The Bait and Jab: How Manipulative People Use Softness to Set Up the Attack

Tom Foster
April 8, 2026
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Some manipulative moves are obvious. You can see them coming and you know what they are.

But there’s one pattern that catches almost everyone, and it works precisely because the opening doesn’t look like an attack at all.

It starts soft. Warm, even. And then, once you’ve relaxed, the real move arrives.

Understanding this pattern — what it looks like, why it works, and how to stop handing over your emotional reaction — is genuinely useful. Because once you see it clearly, you start spotting it everywhere.

A Scene That Shows It Perfectly

In Red Dead Redemption 2, there’s a scene involving Micah Bell and Abigail Roberts that illustrates this pattern almost surgically.

Micah asks Abigail to spend time with him. It sounds like a simple invitation. Abigail responds politely and honestly — she says no, that mothering keeps her busy.

A genuine person would accept that and move on.

But that’s not what Micah does.

Micah: I’d show you a real good time. I’ve always fancied fathering.

That one sentence is a sniper shot. He knows exactly what Abigail is insecure about — the fact that Jack’s father, John Marston, has left. He aimed right at it.

Abigail takes the bait:

Abigail: Jack’s got a father.

Micah: If you say so…

And she walks off angry. Which is exactly what Micah wanted.

The invitation wasn’t real. It was the setup. A soft opening to get her engaged and lower her guard. Then the jab.

Micah got his reaction. Mission accomplished.

Want to learn more about narcissistic manipulation tactics in popular games? Read this article in which I reveal narcissistic patterns in Ghosts of Tsushima.

rdr2 micah and abigail

The Same Pattern in Real Life

This isn’t just a video game dynamic. Some people use exactly this sequence in real relationships.

It goes like this: soft curiosity first, then a targeted comment once you’ve opened up.

Here’s a real example. I had just returned from the hairdresser. My father looked at me and doesn’t say anything but keeps inspecting. Then asks if I was in the hairdressers. I answer honestly. The conversation feels normal.

Then my father continues looking, leans in, looks closely and comments:

“You’re going grey.”

And there it is. The shift. The jab. The soft opening was designed to get you relaxed. Once you were relaxed, the real move arrived.

After it happens, the feeling is specific. Shame. Anger at yourself for falling for it. A sudden drop inside — like you just lost something.

That feeling is important. We’ll come back to it.

Why This Pattern Works So Well

The reason this works is actually a compliment to you, not an indictment.

Most people enter conversations in good faith. When someone is warm and curious, you naturally respond with warmth and openness. That’s normal. That’s how healthy communication is supposed to work.

People who use this pattern are exploiting that. They’re using your default assumption of sincerity as the opening for the attack.

So when you “fall for it”, you’re not being gullible. You’re being a normal person who assumes other people mean what they appear to mean.

The problem isn’t your openness. The problem is the person weaponizing it.

body knows before the mind

The Body Knows Before the Mind Does

That drop feeling — the sudden shame, the sense that you just lost — is actually your nervous system doing something useful.

It’s detecting that the interaction just changed. That something shifted from genuine contact into something else.

The problem is the layer that usually follows it. Instead of just noticing the signal, most people immediately turn it into self-attack: I’m so stupid. Why did I fall for that again.

That second layer is the real damage. And it’s not accurate.

The more useful relationship with that drop feeling is:

“Ah. There’s the hook.”

Not: I failed. But: I just detected something. The body was right. Now I know what I’m dealing with.

How to Stop Handing Over Your Reaction

The goal here isn’t to prevent people from taking shots. Some people will always take shots.

The goal is to stop giving them what they came for: your emotional reaction.

Because that’s the actual prize. Micah didn’t want a date with Abigail. He wanted to see her rattled. He got it.

The moment the jab arrives, the most powerful response is the one with the least emotional fuel in it.

Using the “going grey” example:

Old response: explain, justify, prove you’re not bothered, defend yourself.

Better response: “Yeah, happens.” Or just: “Maybe.” Or a shrug.

Nothing to push against. No reaction to feed on. The hook landed on nothing.

This is harder than it sounds. When someone hits a real insecurity, the urge to respond is strong. But the response is what keeps the game going.

One Useful Line

If you feel the shift happening and you’re not sure whether the opening was genuine, there’s a simple phrase that does useful work:

“Not sure what you mean by that.”

Then stop talking.

A genuine person will clarify without it becoming a bigger thing.

A person who was fishing for a reaction will usually either double down — which tells you exactly what you needed to know — or back off.

Either way, you’ve learned something. And you haven’t handed over your nervous system to find out.

deeper signal

The Deeper Shift

Understanding this pattern doesn’t mean you become closed or suspicious of everyone who asks a question.

It means you develop a slightly better radar. Specifically, you learn to notice when a conversation has been soft in the opening and is now moving somewhere that doesn’t feel right.

The pause you create after the soft opening matters. Answer briefly. Then wait and see what comes next.

A safe person stays warm after you respond. A baiting person uses your response as the opening for the next move.

The pattern reveals itself if you give it a moment.

You don’t have to spot it before it starts. You just have to spot it sooner than you used to. And each time you notice it, even after the fact, that’s the detection getting faster.

Eventually it becomes almost automatic. Not because you’ve become guarded, but because you’ve stopped assuming that softness always means safety.

Sometimes it does. Sometimes it’s just the setup.

Another pattern to recognize is when a person is genuinely showing curiosity vs interrogating you with questions. In that article you can discover when people are safe and why talking to some people feels like a trap.

The bait-and-jab pattern described here is a common feature of interactions with people who use manipulation to regulate their own emotions at others’ expense. Recognizing the pattern and learning not to hand over your emotional reaction is a gradual skill that develops as part of broader trauma recovery work.

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Tom Foster

Writer and Researcher on Narcissistic Abuse Recovery Survivor of parental narcissistic abuse and scapegoat family dynamics, Personal experience recovering from complex trauma (CPTSD), Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.), Independent researcher on narcissistic abuse and trauma recovery

The content on this website is based on personal experience and research into narcissistic abuse and trauma recovery. It is not a substitute for professional psychological or medical advice.

Areas of Expertise: Narcissistic abuse recovery, Family scapegoating dynamics, Complex trauma (CPTSD), Nervous system recovery after psychological abuse, Psychological patterns in abusive family systems, Personal healing tools and recovery frameworks
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The content on this website is based on personal experience and research into narcissistic abuse and trauma recovery. It is not a substitute for professional psychological or medical advice.