
LOVE SQUARE ♥️
June 16, 2025 at 09:36 AM
TWENTY 20 LIES WOMEN OFTEN TELL TO DECEIVE MEN
Let’s talk honestly. Relationships are not just about love, laughter, and connection. They are also spaces where power gets negotiated—often silently. Sometimes it’s mutual. Other times, it’s lopsided. Many men today find themselves confused, doubting their instincts, and feeling emotionally off-balance without knowing why.
Here’s the truth: emotional manipulation rarely looks aggressive. It often feels like affection, concern, or vulnerability.
Machiavelli once wrote, “Men are destroyed when they stop trusting their own judgment.” And that’s exactly how many men lose their footing today—not from one explosive betrayal, but through a series of small, subtle lies that chip away at clarity, confidence, and control.
This essay isn’t about blaming women. It’s about recognizing patterns. Some of these behaviors are learned, unconscious, or even culturally reinforced. But when they go unexamined, they turn relationships into quiet power struggles. If you notice these dynamics, it’s not about blaming others—it’s about strengthening yourself.
1. “You're overthinking it.”
A dismissal wrapped in concern. This trains you to doubt your gut and accept her version of reality. That’s where control begins.
2. “All my exes were toxic.”
If every past relationship was awful, you need to question why. One or two? Maybe. All of them? That’s a red flag.
3. “I’ve never felt this way before.”
Early emotional intensity can feel magical—but it can also blind you. Love bombing builds false intimacy quickly and strategically.
4. “Why ruin this with labels?”
She wants loyalty and attention without commitment. That’s not a connection—it’s a control dynamic.
5. “You’re too good for me.”
This sounds like vulnerability, but it often makes you work harder to prove yourself. She appears weak while gaining power.
6. “I need time to figure things out.”
Taking time is valid—stalling indefinitely while enjoying the benefits of your presence is not.
7. “I don’t want to ruin our friendship.”
This translates to: “I want your time, energy, and attention—but not responsibility.”
8. “I didn’t mean it like that.”
Intent matters—but so does impact. This phrase often avoids accountability and flips the guilt onto you.
9. “You’re insecure.”
Questioning behavior or setting boundaries doesn’t make you insecure. This phrase is often used to shame you into silence.
10. “You should trust me.”
Trust must be earned. When it’s demanded without proof, it’s not about love—it’s about control.
11. “I’ve never done this before.”
Pretending innocence is a tool. It lowers your guard so behaviors get excused without reflection.
12. “I just want communication.”
Some don’t want connection—they want ammunition. Guard your inner world until trust is established.
13. “I was just busy.”
Everyone gets busy. But repeated dodging, ghosting, or avoiding with this excuse isn’t accidental—it’s strategic.
14. “I would never do that to you.”
Unprompted reassurances often reveal hidden intentions. If you didn’t ask, why is she defending?
15. “My phone died.”
Phones die—but when this excuse repeats, it's not about technology. It's about testing how much you'll tolerate.
16. “You’re so much better than my ex.”
This comparison flatters but manipulates. It pressures you to live up to an image, not be yourself.
17. “My last relationship really hurt me.”
Empathy is important—but don’t carry pain that isn’t yours. Her healing is her responsibility.
18. “I don’t care about money.”
Watch for shifts. If financial expectations grow later, the early statement was image-building, not truth.
19. “I’m fine.”
Passive-aggressive silence creates emotional uncertainty. It makes you chase resolution while she stays in control.
20. “I’m not like other girls.”
Words are easy. Uniqueness isn’t claimed—it’s demonstrated over time.
Let’s be clear: not every woman who says these things is being manipulative. Sometimes these words come from fear, conditioning, or confusion. But repeated patterns? They deserve your attention.
Machiavelli didn’t teach us to be cold—he taught us to be aware. “The man who sees the world as it is, not as he wishes it to be, is the only one who can master it.”
If you want to be respected, start by respecting your own standards. Don’t excuse red flags. Don’t explain away inconsistency. Hold your line. Speak your truth. Observe patterns.
Real power isn’t about being unfeeling—it’s about being unshakeable. The man who knows what he values and lives by it becomes untouchable.
Respect is earned. Love must be mutual. And your peace? Non-negotiable.
👋AnkundaOmunyankore counsellor love square
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