What is the DARVO Tactic, and How Can We Respond?

Predators and other abusers often use the DARVO technique, a strategy that maintains control by destabilizing others. DARVO stands for Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender. It disrupts the relational context that helps people stay grounded in truth and connection. It overwhelms the victim’s nervous system with confusion, threat, and isolation, which makes it harder to access a clear sense of what happened or to feel safe enough to speak. 

Effectively responding to DARVO is hard because it’s designed to destabilize, isolate, and confuse. However, from an interpersonal neurobiology perspective, a grounded response protects your inner stability and exposes the tactic without getting caught up in it. Here’s how:

Name the tactic, calmly and clearly. Say what’s happening without being pulled into the emotional bait. For example: “You’re shifting blame and attacking me instead of addressing what happened.”

Stay anchored in your truth. DARVO attempts to undermine your credibility, questioning your memory, feelings, and legitimacy. Don’t argue the details point by point. Hold to what you know happened and how it affected you.

Refuse to reverse roles. You don’t have to justify why you’re speaking up. If they try to become the victim, stay focused: “This isn’t about your feelings being hurt. It’s about the harm that was done.”

Find a regulating witness. DARVO works best when you’re alone. Bring in someone safe who can validate your experience and help you hold the emotional ground.

Don’t debate, document. Predators use DARVO to wear people down and rewrite history. Keep written records, save messages, and describe the pattern to others. Your clarity and consistency matter more than their volume.

Set boundaries and exit if needed. You don’t have to keep engaging once you’ve said what needs to be said. DARVO feeds off prolonged interaction. Disengaging protects your nervous system and keeps you out of their control loop.

Expose the pattern, not just the moment. If it’s safe and strategic, speak about the behavior in public or institutional terms: “This is a common tactic used to silence people who come forward.”

Responding well doesn’t always stop the tactic, but it keeps you from internalizing it. That’s where the real protection lives.

This post includes content generated by ChatGPT, a language model developed by OpenAI. The AI-generated content has been reviewed and edited for accuracy and relevance.

About Shay Seaborne, CPTSD

Former tall ship sailor turned trauma awareness activist-artist Shay Seaborne, CPTSD has studied the neurobiology of fear / trauma /PTSD since 2015. She writes, speaks, teaches, and makes art to convey her experiences as well as her understanding of the neurobiology of fear, trauma theory, and principles of trauma recovery. A native of Northern Virginia, Shay settled in Delaware to sail KALMAR NYCKEL, the state’s tall ship. She wishes everyone could recognize PTSD is not a mental health problem, but a neurophysiological condition rooted in dysregulation, our mainstream culture is neuro-negative, and we need to understand we can heal ourselves and each other through awareness, understanding, and safe connection.
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