Documenting a Narcissist Smear Campaign in Text Messages
Something feels off. You just received a text from someone you barely know, saying something about you that isn't true. Or maybe it's from a friend who suddenly turned cold, referencing things you ...

Source: DEV Community
Something feels off. You just received a text from someone you barely know, saying something about you that isn't true. Or maybe it's from a friend who suddenly turned cold, referencing things you never said or events that didn't happen the way they're describing. Your stomach drops because you recognize the pattern but you can't quite name it. That's a smear campaign. When someone with narcissistic traits decides you're a threat—whether you challenged them, set a boundary, or simply stopped giving them what they needed—they rarely confront you directly. Instead, they recruit others to do the dirty work. The messages arrive through proxies, often called "flying monkeys" in psychological literature. These are people who genuinely believe they're helping someone or "standing up for truth" when they're actually carrying out a coordinated attack on your reputation. The good news is this: text messages leave a trail. Unlike verbal gossip that evaporates, your phone holds the evidence. And t