The relationship started beautifully. But now you're walking on eggshells, apologizing for things that aren't your fault — shrinking yourself just to keep the peace.
A toxic relationship replaces love with control, respect with criticism, and safety with fear. Most start with love bombing — so much affection, you think it's perfect. Then slowly, the real face appears.
✦ "Criticism" dressed up as care ✦ Slowly cutting you off from friends and family ✦ Hot and cold mood swings — keeping you anxious ✦ Blaming you for their own mistakes ✦ Controlling your money or choices
Warmth one moment, coldness the next, you're always trying to win back the person you first fell for. Psychologists call this intermittent reinforcement. It creates an attachment stronger than consistent love ever could.
"That never happened." "You're way too sensitive." "Everyone agrees with me, not you." Over time, you stop trusting your own memory, your instincts, your reality.
✦ Trauma bonding — abuse and love create a dopamine loop ✦ "Being alone is worse" — a very common trap ✦ Sunk cost — "I've invested too much to walk away" ✦ Childhood patterns feeling "normal" ✦ Social pressure and financial dependence
Yes — if both partners genuinely want change, the toxic behavior is acknowledged, and both commit to therapy. No — if gaslighting repeats, apologies never change behavior, or your physical safety is at risk.
✦ Daily affirmation: "I never have to sacrifice my peace for love." ✦ Pick up the hobbies you quietly let go of ✦ Exercise, sleep, good food — regulate your nervous system ✦ Let yourself grieve — sadness, anger, relief — all of it is valid
Take one small step today — tell a trusted friend the truth, book a therapy session, or simply promise yourself: "Enough is enough." Your healing has already begun. Keep moving forward.