access to sensitive info and state the boundary clearly.
Ask when and with whom they shared, and why, to assess intent.
Tell myself they meant well and say nothing to avoid family tension.
Record the incident and adjust future sharing to trace patterns.
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A client asks for extra work "as a quick favor" outside scope. You choose to:
Offer a paid change order or decline if it's not aligned.
Request the exact deliverables and timeline to evaluate impact.
Do it this time to keep the relationship warm.
Confirm original scope in writing and ask to update the contract if needed.
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A friend says, "Everyone thinks you overreacted," but will not name who. You:
Decline to engage vague feedback and request specifics or drop it.
Ask for direct quotes, dates, and contexts to verify.
Apologize broadly to smooth things over with the group.
Note the tactic and stop treating anonymous claims as data.
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Your partner keeps moving goalposts for what counts as "helpful." You respond by:
Define what I can offer and stop chasing shifting standards.
Write down their criteria and compare it across weeks for changes.
Try harder to cover more bases to avoid friction.
Ask to agree on a checklist and track what happens after agreement.
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Saying no always damages relationships.
True
False
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Consistent actions are a better indicator than flattering words.
True
False
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If someone raises their voice, you must match it to be heard.
True
False
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Documenting agreements can reduce confusion.
True
False
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Your needs are less important than keeping everyone else comfortable.
True
False
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Mixed messages can be a sign to slow down and ask for clarity.
True
False
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A boundary is the same as a punishment.
True
False
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It is possible to be kind and firm at the same time.
True
False
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Profiles

  1. Confident Autonomy -

    You demonstrate strong self-awareness and rarely allow others to pull the strings, showing resilience against emotional influence. Tip: Continue applying insights from the manipulative quiz to maintain clear, healthy boundaries.

  2. Quiet Accomplice -

    You often agree to avoid conflict, which may mask subtle "is he manipulating me?" dynamics in your relationships. Practice assertive communication by giving yourself permission to say no when it matters.

  3. Boundary Blurrer -

    You struggle to define personal limits and could be vulnerable to tactics revealed in the am i being manipulated quiz. Quick action: Revisit your quiz results to identify one boundary you can strengthen today.

  4. Emotional Negotiator -

    You spot manipulation tactics but sometimes sacrifice your needs for harmony, a pattern this manipulator test highlights. Strategy: Use "I" statements to express your feelings and negotiate fair outcomes.

  5. Resilient Advocate -

    You recognize red flags early and stand firm against emotional coercion, reflecting strong results on the am i being emotionally manipulated quiz. Next step: Share your experience with a trusted friend or counselor to reinforce your support system.

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