When Someone You Love is Toxic – How to Let Go, Without Guilt

When Someone You Love is Toxic How to Let Go of a Toxic Relationship, Without Guilt

If toxic people were an ingestible substance, they would come with a high-powered warning and secure packaging to prevent any chance of accidental contact. Sadly, families are not immune to the poisonous lashings of a toxic relationship.

Though families and relationships can feel impossibly tough at times, they were never meant to ruin. All relationships have their flaws and none of them come packaged with the permanent glow of sunlight and goodness and beautiful things. In any normal relationship there will be fights from time to time. Things will be said and done and forgiven, and occasionally rehashed at strategic moments. For the most part though, they will feel nurturing and life-giving to be in. At the very least, they won’t hurt.

Why do toxic people do toxic things?

Toxic people thrive on control. Not the loving, healthy control that tries to keep everyone safe and happy – buckle your seatbelt, be kind, wear sunscreen – but the type that keeps people small and diminished. 

Everything they do is to keep people small and manageable. This will play out through criticism, judgement, oppression – whatever it takes to keep someone in their place. The more you try to step out of ‘your place’, the more a toxic person will call on toxic behaviour to bring you back and squash you into the tiny box they believe you belong in.

It is likely that toxic people learned their behaviour during their own childhood, either by being exposed to the toxic behaviour of others or by being overpraised without being taught the key quality of empathy. In any toxic relationship there will be other qualities missing too, such as respect, kindness and compassion, but at the heart of a toxic person’s behaviour is the lack of concern around their impact on others. They come with a critical failure to see past their own needs and wants.

Toxic people have a way of choosing open, kind people with beautiful, lavish hearts because these are the ones who will be more likely to fight for the relationship and less likely to abandon.

Even the strongest people can find themselves in a toxic relationship but the longer they stay, the more they are likely to evolve into someone who is a smaller, less confident, more wounded version of the person they used to be.

Non-toxic people who stay in a toxic relationship will never stop trying to make the relationship better, and toxic people know this. They count on it. Non-toxic people will strive to make the relationship work and when they do, the toxic person has exactly what he or she wants – control. 

Toxic Families – A Special Kind of Toxic

Families are a witness to our lives – our best, our worst, our catastrophes, our frailties and flaws. All families come with lessons that we need to learn along the way to being a decent, thriving human. The lessons begin early and they don’t stop, but not everything a family teaches will come with an afterglow. Sometimes the lessons they teach are deeply painful ones that shudder against our core.

Rather than being lessons on how to love and safely open up to the world, the lessons some families teach are about closing down, staying small and burying needs – but for every disempowering lesson, there is one of empowerment, strength and growth that exists with it. In toxic families, these are around how to walk away from the ones we love, how to let go with strength and love, and how to let go of guilt and any fantasy that things could ever be different. And here’s the rub – the pain of a toxic relationship won’t soften until the lesson has been learned.

Love and loyalty don’t always exist together.

Love has a fierce way of keeping us tied to people who wound us. The problem with family is that we grow up in the fold, believing that the way they do things is the way the world works. We trust them, listen to them and absorb what they say. There would have been a time for all of us that regardless of how mind-blowingly destructive the messages from our family were, we would have received them all with a beautiful, wide-eyed innocence, grabbing every detail and letting them shape who we were growing up to be.

Our survival would have once depended on believing in everything they said and did, and resisting the need to challenge or question that we might deserve better. The things we believe when we are young are powerful. They fix themselves upon us and they stay, at least until we realise one day how wrong and small-hearted those messages have been.

At some point, the environment changes – we grow up – but our beliefs don’t always change with it. We stop depending on our family for survival but we hang on to the belief that we have to stay connected and loyal, even though being with them hurts.

The obligation to love and stay loyal to a family member can be immense, but love and loyalty are two separate things and they don’t always belong together.

Loyalty can be a confusing, loaded term and is often the reason that people stay stuck in toxic relationships. What you need to know is this: When loyalty comes with a diminishing of the self, it’s not loyalty, it’s submission.

We stop having to answer to family when we become adults and capable of our own minds.

Why are toxic relationships so destructive?

In any healthy relationship, love is circular – when you give love, it comes back. When what comes back is scrappy, stingy intent under the guise of love, it will eventually leave you small and depleted, which falls wildly, terrifyingly short of where anyone is meant to be.

Healthy people welcome the support and growth of the people they love, even if it means having to change a little to accommodate. When one person in a system changes, whether it’s a relationship of two or a family of many, it can be challenging. Even the strongest and most loving relationships can be touched by feelings of jealousy, inadequacy and insecurity at times in response to somebody’s growth or happiness. We are all vulnerable to feeling the very normal, messy emotions that come with being human.

The difference is that healthy families and relationships will work through the tough stuff. Unhealthy ones will blame, manipulate and lie – whatever they have to do to return things to the way they’ve always been, with the toxic person in control.

Why a Toxic Relationship Will never change.

Reasonable people, however strong and independently minded they are, can easily be drawn into thinking that if they could find the switch, do less, do more, manage it, tweak it, that the relationship will be okay. The cold truth is that if anything was going to be different it would have happened by now. 

Toxic people can change, but it’s highly unlikely. What is certain is that nothing anyone else does can change them. It is likely there will be broken people, broken hearts and broken relationships around them – but the carnage will always be explained away as someone else’s fault. There will be no remorse, regret or insight. What is more likely is that any broken relationship will amplify their toxic behaviour.

Why are toxic people so hard to leave?

If you try to leave a toxic person, things might get worse before they get better – but they will always get better. Always.

Few things will ramp up feelings of insecurity or a need for control more than when someone questions familiar, old behaviour, or tries to break away from old, established patterns in a relationship. For a person whose signature moves involve manipulation, lies, criticism or any other toxic behaviour, when something feels as though it’s changing, they will use even more of their typical toxic behaviour to bring the relationship (or the person) back to a state that feels acceptable.

When things don’t seem to be working, people will always do more of what used to work, even if that behaviour is at the heart of the problem. It’s what we all do. If you are someone who is naturally open and giving, when things don’t feel right in a relationship you will likely give more of yourself, offer more support, be more loving, to get things back on track. 

Breaking away from a toxic relationship can feel like tearing at barbed wire with bare hands. The more you do it, the more it hurts, so for a while, you stop tearing, until you realise that it’s not the tearing that hurts, it’s the barbed wire – the relationship – and whether you tear at it or not, it won’t stop cutting into you.

Think of it like this. Imagine that all relationships and families occupy a space. In healthy ones, the shape of that space will be fluid and open to change, with a lot of space for people to grow. People will move to accommodate the growth and flight of each other. 

For a toxic family or a toxic relationship, that shape is rigid and unyielding. There is no flexibility, no bending, and no room for growth. Everyone has a clearly defined space and for some, that space will be small and heavily boxed. When one person starts to break out of the shape, the whole family feels their own individual sections change. The shape might wobble and things might feel vulnerable, weakened or scary. This is normal, but toxic people will do whatever it takes to restore the space to the way it was. Often, that will mean crumpling the ones who are changing so they fit their space again.

Sometimes out of a sense of love and terribly misplaced loyalty, people caught in a toxic relationship might sacrifice growth and change and step back into the rigid tiny space a toxic person manipulates them towards. It will be clear when this has happened because of the soul-sucking grief at being back there in the mess with people (or person) who feel so bad to be with.

But they do it because they love me. They said so.

Sometimes toxic people will hide behind the defence that they are doing what they do because they love you, or that what they do is ‘no big deal’ and that you’re the one causing the trouble because you’re just too sensitive, too serious, too – weak, stupid, useless, needy, insecure, jealous – too ‘whatever’ to get it. You will have heard the word plenty of times before. 

The only truth you need to know is this: If it hurts, it’s hurtful. Fullstop.

Love never holds people back from growing. It doesn’t diminish, and it doesn’t contaminate. If someone loves you, it feels like love. It feels supportive and nurturing and life-giving. If it doesn’t do this, it’s not love. It’s self-serving crap designed to keep you tethered and bound to someone else’s idea of how you should be.

There is no such thing as a perfect relationship, but a healthy one is a tolerant, loving, accepting, responsive one.

The one truth that matters.

If it feels like growth or something that will nourish you, follow that. It might mean walking away from people you care about – parents, sisters, brothers, friends – but this can be done with love and the door left open for when they are able to meet you closer to your terms – ones that don’t break you.

Set the boundaries with grace and love and leave it to the toxic person to decide which side of that boundary they want to stand on. Boundaries aren’t about spite or manipulation and they don’t have to be about ending the relationship. They are something drawn in strength and courage to let people see with great clarity where the doorway is to you. If the relationship ends, it’s not because of your lack of love or loyalty, but because the toxic person chose not to treat you in the way you deserve. Their choice. 

Though it is up to you to decide the conditions on which you will let someone close to you, whether or not somebody wants to be close to you enough to respect those conditions is up to them. The choice to trample over what you need means they are choosing not to be with you. It doesn’t mean you are excluding them from your life.

Toxic people also have their conditions of relationship and though they might not be explicit, they are likely to include an expectation that you will tolerate ridicule, judgement, criticism, oppression, lying, manipulation – whatever they do. No relationship is worth that and it is always okay to say ‘no’ to anything that diminishes you.

The world and those who genuinely love you want you to be as whole as you can be. Sometimes choosing health and wholeness means stepping bravely away from that which would see your spirit broken and malnourished.

When you were young and vulnerable and dependent for survival on the adults in your life, you had no say in the conditions on which you let people close to you. But your life isn’t like that now. You get to say. You get to choose the terms of your relationships and the people you get close to.

There is absolutely no obligation to choose people who are toxic just because they are family. If they are toxic, the simple truth is that they have not chosen you. The version of you that they have chosen is the one that is less than the person you would be without them.

The growth.

Walking away from a toxic relationship isn’t easy, but it is always brave and always strong. It is always okay. And it is always – always – worth it. This is the learning and the growth that is hidden in the toxic mess.

Letting go will likely come with guilt, anger and grief for the family or person you thought you had. They might fight harder for you to stay. They will probably be crueller, more manipulative and more toxic than ever. They will do what they’ve always done because it has always worked. Keep moving forward and let every hurtful, small-hearted thing they say or do fuel your step.

You can’t pretend toxic behaviour away or love it away or eat it, drink it, smoke it, depress it or gamble it away. You can’t avoid the impact by being smaller, by crouching or bending or flexing around it. But you can walk away from it – so far away that the most guided toxic fuelled missile that’s thrown at you won’t find you.

One day they might catch up to you – not catch you, catch up to you – with their growth and their healing but until then, choose your own health and happiness over their need to control you. 

You can love people, let go of them and keep the door open on your terms, for whenever they are ready to treat you with love, respect and kindness. This is one of the hardest lessons but one of the most life-giving and courageous ones.

Sometimes there are not two sides. There is only one. Toxic people will have you believing that the one truthful side is theirs. It’s not. It never was. Don’t believe their highly diseased, stingy version of love. It’s been drawing your breath, suffocating you and it will slowly kill you if you let it, and the way you ‘let it’ is by standing still while it spirals around you, takes aim and shoots. 

If you want to stay, that’s completely okay, but see their toxic behaviour for what it is – a desperate attempt to keep you little and controlled. Be bigger, stronger, braver than anything that would lessen you. Be authentic and real and give yourself whatever you need to let that be. Be her. Be him. Be whoever you can be if the small minds and tiny hearts of others couldn’t stop you.

[irp posts=”1602″ name=”When It’s Not You, It’s Them: The Toxic People That Ruin Friendships, Families, Relationships”]

1,089 Comments

Austin

Reading this… it is all correct. You know how I know this? Because I am a toxic person. I had a girl who had been my best friend for years and we dated for 3 and now that she done with me and she has given up on me I understand what she said when she said I am a toxic person. I blamed my mistakes on her, always ruined things then ran back to her and blamed it on her again, treated her poorly. She is a beautiful and caring woman so she stuck by my side time after time but I never changed. I kept being the arrogant douche bag I am… I constantly stay up and think about her and run our relationship through my head over and over… I can’t get a grip on how toxic I really was. I hurt her, but she is free from me now.. she is healing she will get better she’s amazingly strong. & to be honest the toxicness does come from childhood.. It was rough for me but it is mainly my fault for letting it take over me. Girls, women, if you read this article and you feel like this is your relationship.. get out. Heal. You deserve better. Guys, if this is you don’t constantly bother her and chase after her after she has had enough of your crap. Let her go, respect her as a friend. She deserves to heal for what you put her through and find God. He is indeed the only one that can fix this, I myslef have found him and he has worked amazing things in my favor. I’m learning, one day I may have her in my life again, but as for now I don’t deserve her. Ladies stand up for yourselves make him go fix himself, drop him flat on his face. Toxic individuals need to hit rock bottom before they seek help just remember that. I pray the best for all. -AM

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Julie

I love what youve said and the insight is appreciated. I hope she does come back into your life because that would be a success story. For me though, the hurt, the loss, the pain, the craziness, the damage is already done and I cant imagine being together again with this person especially when I ignored so many red flags and knew that we just didnt “get” each other, aside from the abuse. You have already taken the biggest, most difficult step of all. Keep working on yourself. I believe you will get there. Love and peace

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Shelly

Austin, I loved reading this and I pray one day my ex will do the same. I truly love him and want to spend a healthy life with him but as you said for now it can’t be.

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Melanie

Austin… *Thankyou so much* for taking the time to share your opinion.

I’ve been reading articles like this for nearly 2 years (still) trying to detangle myself from a very, very toxic relationship (the kind that needs police/court involvement, family/career intervention, mandatory counselling, etc.)

—and the biggest issue I’ve had with ‘moving on’ is dealing with the pain of feeling like I’m ‘abandoning him’.

I know what he did (and continues to do) is wrong; no one should be treated/talked to/hurt the way he has done unto me for the last 3 years. But like you said, I know his issues stem from a difficult childhood and mishandling his anger. I’ve justified it all along, blinding and deluding myself about how bad it was actually getting (emotionally, physically…)

The fact is I still really love ‘the good version’ of him, and it kills me to have to ‘abandon him’ when he manipulates me to make me feel like ‘I’m the only one that can make him feel better’. Ironic considering I’m also the only one that makes him erupt in (borderline psychotic) rage too…

TLDR: Thankyou for saying the words I needed to hear (from a real guy; not a counsellor or a ‘self help’ article). Knowing that men like you are capable of ‘coming round’ makes me feel less crazy/guilty…

I used to wonder “but who’s going to love the ‘bad people’; because surely they’re the ones who need it most” and maybe now (because of you) I can trust that one day *they can be loved* without hurting/killing someone else’s spirit. Thankyou more than words can say Austin <3

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Shelly

I copied many of the statements in this article. I really liked the last one about letting go of people until they are ready to treat you with love, respect and kindness.
I have been involved with a very toxic man for over 4 years. He has been physically, emotionally and financially abusive. He has treated many people in his life including his children poorly for many years. He is really left with no one at this point and still has trouble forming relationships.
When he perforated my eardrum from hitting me I decided it was time to end it before he killed me or caused me permanent brain damage. There is an now an order of protection and he was forced to leave my home but his stuff is still here. I have the legal right to do whatever I wish with it but I am too kind of a person to get rid of someones belongings. I know its ridiculous after all hes done to me. I could make back the almost 20,000 dollars he owes me by selling it but I cant do it.
The worst part of it all is I still love him. I check back with him often to see if he’s changed or making progress with the counselor he is finally seeing. I am quickly reminded that he is an excellent manipulator when his anger at “what I did to him” cant be held back. I turn around and run away again, but the problem is I keep going back. I have to come to terms with the fact that he will not change.
This turmoil is holding me back from a productive, happy, healthy life and I am very aware of it but I still do it anyway. I have read many things, seen counselors, but this article hit me differently when I read it. Why do we waste time on unhealthy people, especially when we are surrounded by so many good ones?????

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

Shelly I’m so pleased you found this article. Relationships become habits – it’s that way for all of us. All relationships, even the bad ones, generally have something good about them. If there is nothing good about them now, there are generally memories or the reasons you became close in the first place. It’s easier to give these ‘positives’ more weight when you are out of a relationship, and to start questioning whether you could have done something to save the relationship. Give it time, but don’t look back. Keep moving forward. You know what your experience of this relationship is – it’s lonely, unsafe, confusing and painful. It takes time to adjust to a new reality that doesn’t involve someone we have been so close to for so long. Keep moving forward. If you need to, lock onto a memory or something solid, like a text to remind yourself why the bravest, strongest, wisest part of you knows how important it is that you keep walking away. Stay strong.

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Leigh

I have just left my alcoholic husband. I have met someone who treats me really well and gives me the love I deserve yet I feel so guilty about destroying a family and leaving my husband. He does not give me what I need and makes me feel bad about myself so why is it so hard to move on

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

Leaving any relationship is difficult, even if it is a relationship that is hurting you. No relationship is all good or all bad, and when you leave a relationship, it is easy to focus on the parts that were good. That doesn’t mean the relationship is right for you. Take the time to find your strength and heal, so you can move on completely.

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hannah

i know i deserve someone better and that he probably doesnt even love me but its still so hard. i dont know what to do.

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Amy

@Hannah I feel your pain. I know I deserve someone who will treat me the way I deserve but that fear of being alone and not having anyone to run to at the end of the day is hard.

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Joe

I’m currently experienced something very painful. The relationship I had is very bizarre for me since I have never met a guy like this. He is 32 years old man who has low esteem and depression problem started from his young age. He pursued me for 7 months after we really met. I knew some of his problems but I feel he is still a good person that I want to know him better. Therefore, we started to date for two weeks and then he started to change into someone totally different / maybe that’s the real himself and I don’t want to put myself into too much because I knew he could not handle it. After a while, I tried to encourage him to come out more to have fun like everyone would do. He went totally shut down on me and sent me text that I deserved someone better. Just because I encouraged him to have more confidence and believe himself a little more because he is not bad as he thinks, I don’t want to change him but he didn’t even see how negative he is, everything is not gonna happen, I don’t even know whether he was faking it or not because maybe he just want get laid by pretending to be sad. He had so many short term girl friends and he said each one of them has different problems and he kept talking with his long term girlfriend after they broke up while he was sleeping with other girls. He is so damaged and I feel sorry for him, But he hurt me by blaming me not into him that much, relationship is two way dynamics. I supported him to find a better job and to have a goal in his life, but what I got in the end of day, I deserve someone better. What’s wrong with him? Thanks!

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beanz

Look up poor me people and then run a mile… don’t be sucked in because it will drain you and then they blame you and you wonder how did I end up here when all I wanted was to help… All the many girls he says have problems ha! What’s the common denominater between them all…HIM…. bet ya they didn’t start out with problems just got sucked in his poor me pity party and ended up with a massive one and his way of keeping that under wraps is to say it’s them they are crazy have issues or whatever. The celestine prophecy is a good book teaching about all the different types of people and explains the poor me person… very energy draining. My advice walk away now before you get too drained with the negative and end up stuck fighting to help someone who has no intentions of helping themselves. Poor me people learn early on that they don’t need to do much in life to get by if they can make people feel sorry for them they will do all the hard work x hope this helps

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Jess

Sounds like he’s still with his long term girlfriend. He also sounds like he’s too damaged to have a healthy relationship.

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Paul

Toxic relationships
I have just come out of one ,what a bloody disaster it was and I’m left feeling I’m the guilty one it was all my fault . If I could only have changed it would be fine I could have saved it .Wrong !!!! I still think about her I still miss her I still love her ,but I know she was so wrong for me the pain of letting go ,of course it’s my ex where the pain lies and not the letting go .the steps to happier times are long and lonely it’s what we have to do ,when the ship goes down swim away from the wreckage.

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Mimi

It has been a month since he ended up in prison yet I cant stop thinking about him. I was offered counseling from a victims advocacy group but I dont feel like talking to them. I feel like I should try to beg for his forgiveness and take the punishment I deserve because I am an awful person. It is just eating me up inside. I wish the constant pain would end.

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

Mimi the way you are feeling now is really normal. It’s only been a month. Letting go of a relationship is like letting go of an addiction – it takes time and the temptation to run back to the familiar, even if it was so broken, can be overwhelming sometimes. This article will explain that https://www.heysigmund.com/your-body-during-a-breakup/. If this is the relationship you have known for a while, this is where you will likely feel most comfortable, but that doesn’t mean it’s right for you. Clearly it wasn’t right for you! You have to fight for yourself through this. You know how this relationship plays out. You’ve seen it so many times before. You have to fight for yourself through this. There is a happier, more secure version of your life waiting for you but you have to let go of the things that are hurting you so that the right things can find you. Sometimes it’s the changes that we want the least, and resist the most, that bring the most life-giving, most ‘right’ changes to our lives. But it takes strengths and guts – you have plenty of that inside you. You wouldn’t have got to this point if you didn’t. Let the victims advocacy group help you. Right now, there are two paths you can take – to go back or to let go. You know what your path looks like if you go back. It’s time to try something new. You can do this. You have everything inside you to do this. Trust that. It will be worth it.

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Kat

I just wanted to say, I am sitting here in my apartment, bawling my eyes out because I have to break up with my toxic girlfriend. I love her with al of my heart and I don’t want to do this, but I know how she makes me feel now. Everything in this article was true, and it made me cry harder. I have tried everything, and nothing has been good enough to make things work. Every time she hurt my feelings, I felt belittled, like I didn’t matter, and I ended up thinking everything was my fault. It was my fault she snapped at me, yelled at me in front of people, criticized me. I believed she criticized me because she wanted me to be better, but her criticism changes a lot about who I am and now I feel I am losing just what it means to be me. My girlfriend has put me down in jokes, through criticism, telling me I am too sensitive, need a thicker skin, and so on. She has belittled me publicly and privately. We have only been together for a year and 5 months but at least 11 months of it has been increasingly hell. We fight daily, when I fight back. I am mustering up the courage to do it in 30 minutes and I feel weak, small, and I feel like I am no match for her. She is my first love, first relationship, and this hurts like hell. Anyway, I could go on about this, I just wanted to say, thank you for this beautiful article. It forces one to see reality instead of what we want to see, no matter how bad it hurts us. This article is giving me strength and clarity. Thank you so much.

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

Kat I’m so pleased this have given you the strength and clarity you needed to move forward. It’s never easy to let go of a relationship, but it sounds as though you have worked hard to try to make this work. I wish you love and srength.

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Julie

You have just got to start the conversation. It feels painfully awkward but once you start, it wont be easy but it will make you feel better with each new admission. If this is the very first breakup, she will resist and you will retreat out of guilt and shame and you will both fight to keep love alive. Ive done it at least three times but what you must know is that if its there now, it aint going away. You will try , both saying you will make changes but you will go back to how it always was, but maybe a bit better but still not enough to keep trying. Plus, once you are made to feel bad and small repeatedly, you feel a little less for them each time until finally you have no more tears to cry. And its THE GREATEST FEELING IN THE WORLD. Freedom from the shackles. Freedom to live free of being their doormat to wipe all of their insecurities, shortcomings, and anger on. Im sorry I did not see this until now. Youre coming forward and speaking on this is going to free you in one way or another. But its a step you must take and congrats for taking it. Youre gonna do fine. Listen to your gut and your heart and like Karen says, if it feels bad, it is bad. You just have to reach the place where there is no doubt in what youre going to do. Much love and peace tonight.

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Joe

My relationship with my wife in ending in divorce. I was the one who was toxic. She moved out 10 months ago and I have been trying to get her back. I was head over heels crazy about her since we were both 14 now we are 48. We have been together 7 years. 2 years ago I was forced to retire from the military and I got really depressed. I put her down and hurt her feeling often and I don’t know why. I am seeking counseling now but I am so heartbroken. I miss her more than anything and I don’t know how to stop hurting. She was my best friend. She says she hates me and has moved on with someone else. Our divorce date is in 2 weeks. I am so hurt I don’t know what to do. I don’t want to be that toxic person anymore. What do I do?

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

Joe it sounds as though you have been through a really tough time, aside from what you are going through in relation to your marriage. I’m so sorry this has happened to you. You have learned a lot and you are moving forward with new clarity and new wisdom. Toxic people don’t have insight into their behaviour and they also don’t have any empathy or regret for the damage they do to other people. You and your wife are now on different paths, but there will be a happier version of you and your life. I know it doesn’t feel like that now, but there will be. Sometimes the only way to end the pain is to learn from it and to start down the new path that is waiting for you. The time has come for you to stop punishing yourself for what has happened. There will be new experiences and new relationships, all of which will be better for the learnings and growth you have gone through because of your heartbreak. I can hear your regret and your wish for things to have ended differently. I’m pleased you are seeing a counsellor. You deserve to feel happy, and you will. It’s often he changes we want the least that have the most life-giving effects on us, and open us up to a new way of being and relating to the world, ourselves and the people in it. This takes guts, and you’re doing it. Love and healing to you.

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Manda

Wow such a good read! So I have been in a toxic relationship for the past year and half. Never in a million years did I think I’d fall in love with such a difficult man. He is soo emotionally unstable I can’t even fathom things anymore. I love him more than I’ve loved any man and the love I have for him runs deep. It’s like I can’t give up on him. It’s not about us, it’s about him. I was always the one to end a relationship because the guy wasn’t what I wanted or I didn’t feel the love. It’s so different this time, I care about this man so much. I’m practically a part of his family, mind you he has a very big family and we live in a small town where everyone knows everyone. I’m only 30 years old and everyone tells me I deserve much better where he is 10 years older than me. He’s never been physically abusive but the way his feelings change from one day to the next just drives me to my ends. I have come to the fact that he buries himself in his career for a reason. He has issues soo much. I mean either you love a person and make it work or you don’t and let them go right? It’s not that easy with this man. He claims to want to spend the rest of his life with me and things will be great and then bam I’m blocked for “overreacting” or some nonsense. It’s always me. I just don’t understand him at all. I know I need to let go but I see something in him that I can’t give up on. How do you let go of someone that has shown you a love you’ve never felt before? I feel like if I walk away I may never care this much about another man in my life again…I just don’t get it. I’m a good girl with a big, forgiving heart..outta all the guys out there how the heck did I fall for one that is impossible to love? Gosh I wish I knew…

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Julie

Oh, Manda. I was there. Right where you are and like so many of us on here. It feels like its all about him because for him IT IS and you wont change that. I know it feels like giving up. Like an impossible feat . Like a waste of time if you dont make it work. A let down to yourselves and others. I know this all! It took me three years of knowing it wasnt right to break free. Its not your time yet, but youre getting there. I know you fear him reading your phone, or criticizing what you wear, what you say, who you associate with. The list goes on. I know your fears. I know that he can be very loving and nice at times. But thats what he uses to control you. Im sorry but manipulation by anyone is a tactic to try to control you. I got sucked in because I knew the hurt he was causing me wasnt intentional. He couldnt stop and so I had to put a stop to it. Sweety, you cant be happy with someone who does not offer you security in everyway. I know your security is shaken. I know with each day, your self worth is deminishing because you cant seem to please him enough and you cant believe you, a smart , kind girl could be wrapped up in this. You probably even see his friends and family believe and see what you do but they dont say a thing because they dont have to live with the accussations of cheating, of talking behind his back, of not inviting and including him, the list of how hes a victim goes on and on. So Ive been there but my light turned on and my tears are gone and I dropped the dead weight once and for all. Im not saying you should. I just know your story because it is my story. Its like I wrote this and not you. I know youre not ready. You havent reached your limit. But you will sweety and he will not be able to feel anything but the understanding that he was the root of the problem which may or may not be admitted to. Take care sweet girl.

Reply
distressed

Hi, I think my twin is toxic. We’ve done everything together all our lives and there has been so many examples of this type of behaviour. I opened up to my boss eventually and she said if that was my partner behaving like that she’d tell me to get out of an abusive relationship. The problem I have is that our bond is so deep and strong that I t imagine anything else. I am married and my spouse is amazing. She does what she can to bring him down but he rides the waves with dignity. As a couple we are happy and have a lovely family. But when issues with my twin crop up it just ruins everything. I literally have no friends, heck I don’t even know how to make friends, I’ve never needed to. How do I break this cycle without ruining everyones lives? She lies to me all the time and she thinks I don’t know. She belittles me telling me I can’t do things can’t cope with things, can’t have friends and I just let her walk all over me. I really want to change my life and often feel like running away from everything.

Reply
Karen - Hey Sigmund

It sounds as though there is only one thing in your life that needs to change, and that is your relationship with your twin. This is a time of enormous growth for you. It’s not easy to realise that the people we love, and who love us back, have so much power to hurt us. The way you break the cycle is to decide on the things you will tolerate and the things you won’t. Discuss with your partner what is needed to protect your marriage from being damaged by your relationship with your twin, then, if you agree with them, discuss these boundaries with your twin. You can’t make her respect them, but as the article explains, you can decide when she comes into your life. If she chooses not to respect the things that are important to you, that is her decision, but she is the one deciding not to do what she needs to do to be a part of your life. Let her know that the door to you will always be open, but for the sake of both of you, the relationship needs to feel safe, kind and loving and respectful and the important people in your life, such as your spouse. Be specific about the things that aren’t working for you in a way that she can respond to. For example, ‘you make me feel bad’, is vague and difficult to work with. On the other hand, ‘I need you to stop saying negative things about [spouse]. If you can’t do this, I’m not able to spend time with you. I’ll miss you, but I’m not prepared to stand by while you say these sort of things. I’ll always be ready to have a relationship with you when you’re ready to treat [spouse] with respect.’ – or something like that. It won’t be easy, and it will take guts, but for the sake of you, your relationship, and your relationship with your spouse, it sounds as though it’s time to put strong boundaries around her behaviour that feels hurtful for you.

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Vega

Thank you so much for this article 🙂 just walked away from a 9 year to is relationship. I needed this.

Reply
Cigarettebutts

Hello, in all honesty I don’t know if I’m in a toxic relationship (friendship specifically), but i’m confused about the whole nature of it. A few of my friends pointed it out, what they thought to be some weird-ish behavior. Most of these have been my own observations however, like:

Always wants to know where i am (I mean it’s fine, we’re close friends, we used to have a circle of friends and we all hung out together, but now that I’m not studying this semester, they don’t hang out with them anymore?? They willingly isolate themselves, I thought we were all good friends but apparently they don’t care enough except to ask them about me).

Making me feel like all my plans for the future are bad.Like shooting them down almost immediately. (Specifically if this means, not interacting as much with said person, by moving away to a more distant place.)

If I make a decision that takes me to somewhere distant, this person “adjusts” their plans so that they converge. Do they not understand that sometimes life takes you in different directions? It just comes across as very clingy, like they just don’t wanna be apart from me.

Always giving too much. (It makes me feel like i run a charity. It’s not like i don’t appreciate it. But sometimes it’s like i have no say in the matter.)

Being too clingy in general. Not giving me the personal space i want (even after confronting said person about it.)

Making inappropriate jokes and/or comments about sensitive topics about your life.

This person also harbors romantic feelings towards me and (used to) make indirect jabs about it although I had already told them I didn’t feel the same. It’s almost as if they want me to feel guilty about it. Once (although they passed it off as a joke) they made a comment about there being something wrong with me because I’m not in love with them.

They also provoke me when it comes to religion themed topics. I had already said i believe in God, and they know this. This person however doesn’t believe in anything. I believe it’s fine to have passionate conversations about said themes, but they say it in manners that are offensive. Disrespectful, almost like what they say it’s the right answer.

Maybe I’m just being dramatic or sensitive but I’ve noticed all these things for years now, but have continually brushed it aside in favor of continuing the friendship. After they told me they wanted to be more than just friends with me, although things were never the same I tried to still keep being their friend because I genuinely thought that they were a good person. It’s not like they’re a bad person, but over the years I’ve just noticed that there a few things about them that aren’t exactly favorable, and I’ve never had this sort of problem with other friends. After interacting with them I usually feel exhausted. I feel bad about feeling like this, but the feelings of discomfort have always been there, even before they confessed to me. I’ve only now chosen to do something about it and even now I feel bad about it. People have pointed out problematic things about them in the past but like always I brushed it off. I’m not entirely sure if my situation qualifies as toxic, but your input or help would be appreciated. Thank you for writing this article, it was very informative and if you take the time to read this answer I would be eternally grateful.

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Mari

These words are life affirming and provide an anchor when in doubt or confused…
Thanks, Karen

Reply
a girl

I’ve always been telling myself that things can and will get better. And I guess at times it has, but now it’s here again. It’s always been here. I thought everything was going well until now I’m starting to see those elements from my friend, how she doesn’t seem to show me the same respect or priority as she does for others. Considering that we’re close, I always wonder why she seems to ignore me and treat me poorly. Does she even know? We’ve had arguments in the past and I regret not bringing up THIS issue before. Now, I’m still too scared to. What if I lose her for real this time? What if she starts defending herself? What if we fight again? I don’t want to argue. I just want her to listen and hope she knows what she’s doing in my eyes. A part of me feels like she’d understand, but still what if? What if she doesn’t?

It’s ironic of her situations. Whatever she tells me, she doesn’t realise that’s how I feel because of her. It’s all so stupid.

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Tricia

Great read and it has led me to one question and issue that I’m really struggling with. What helps to get over someone who you dated for almost a year and have been repeating a mistake of talking to them on and off for almost a year and a half after the break up? The relationship was toxic but I find myself missing some of his characteristics. And I have tried to get over this person by ‘moving on’ but I don’t want to put myself out there again until I’m back to the person I was before I dated this guy. I want to be confident and happy with who I am like I was before I dated him. I hope this makes sense! I also haven’t met anyone who meets my expectations for what I’m looking for in a man.

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

Tricia your comment makes complete sense to me. Even the most toxic relationships will very likely have something good about them – you were drawn to him for a reason. This doesn’t mean the relationship will be good for you, as you know. The problem is that time can tend to dull the truth about a relationship and have you believing that the good was better than it was, and that the bad wasn’t as bad. This will be stirred up every time you have contact with him. Letting go of relationships can be similar to letting go of an addiction. Here is an article that will explain that and hopefully give you some clarity around why you are having trouble letting go https://www.heysigmund.com/your-body-during-a-breakup/. I hope this helps. You might not have met the one who is right for you yet, but that doesn’t mean that you should settle for someone you know to be wrong. Stay strong. The right person is out there.

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~Hurt in Chicago~

Update: She has made the decision to move forward with ending this. She claimed that she needed space, but in reality, it was a ruse to say that she wanted to end our situation. She blocked me from calling her and I flipped out. However, I do realize that the child that hurt inside, came out to represent. Nonetheless, I am now able to accept it being over and it was for the best.

I assumed that this is completely over and have tried my best toxic way to burn this bridge. I am actually sorry I did that, but I accept the response and reaction.

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Mona

I kept reading this article over and over today! I’ve been feeling overwhelmed to call him but I know I cant! Its for my benefit and my future! I broke the relationship a month ago for the 6th time. His really nice to me and a sweetheart but his manipulative and had a meth and pornography problem and has also starting in this past year I believe having sex with men! When I read this article its given me the strength to not contact him and especially the part where you say I can keep loving him but leave the door opened that when he is ready and has accepted to come to my terms is life-giving and courageous!

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Mari

Hi,
I am 56 years old and a few months ago, had a stark realization that it was harmful for me to continue contact with my 2 sisters. My relationship with one sister has felt one sided and I was having reocurring dreams over the years, that I was trying to connect with her emotionally, and she would walk away, not quite acknowledging I was even there. I realized this was a pattern I had in intimate relationships with men…trying to connect and communicate while they were cold and uncommunicative and passive aggressive. I realized that, with my sister, I felt guilty, like I was never doing enough. I had also resigned myself to accepting that when I would send her a gift, something I put thought into and was personal, like a necklace she had wanted and earrings I had made for her last Christmas and mailed, I would hear nothing, no thank you or acknowledgement that she even received it. I decided to accept that I would never hear from her upon receiving a Christmas or birthday gift, until I realized that I was diminishing myself and my life force by this acceptance and pretending it was ok. This is not to say I don’t receive gifts or cards from her for Christmas or birthdays, I do, and they are always filled with I love you!!! which is the confusing part. I feel there is no relationship there. She lives with her husband and family 3 1/2 hours away, and I have driven there for Christmas some years, but she has never even seen my home of 11+ years. I have tried to suggest we meet half way for lunch but she says she is too busy with work and her kids, one who is 18, and the other 2 in their 20’s.
So, after trying to call her and have a conversation and getting no answer, I texted her, and asked her to respond that she even heard or understood what I was trying to say, and I heard nothing back from her which is her way of saying she is angry, which is her being passive aggressive, which is why I can’t do this anymore. This is really hard, because I am her older sister, and have always felt a loyalty to her, but I can’t do this anymore…
The hardest part will be Christmas, because she is the only family I have close by, and I am single, so I have to be brave and not feel guilty.

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

You are wise and open-hearted. It sounds as though you have worked hard on your relationship with your sister. Trust your intuition about what the right thing is to do for you. When you come from a place of generous intent, as you are, whether it leads you away or towards, it will be the right thing for you. The key is to trust that. I wish you love and peace over Christmas and hope your relationship with your sisters is able to find a way forward. I can hear how much you want that.

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Julie

I love this advice. Your story angers me because most people would give their right arm for a sister, let alone one who makes such an effort as you do. I think that since you are the one making all the effort while she half ass engages you, you should stop. It has been my experience that she will either wonder where you went and enquire or she wont and either way this will tell you what you need to know. Two qoutes come to mind here:

“You have nothing to lose if there’s nothing to lose”

“Don’t push me away and wonder where I went”

Its painful to be in your position mostly because you feel like your sister is more than a friend who you could cut out of your life if they dont fit, shes family. Everybody says that. But thats just it, who cares if shes family? Shes a person who is not there for you. Period. And I would tell you to set your boundaries with her and let her know youre ready if and when she choses to meet you in the middle but it sounds like shes already let you know her true intentions and really you need to be ok with it because your life is precious and not to be wasted on feelings of guilt. She certainly seems fine. Peace and much love to you.

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Mari

Dear Julie,
Thank you for your caring and thoughtful reply…
Everything you said rings very true for me and gives me strength.
I had a softening a couple of days ago, a calm feeling of sensing my sister is doing the best she can, in her overwhelmed life. I am also not willing to move toward her anymore under the current circumstances and waste my precious energy. I have a beautiful, peaceful, creative, and loving life to live.
Your words helped me clarify my feelings and intentions for myself and my life moving forward.
Wishing you all love and good things in your life!
Warmly,
Mari

Reply
Julie

Mari,

This makes me so happy to read. You have such a warm spirit and you truly sound like youre in a better place now and that is such a gift. When the light clicks, it just clicks. It just takes time. Im happy I could help you. I feel that I am good at understanding and empathizing when peolpe are hurting because I can feel it almost as much as they do and in turn, speak from my heart with raw emotion and honesty. I hope my love for helping shines through. Keep being amazing and doing what you love and what makes you happy. Peace and love to you tonight my dear.

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stranded

Dear Karen

I’d really like if you helped me out since I have failed a million times at helping myself.

Your article is empowering. After reading this article I am certain that my gf is toxic and I kind of knew that even before I read the article which brought me to reading it.

I have tried before to let her go but failed MISERABLY. When I try to leave, her cruel, manipulative behavior comes into play and if i am strong enough to make it through that, she starts getting softer and even begging to get me back until I am. But once I am back she is the same toxic person again. And we are in a cycle. And if i manage to leave her I miss and crave her too damn much. I see her in everything around me. I even think you look like her. It drives me crazy and I end up going back to her, feeling shitty.

I am in deep grief and misery at the moment. I want to get out of this happy. I dont know what to do. Please help.

Reply
Karen - Hey Sigmund

There is no easy way to let go of a relationship. When you leave, have the list of reasons with you all the time so you can remind yourself of why you left. It might be screenshots of texts that came to you in fights, or a handwritten list of why you need to get out. Make the list when you are feeling strong and certain and use it as an anchor when you are feeling wobbly. When you leave, try to spend time with the people who care about you to remind yourself of how relationships should feel. Then, write down a simple line to give you strength when you need it. This will come from you. Remind yourself that just because you miss her, it doesn’t mean the relationship is right for you. People miss all sorts of addictions when they let go of them, even though those addictions slowly break them. Here is an article that might also help you. It explains how relationships are like addictions, and why you go through what you go through when you leave https://www.heysigmund.com/your-body-during-a-breakup/. I hope it is able to give you the strength and comfort you’re looking for. Everything you need to move forward is in you. Now you just need to trust that.

Reply
Karley

I am currently struggling with my decision to finally walk away from my chronicly alcohol dependant mother. This article has helped me considerably.
Walking away has been the hardest choice I have ever faced in my 41 years! The guilt is overwhelming at times….it is so much harder when i am forced to repeatedly justify my decision to walk away to siblings and other loved ones. Your article has been truely uplifting and helped me to be strong and stand by what I know is the only choice I can make for myself and my son.
Thankyou.

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

You’re so welcome Karley. You sound strong and clear. I can hear how difficult it was for you to walk away. It’s never easy to let go of a relationship, but sometimes there is just no other way to keep yourself and the people you love protected. I wish it wasn’t this way. Know that you don’t have to justify your decision to anybody. Nobody else can possibly know your experience or the fully reasons you have made your decisions. It sounds as though you have acted with great courage. Keep moving forward and don’t let anybody’s doubt become yours.

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Sharon

This post helped me so much! My sister has a gambling addiction and through her actions has been homeless twice. She admits she still gambles but now attends meetings. She is 60 years old and has a daughter with disabilities who lives with her ex-husband. As her older sister I somehow feel responsible for her finances as she loses jobs, gambles, has no money. My entire family (all of us) gave her money for years and now that they all have passed she is wanting me to help her. I feel conflicted with the charitable aspect of Catholic/christian tenets to help those in need with the need to not go down with her ship while she uses me. She has stated she was always jealous of me and resented me. It’s such a long story, but I feel phenomenal angst every time I see her text. I feel sick that I would have to take care of someone who chooses to not take care of herself and the expectations of being the good sister, when I know all she truly wants is money. It’s been an ongoing heartache since all family members passed. She has never wanted to grow up and be responsible. I do not want anything to do with her, really. It’s never true as I feel she really does not like me either as I made different choices in my life. Distancing myself as suggested by this article will be my first step but if anyone has other suggestions, I would truly welcome them. Bless you for this article!

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Sharon

Dear Karen,

Thank you for sharing such a revealing and poignant article regarding this subject. I feel I could write a book in response. This article really needs to be imprinted in my heart as it is the heart that seems to be the most troubled. How can I live and be happy with a sister who has so little? When I reason it out in my head, I will often respond with the thoughts of wanting to tell her, “I can’t save you from yourself.” But, I never do because of seeming like a bad person. Sigh… Thank you for your insightful articles and genuine compassion.

Reply
NoahDN7

I don’t feel like I can get out at all. Even after reading this and knowing I need to get out I can’t. I need help and I don’t know where to go…

Reply
J

I want the person im with to get out we live in a apartment and his name is not on the lease but he said he pays most of the bills and hes not going anywhere but he is mentality abuse of any suggestions

Reply
AA99

i have been in a relationship for more than 4 years. he says he loves me, but he broke it off few days ago saying he couldn’t do it anymore. we had too many issues. all we did was fight all the time and loved each other at the same time. he is very manipulative and abusive. i love him and i know that this relationship is toxic, but i am not able to let go of it and move on. it hurts. i don’t know what to do. help!!!

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

It is rarely easy to let go of any relationship, even one that you know is bad for you. If you are in a manipulative, abusive relationship, What will you be like in ten years if you stay?

Reply
Julie

One thing I need advice about though! He is now asking for the other half of the rent and one bill but in order to move out, Im going to need what extra money I have. He can afford to live here on his own but wants his money. It was our agreement that I pay a certain amount according to my income all these years and now that I broke up with him, hes being stingy. I dont want to cause more tension and would gladly agree to it but I need it in order to move out. Help!

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Debbie

Reading Thro all these is giving me hope! I’m a struggling so much to walk away from a toxic relationship but the main problem is it my neighbour can literally see him from my window. He is a troubled person heavy drinker but I saw past this and was a fool to get involved , now I feel I’m going mad, he goes out regularly drinking , blanks my texts when I can see him sitting there at home. Turns up at mine drunk when I have cooked for him. Feel so angry at myself for letting him in and now feel so hurt and sad most of the time, have finished the relationship once again but am driving myself mad as he lives just opposite, have my blinds shut as can see him walk /drive past he has to go past my house to get out of road! It’s so hard to resist looking out window to see if he in or out feel going mad! Asked him to leave me alone to heal but he never does, thinks it all funny .

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Julie

Hello everyone. Well, I did it. I/we finally ended the crazy train ride and called it quits tonight. I knew I had to say it but it was he who innitiated it thankfully. Of all the times Ive broken it off, I just couldnt do it this time. Very hurtful. My ex fiance was abusive and couldnt stop hurting me which wasnt physical but I could not take the bad feelings he would cause me to have using guilt and manipulation. No matter the gifts and nice gestures. Im done and now Im in that place of fear again although not as bad this time. I just wanted to share this and I will check in as to the progress of all of this. I do not think hes going to beg and plead this time. I think he knows. Its sad. I need strength. Fear of the unknown.But I am no longer worried about anyone else. I am whats important now. I can move on.One step at a time. Peace.

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Julie

Weve discussed our future living arrangements. Im moving out Jan 6. Its very civil for now and hoping it continues. How bout you?

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~Hurt in Chicago~

Well, for me, the most positive news is that I’ve been getting counseling. The bad thing though is that my behavior hasn’t adjusted yet. It has gotten worse and I can’t seem to exhibit self control when needed. I haven’t talked to her in weeks (although I have tried), she seems to have taken all of the control back.

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alicia

This was a good read I have been in a toxic not even sure what to call it for over 4 years because its for sure not a relationship in this time this narcassist has made me loose all self confidence and i have become to feel as though i deserve someone toxic and there treatment moving on is hard after you have been warn down emotuionally for so long

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Diamoni

I can feel the passion in this article. This gave me so much life and energy to let go of this toxic person of 2 years. I truly needed this. It is so pure

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Hurt in Chicago

After reading this article, I see that I was/am toxic. I have been looking for answers to find out what my problem is. I have been going to counseling and starting to see the total issue of myself. I had trust issues, experienced trauma growing up, and it’s not until a few years ago, I’ve started walking down a dark path. Bottling up frustrations did not help.

I also realized that I was holding my ex- girlfriend to my ideas of what a girlfriend should be, instead of accepting for her who she is. Every time we broke up, I would come back in tears and pain. Mostly because I no longer had the control that I attributed to what I thought was love. Early on in our situationship, I had no problems letting her go, but I wanted to remain her friend.

Now this is year four and this has been our worse year ever. We have been through so many ups and downs this year, that I think this has finally met the end. We were suppose to get married and start a family. I am tired of hurting the women I love, but after reading this article, I’m too embarrassed to even contact her. I’ve caused so much hurt and pain with my words, tempers, attitudes, lies, and manipulation, I don’t even know who I am anymore. After I finish with counseling… I’m going to write her an apology and hit the road. I don’t ever want to harm a living soul again.

~Hurt in Chicago~

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

I love how open you are to this. We can al change, but the only peope who do are the ones who are open to the possibility that they might need to. You’ve done that. Never be embarassed about putting something right. Even if you aren’t heard, or if you are shut down from the start, the reason you apologise is because of who you are, not because of how the other person will respond. You may have done toxic things, and you are now also someone who is open, brave, strong, and clear. You are moving forward. That’s what’s important.

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~Hurt in Chicago~

Yes, I NEED to change, for myself and others. Some of the things that I did to get her back were very controlling. Then when we were back together, once the “love high” subsided, I was right back to pushing her away, not effectively communicating, not complimenting her, and thinking that she was the one with the insecurities. It was all my doing.

I will apologize to her when I am sure that her response, if any, would not place me in the controlling aspect of pouring out my heart to force her to accept my apology. I can only apologize to her when it is truly sincere and no matter the response, if any, will still have me in a healthy head space.

Sometimes forgiving ourselves is better than anyone else’s forgiveness.

Thank you so much for your article and response. Let the healing began 🙂

Reply
Charlie

I’m going to confront one of my friends about her toxic behavior, but the fact that I’m so afraid of doing so really bothers me. She makes a lot of little barbed comments that hurt my feelings and she always has to control the situation completely. I feel like I have to submit to her all the time or she’ll cause a scene. Normally, I would have no problem telling people that their comments hurt my feelings, but I’ve tried to tell her in the past and she refuses to accept criticism and twists the blame to me, saying I’m being overly sensitive, or imagining things, or I actually hate her (which isn’t true). We’ve been friends for years and there are parts of her I genuinely like, and I know that she cares about me as a friend and doesn’t seem to realize she’s being toxic, so my discussion with her will probably seem like an attack. I can’t think of a way to tell her nicely that I’m upset with her or tell her that I don’t want to be friends anymore. This confrontation would be a complete shock to her because she doesn’t realize that she’s toxic. I’m being so overwhelmed by guilt and bitterness and fear and irritation that I can’t act like a good friend with her. We share a lot of mutual friends who accept her behavior, what should I do?

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Karen - Hey Sigmund

There is no nice way to tell somebody that you don’t want to be friends with them anymore, but I understand that sometimes it can be necessary. Be gentle with her and as kind as you can. Let her know the combination of the two of you doesn’t work and if you can, be really specific about the behaviours that aren’t working for you. Be open to her and listen as much as you talk. I know this is a difficult conversation for you. I wish you all the best.

Reply

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Can’t make it? There’s now an ONLINE option so you can watch from anywhere in the world, with the recording available for 4 weeks after the conference. 

I’ll be talking about anxiety in young people, but this information is relevant for ALL OF US. We need to  change the way we think about anxiety and respond to it - so let’s talk about how. I’ll give you practical, meaningful ways to support and strengthen your kids and teens with in ways that will serve them not just for now, but for the rest of their lives. 

Two things I know for certain. 1. All kids have it in them to be brave and do the things that feel bigger than them sometimes. 2. Parents and their important adults have the most profound capacity to strengthen kids and teens against anxiety and build their confidence and courage. 

I love these conferences and I know parents walk out feeling excited and empowered. 

Since 2016, the Resilient Kids Conferences have attracted up to 800 attendees at a single event. It is beyond beautiful to see parents, educators, and many other professionals stream through the doors in anticipation of a soul fulfilling experience. By the end of the day their faces are beaming, and so is our teams. It’s a community of people, redefining resilience together.

I’ll be joining Maggie Dent, Michelle Mitchell, and Dr Justin Coulson. In person, online and group license tickets are available for this event.

Tickets (online and live). Link in bio.
When times feel uncertain or your own anxiety feels big, come home to the things that make sense. 

Come home to each other, to stillness, to play, to rest, and conversation. 

Come home to listening more openly and caring more deeply, to nature, and warm baths, and being more deliberate, to fighting for what we can control, and the soft surrender to what we can’t. 

Come home to stories, and music, and to the safety of your tribe. 

Come home to that part of you that is timeless, and strong, and still, and wise, and which knows that, like everything that has ever felt bigger than you for a while, you will get them and you through this.♥️
Separation anxiety can come with a tail whip - not only does it swipe at kids, but it will so often feel brutal for their important adults too.

If your child struggle to separate at school, or if bedtimes tougher than you’d like them to be, or if ‘goodbye’ often come with tears or pleas to stay, or the ‘fun’ from activities or play dates get lost in the anxiety of being away from you, I hear you.

There’s a really good reason for all of these, and none of them have anything to do with your parenting, or your child not being ‘brave enough’. Promise. And I have something for you. 

My 2 hour on-demand separation anxiety webinar is now available for purchase. 

This webinar is full of practical, powerful strategies and information to support your young person to feel safer, calmer, and braver when they are away from you. 

We’ll explore why separation anxiety happens and powerful strategies you can use straight away to support your child. Most importantly, you’ll be strengthening them in ways that serve them not just for now but for the rest of their lives.

Access to the recording will be available for 30 days from the date of purchase.

Link to shop in bio. 

https://www.heysigmund.com/products/separation-anxiety-how-to-build-their-brave/
The more we treat anxiety as a problem, or as something to be avoided, the more we inadvertently turn them away from the safe, growthful, brave things that drive it. 

On the other hand, when we make space for anxiety, let it in, welcome it, be with it, the more we make way for them to recognise that anxiety isn’t something they need to avoid. They can feel anxious and do brave. 

As long as they are safe, let them know this. Let them see you believing them that this feels big, and believing in them, that they can handle the big. 

‘Yes this feels scary. Of course it does - you’re doing something important/ new/ hard. I know you can do this. How can I help you feel brave?’♥️
I’ve loved working with @sccrcentre over the last 10 years. They do profoundly important work with families - keeping connections, reducing clinflict, building relationships - and they do it so incredibly well. @sccrcentre thank you for everything you do, and for letting me be a part of it. I love what you do and what you stand for. Your work over the last decade has been life-changing for so many. I know the next decade will be even more so.♥️

In their words …
Posted @withregram • @sccrcentre Over the next fortnight, as we prepare to mark our 10th anniversary (28 March), we want to re-share the great partners we’ve worked with over the past decade. We start today with Karen Young of Hey Sigmund.

Back in 2021, when we were still struggling with covid and lockdowns, Karen spoke as part of our online conference on ‘Strengthening the relationship between you & your teen’. It was a great talk and I’m delighted that you can still listen to it via the link in the bio.

Karen also blogged about our work for the Hey Sigmund website in 2018. ‘How to Strengthen Your Relationship With Your Children and Teens by Understanding Their Unique Brain Chemistry (by SCCR)’, which is still available to read - see link in bio.

#conflictresolution #conflict #families #family #mediation #earlyintervention #decade #anniversary #digital #scotland #scottish #cyrenians #psychology #relationships #children #teens #brain #brainchemistry #neuroscience

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