She fakes things more often than not!
I was babysitting my niece when she slid her phone across the couch. “Look,” she whispered, “he liked my selfie. Should I like his?” She was seventeen and serious, which is to say she believed every double-tap came with strategy, consequence, and a performance review.
That’s the context now: relationships lived half in bedrooms and half on feeds, where soft power — attention, tone, timing — matters as much as arguments and apologies did for earlier generations.
Gen-Z didn’t invent manipulation; nobody did. But they’ve learned to weaponize subtlety: emotional smokescreens, curated sympathy, timed silence. And because emotional intelligence is celebrated now, these moves often look like sophistication — “soft control” — not the blunt force control we learned to hate in teenage rom-coms.
I don’t mean to demonize. Both partners lean on small influence tactics when scared. When attachment freaks you out, you test the water. When trust is missing, you nudge and watch the reaction. But recognizing the moves helps stop them from becoming habits that hollow out trust.
Tactic 1 — Emotional Withholding