When someone is caught lying or manipulating, it would seem logical for them to feel guilty or ashamed. Yet, many liars instead respond with blame, contempt, or even anger toward the very people they deceived. This reaction often confuses victims and outsiders alike. Why would someone who knowingly does wrong feel entitled to judge or belittle the person they wronged? The answer lies in a psychological phenomenon known as cheater’s contempt.
What Is Cheater’s Contempt?
Cheater’s contempt refers to a mental strategy used by people who lie, cheat, or manipulate to avoid facing their own guilt. Rather than acknowledge their wrongdoing, they shift blame onto the person they deceived. This helps protect their ego. If they can convince themselves that the other person was stupid, naive, or deserving of the deception, they don’t have to feel bad about what they did.
It’s a form of psychological projection — instead of dealing with inner conflict, the manipulator casts negative judgments outward. The thinking might sound like, “If they fell for it, that’s on them,” or “They made it easy, so I took advantage.” These rationalizations help the liar maintain a sense of superiority and self-justification.
Why This Happens
Lying often creates cognitive dissonance — the tension between knowing something is wrong and doing it anyway. Rather than resolving that tension through honesty or remorse, some people relieve it by reshaping the story in their mind. Blaming the victim makes them feel less guilty and more in control. In their internal narrative, the problem isn’t their deception, but the other person’s supposed weakness or ignorance.
This is particularly common in manipulative personalities who lack empathy or accountability. It also shows up in people who live with deep insecurities. Rather than admit failure or moral fault, they construct a worldview where deceit is justifiable and the victim is inferior.
What It Reveals About the Manipulator
Cheater’s contempt is not a sign of strength, cleverness, or moral clarity. It reveals a refusal to take ownership of one’s actions. It also reflects a fear of vulnerability. If someone truly believed in their worth, they wouldn’t need to lie — and if they valued others, they wouldn’t feel contempt for those they deceived.
When someone responds to their own dishonesty by belittling others, they are showing their own fractured relationship with truth, trust, and respect.
How to Recognize It
You might be dealing with cheater’s contempt if someone:
- Makes you feel responsible for their betrayal
- Minimizes their actions while emphasizing your reaction
- Ridicules or dismisses your trust
- Frames manipulation as intelligence or resourcefulness
Conclusion
When liars blame the people they deceive, it’s not logic — it’s a defense mechanism. Cheater’s contempt allows manipulators to avoid guilt by discrediting their victims. But trust and decency are not flaws. Falling for a lie may be painful, but it does not make someone foolish. If anything, the person who must lie to feel powerful reveals far more about their own character than the one who believed in them. Understanding this pattern helps victims of manipulation let go of misplaced shame and recognize the true source of the betrayal.