What happens when narrative becomes more persuasive than memory?
In Distorted: The Psychology of Gaslighting, the Power of Story, and the Practice of Clarity, Jim Detjen explores how institutions, media systems, culture, technology, and language shape human perception in an age of accelerating informational pressure.
Blending psychology, history, philosophy, media analysis, and cultural observation, Distorted examines the mechanics of gaslighting and poetic truth—not simply as deception, but as systems of interpretation powerful enough to reshape memory, identity, trust, and public reality itself.
- Why do emotionally compelling narratives often overpower direct observation?
- Why do institutions change language faster than people can process it?
- Why does disagreement increasingly feel like disorientation?
Across politics, media, education, technology, economics, medicine, culture, family, and AI, Detjen traces the subtle choreography of distortion: denial, reframing, euphemism, emotional manipulation, narrative compression, and the erosion of confidence in one’s own perception.
But Distorted is not simply a critique of modern culture.
It is an inquiry into discernment.
A framework for maintaining clarity, orientation, and intellectual independence in environments shaped by acceleration, spectacle, emotional pressure, and institutional instability.
At its core, Distorted asks a deeper question:
How do individuals remain psychologically grounded when reality itself becomes contested terrain?
Part cultural analysis, part philosophical inquiry, and part field guide for the Information Age, Distorted challenges readers not merely to consume narratives—but to examine the systems, incentives, language, and frames shaping them.
Because the difference is rarely the event itself.
It is the frame around it.
Jim Detjen is the founder of Gaslight 360 and host of the podcast Think First. Through his writing, teaching, and media work, he equips readers and listeners to recognize manipulation, resist narrative spin, and reclaim perspective. His work examines how stories influence power, perception, and decision-making - and how clarity can be restored when narrative replaces evidence.
Jim began his career in the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Regiment - The Old Guard, the Army's oldest active-duty infantry unit and its most elite ceremonial command. Tasked with honoring fallen heroes, guarding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and representing the nation in its most symbolic moments, The Old Guard operates where error is not an option. There, he served in an environment shaped by discipline, preparation, and trust - values that continue to influence how he leads, listens, and thinks.
For more than twenty-five years, Jim has advised global brands, academic institutions, and nonprofit boards at the intersection of brand architecture, strategic partnerships, and sustainable growth. Whether working publicly or behind the scenes, he focuses on connecting story, structure, and scale - and aligning them with reality.
His work spans fields where influence is shaped and narratives are formed - from athletics and music to technology and public life. At home, he is most proud of his role as husband and father. His family's path reflects a shared commitment to excellence and curiosity, including children pursuing advanced studies at Harvard and the United States Air Force Academy.