A scheming woman faked pregnancy, got married, divorced, and impersonated a daughter

Fake pregnancy, forced divorce, and impersonating a daughter are typical psychological manipulation behaviors that may involve personality disorders or emotional fraud. This type of behavior typically involves false statements, emotional blackmail, identity disguise, and other characteristics, causing serious psychological harm to the victims. The manipulators of fake pregnancy and forced divorce often have borderline personality traits, obtaining relationship control by creating the illusion of pregnancy. These people will deliberately choose to implement plans during their partner's emotional vulnerability period, such as taking advantage of their partner's career downturn or family changes. Common methods include forging pregnancy test reports, pretending to have pregnancy reactions, and purchasing baby products to create illusions. Victims often experience psychological trauma such as trust collapse, self doubt, depression, and anxiety after discovering the truth, and require professional psychological counseling intervention for repair. The act of impersonating a daughter is closer to pathological lies, and the parties involved often have narcissistic personality tendencies. These types of scams are often accompanied by carefully designed social packaging, such as forging family backgrounds, renting luxury goods, and fabricating personal connections. Manipulators gain material benefits or social resources through identity elevation, and victims not only suffer property losses, but also develop social fear and mate selection barriers. In some cases, the perpetrator may have antisocial personality disorder and a complete lack of guilt and empathy.

In the event of such psychological manipulation, evidence should be promptly retained and legal assistance sought, while conducting post-traumatic psychological assessment. It is recommended to handle trust trauma through formal psychological counseling and rebuild healthy interpersonal relationship cognition. In daily communication, it is important to be wary of relationships that progress too quickly, conflicting life details, and overly perfect personal stories. Maintaining a moderate sense of boundaries can effectively prevent emotional fraud.

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