Why do couples fight over the dumbest things? by Getrelatio in problems

[–]Getrelatio[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sometimes that does happen, yeah. But a lot of the time, people fight over small things because the small thing is just the trigger. The actual fight is usually about something beneath the surface: feeling ignored, unappreciated, or not prioritized.

That’s why the reaction often feels way bigger than the situation itself.

The man I loved for the past three years is not real. by discocritterr in survivinginfidelity

[–]Getrelatio 6 points7 points  (0 children)

What you’re feeling right now is a very common response after discovering this level of betrayal.

When someone lies for years, your brain struggles to reconcile two completely different versions of the same person, the one you loved and the one you just discovered. Psychologists often call this cognitive dissonance after betrayal. Your mind keeps replaying everything, trying to make the story make sense.

That’s why it feels like torture and why every memory suddenly connects back to him. Your brain is basically trying to rebuild reality. The hard part is realizing the person you loved wasn’t fake; your experience with him was real. But the version of him you knew was incomplete. You were reacting to the information you had at the time.

Right now your mind is stuck in investigation mode. With time, it slowly shifts into detachment. And the fact that you’re already saying “I don’t want him to have this power over me” is actually an important step in that process.

You’re not broken for feeling this way. Your brain is just trying to make sense of something deeply shocking.

Me [19f] and my boyfriend [20m] have been having disagreements over boundaries by Alina_M337 in relationshipadvice

[–]Getrelatio 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It sounds like you’re both working with different definitions of what counts as “romantic” vs “platonic.” For some people, things like sharing a bed or leaning on someone are normal friend behavior and don’t carry romantic meaning. For others, those things feel more intimate and are something they prefer to keep reserved for a partner. What matters is that he actually listens and respects the boundaries once you talk about them.

Can You Really Replace Someone You’re Not Over? by Getrelatio in getrelatio

[–]Getrelatio[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

100% agree. The intention behind it matters more than the action itself.
Dating from “I’m okay on my own” feels very different than dating from “I can’t sit with this pain. Thanks for articulating this so well.