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Do you feel STUCK in your Relationship?Do you feel STUCK in your Relationship?">

Do you feel STUCK in your Relationship?

Irina Zhuravleva
von 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Seelenfänger
6 Minuten gelesen
Blog
November 05, 2025

All right — here’s a very simple way to approach relationship advice: ask yourself one question. Do you feel stuck? Does it seem like no matter what you try — arguing, staying silent, voicing your needs, convincing yourself to have none, begging, crying, getting angry, or being kind — nothing changes? That sense of being trapped is real. There’s some good news and some bad news. The good news: the relationship can become unstuck. The bad news: it always takes two people who genuinely want to do the work. Always has, always will. True connection requires both partners to want to be fully known and to fully know one another — that’s intimacy. Far too many of us, at times, have neglected it, failed to prioritize learning it, and never practiced it, yet we expect the relationship to function normally anyway. That expectation is unrealistic. If you feel stuck or neglected, that feeling is valid. Too often people are taught to bury those emotions: avoid rocking the boat, focus only on others’ good qualities, try to be grateful. But when needs are ignored, resentment and bitterness build. Feeling dismissed, invalidated, or told it’s all in your head and then sweeping it under the rug instead of setting healthy boundaries or getting help only creates more distance and disconnection. The other partner’s experience matters just as much. When one person feels stuck, the whole relationship is stuck. It’s easy to drift into self-centeredness or to avoid discussions about intimacy and trust — but that path has a destination: distance. Loving someone doesn’t mean allowing them to take advantage of you or letting yourself become a punching bag. Loving someone does mean paying attention; being a safe place where they can share feeling stuck; inviting and encouraging honesty. Love requires checking in, having hard conversations about what’s happening inside each partner, and then taking concrete steps — pursuing solutions, compromises, or a plan — to get unstuck. Love serves and gives, anticipates needs, and is thoughtful and considerate. Many of these qualities have been unintentionally de-prioritized in relationships, so it’s time to get back on track. Ask the simple question: do you or your partner feel stuck, and are you both willing to put down the pointed fingers, set aside pride, blame, criticism, avoidance, and defensiveness, and actually care? If someone you love feels neglected, care enough to listen, to understand, and to seek professional help when you can’t figure things out together. When two people both understand one another and genuinely want to serve and meet each other’s needs from a place of love, healing and reconnection are possible. Without that shared commitment, it’s like paddling on only one side of a canoe and wondering why you keep going in circles.

Signs you (or your partner) are stuck

Practical steps to get unstuck

Practical steps to get unstuck

Conversation starters and scripts

When to seek professional help or take safety steps

Realistic expectations and mindset

Simple Getting-Unstuck plan (6 steps)

Final note

Feeling stuck is painful but also a signal: something important needs attention. If both partners are willing to slow down, listen, and take small, consistent steps, relationships can shift from gridlock to growth. If one partner won’t engage, you still deserve support, clear boundaries, and care for yourself. You don’t have to figure it out alone.

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