If you do these three things too much in a relationship, you will lose

Emotions are like a garden jointly managed by two people, watering too little will wither, and watering too much will rot the roots. Some behaviors may seem like expressions of love, but in reality, they quietly erode the foundation of relationships.

1. Overly compromising and losing one's own boundaries

1. Giving up personal interests and hobbies

When your partner's schedule completely becomes your schedule, and their preferences replace your favorites, this seemingly great sacrifice actually hides a timed explosion Bullet. A healthy relationship requires 20% of alone space, just like plants need to be watered at intervals to better absorb nutrients.

2. Unconditional acceptance of the other party's shortcomings

Treating indulgence as tolerance is a common misconception. A truly mature relationship requires setting a bottom line, such as verbal attacks that violate principles or habitual dishonesty, and clearly expressing discomfort when the red light should be on.

3. Unclear financial boundaries

Joint accounts can exist, but personal emergency funds should also be reserved. A completely transparent financial status may actually trigger a desire for control. It is recommended to retain 10% -15% of disposable funds for self-improvement.

2. Emotional dependence leads to emotional kidnapping

1. Require real-time reporting of whereabouts

Checking job style communication can turn relationships into prisons. Try to replace 'where are you now' with 'something interesting happened today', turn monitoring into sharing, and trust will naturally grow.

2. Trading anger for attention

Intentionally being cold and making a big deal out of it is like an emotional credit card, overdrawing too many times will lead to credit bankruptcy. Directly expressing 'I need companionship' is ten times more effective than slamming the door.

3. Over analyzing the other party's reaction

Interpreting the inability to read back as not loving, and using tired expressions as signals of boredom, this microscopic sensitivity will make both parties exhausted. Remembering the feeling of breathing is the secret to long-term companionship.

3. Attempting to reform triggers a power struggle

1. Creating a partner according to the ideal

requires changing the dressing style and correcting the way of speaking, and this kind of reform project will eventually encounter backlash. Just like you can't ask a cactus to bloom a rose, to love someone, you have to accept their original version.

2. Comparative incentives backfire

"Other boyfriends This type of sentence structure does not generate motivation, it only creates hostility. Try using 'Let's do it together' The co creation model of '...' replaces unilateral demands.

3. Using old accounts as bargaining chips

Using past mistakes as weapons for current negotiations, like constantly opening scabs of wounds. The real solution to the problem needs to be based on the facts, rather than settling the historical record. A good relationship should be like dancing a duet, sometimes leading and sometimes following, but always maintaining one's own rhythm. When you feel increasingly tired in a relationship, you may want to check if you have stepped on these pitfalls. Remember: love is not an arena, there is no winning or losing, only win-win or mutual loss.

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