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How to know when to LEAVE your RelationshipHow to know when to LEAVE your Relationship">

How to know when to LEAVE your Relationship

Irina Zhuravleva
από 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
12 λεπτά ανάγνωσης
Blog
Νοέμβριος 05, 2025

How can you tell when it’s time to walk away from a relationship? That question feels one of the hardest to answer because we invest so much in someone and cling to the hope that things will improve. If we didn’t want it to continue, we’d already end it, yet deep down we sense something is off: we don’t feel consistently valued or prioritized, and this isn’t how love should feel. Most of you would be willing to do the work — read the books, go to therapy, learn to communicate better — if that would repair things. But chances are your partner shows no interest in those steps. For them, everything’s fine; it’s you who has the problem. So I want to remind you of what you already know: happiness, fulfillment, intimacy and connection in relationships require both people to contribute. After nearly a decade studying relationships and learning painfully from experience, I’ve learned love without sustained action won’t save a relationship. Think about a job: if you stop showing up, you’ll be fired, even if you claim to love the work. Feelings alone don’t replace the basic requirement to show up. The same is true for intimacy and closeness — they demand effort from both partners: trust, safety, accountability, the ability to apologize, consideration, and empathy. If another person has no interest in those things, you will never feel genuinely close to them. You can keep hoping they’ll change or keep dating their potential, but a relationship only works when two people decide to do the work together. My advice varies depending on whether you’re married with children or dating. If abuse is present, leave and get safe immediately. For those dating, the dating world may feel messy, but who you marry matters enormously — not to scare you but because marriage is inherently difficult. That’s why almost half of first marriages end, about 60% of second marriages end, and roughly 70% of third marriages end. Those glossy weddings and newlywed joy don’t guarantee a lasting union. From eleven years of marriage, I’ll say this plainly: if you’re with someone who is self-centered, refuses accountability, rarely cares about your inner life, and ignores your feelings, needs and dreams, it’s not negotiable — you need to leave. You might protest that nobody’s perfect, but love doesn’t excuse a lack of capacity to act lovingly. Love means thinking of someone else as much as you think of yourself; it’s mutual respect, curiosity about how the other person feels loved, and willingness to sacrifice. Often only one partner sacrifices selfishly — usually you — and you can’t build a sustainable relationship alone. At some point you must admit aloud: this relationship isn’t working for me. That admission matters because many of us hide the truth, excuse the other’s behavior, or stay silent out of fear of fights. That silence breeds disconnection, resentment and anger — and that anger is a signal, telling you you’re being mistreated or neglected in key areas. The goal isn’t to lash out but to listen to what that anger is saying. Admitting the relationship isn’t working doesn’t mean it’s doomed; it could still change. But foundations of trust, intimacy, and emotional safety always require two people. Ask yourself: does my partner want to change the relationship so it works for both of us, not just for them? It’s not enough to be capable of change — will they actually do it? Knowing you should act and actually doing it are very different, with very different results. Many of you have been shown repeatedly that your partner won’t take responsibility, reflect, or prioritize you. As Maya Angelou said, “When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” If you’ve realized this relationship isn’t changing, your choice is clear: leave, or continue feeling isolated and unfulfilled. It’s tempting to think that if you compromise more, ask differently, or be less “needy,” things might shift. But you’re already bending over backward — why should you be the only one? Why do you have to beg for the bare minimum? Time invested and emotional commitment don’t determine health or success; what matters is whether both partners are willing to meet the demands of trust, safety and intimacy. You don’t have to leave, but you should know what it takes not to be miserable: a mutual commitment to growth, maturity and emotional intelligence. If only one person is doing that work, the likely destination is loneliness and resentment. For those married with children, leaving feels impossibly hard and frightening, and I won’t pretend otherwise. People stay in unsatisfying marriages for many reasons and I’m not judging. But you leave when you’ve decided the relationship hasn’t led to fulfillment and you’re prepared to face the consequences of ending it. Some stay because of religious beliefs; that decision is yours. Staying doesn’t erase the consequences of being mistreated or neglected — your body and heart pull back from someone who isn’t safe; you can’t feel close to someone who dismisses or disrespects you. Mistreatment and complacency have repercussions, often leading you to withdraw, grow distant, and become resentful. Perfection isn’t the bar you need; safety, mutual respect and connection are. You don’t need perfect to be happy: you need someone who cares how you feel loved, who listens when you say you’re hurt instead of dismissing you, who lets you be honest without shaming you, and who still treats you with consideration. You need someone who puts in even a fraction of the effort they showed when dating. That’s available — we don’t require perfection, only consideration. Terry Real asks in The New Rules of Marriage: “Are enough of your needs being met to grieve the ones that aren’t?” That’s a powerful litmus test. No relationship will meet every need, but you shouldn’t settle for a partner who only offers the bare minimum. Step one is identifying what you need to feel valued, respected and connected. Step two is asking whether your partner will meet enough of those needs that you can grieve the rest and still feel whole. If the answer is yes, it’s worth trying; if not, it’s time to move on — or to accept that you’re choosing to stay despite not getting what you deserve. Every relationship requires grieving unmet needs to some degree, and that can still feel fulfilling if enough of your needs are met. What never leads to fulfillment is a partner who shows no interest in learning about or meeting any of your needs. If you decide to leave, expect some immature backlash: people often blame the one who walked away because they didn’t see what was happening inside the relationship. You’ll hear comments like, “Too bad you couldn’t make it work,” when in truth you were likely the one keeping it alive, carrying emotional labor and offering the apologies first. It’s rare that anyone blames the person who starved the relationship of what it needed. Don’t let the end of a relationship be read as your failure. This relationship taught you what you needed to know at this stage of your life; your task is to resist shame, reflect, give yourself grace and ask what lessons you should take forward. Many of us realize we missed red flags early on: love bombing, hot-and-cold inconsistency, using our efforts to prove our worth, avoiding conflict to seem easy-going, tolerating a dominant power dynamic that left us voiceless. Perhaps we didn’t understand equality and mutual respect then, but now we do, and those are non-negotiables. We needed to learn that honestly expressing our feelings, boundaries and needs isn’t being “too much”; it’s healthy when done assertively and respectfully. People who leave because you insist on being seen and valued aren’t your people anyway. Some of you had to learn you aren’t responsible for other people’s emotional reactions. It’s not your job to carry all the work of maintaining connection. You deserve the same respect, kindness and consideration you give others. It’s never acceptable for someone to call you names, yell, or silence you. Giving a person more of what they already take for granted isn’t love — it’s self-sabotage. When we bend over backward to keep the peace and walk on eggshells to predict emotions, we often enable bad behavior instead of standing up for what we deserve. If you avoided standing up because it would “start another fight,” that was a red flag you didn’t treat as seriously as you should have. People who care about you care about your feelings and limits; they don’t punish your honesty. So it’s your responsibility to choose who you share your life with, because you can’t control others — only your reactions and boundaries. You don’t owe anyone your time, energy or body. Don’t be baited into fights by someone who manipulates with lies or accusations; reacting plays into their control. Take the high road: recognize when you’re arguing with someone uninterested in your perspective or in acknowledging your worth. A mature person can accept responsibility, care about how their behavior affects you, and apologize in a way that leads to real change. Immature people blame their toxicity on you. It’s possible to have adult conversations about hurt and needs without them always turning into battles; two people who love each other can listen, hold space, validate and get curious about one another’s inner worlds. That is the bare minimum of love. We also need to understand why we so often settle into relationships where we feel we must earn love: familiarity. Dysfunction can feel familiar and, confusingly, safe. Healing from past trauma is essential so we stop abandoning ourselves to keep the peace. Whether you stay or leave, take accountability and stop only blaming the other person. Change into the person you want to be. When we shift our mindset, challenge old beliefs, and set a new, unapologetic standard for how we’ll be treated, we change the relationship — either our growth inspires our partner and the relationship improves, or their resistance and shaming reveal how wide the gap in maturity really is, making the choice to leave clearer. We do this for ourselves, not to manipulate anyone. We must reach the point where we can honestly think: if this relationship ends, I will survive. It will hurt, but I’ll be okay. Be willing to do everything in your power to save it, but not to carry the work of two people alone. We aren’t trying to force change; we’re freeing both of us to be who we will be while holding an unapologetic standard for how we deserve to be treated. That may sound cold or like removing “love” from the equation, but love alone hasn’t led to intimacy or trust here. If they say they love you yet the relationship isn’t sustainable for you, you must be prepared for that reality. Take responsibility: reflect, apologize, grow, and address the ways you’ve harmed the relationship — the times you yelled, were critical, passive-aggressive, or allowed your feelings to be ignored until you exploded. Admit if you didn’t set boundaries because you were scared; that’s on you, and now you can change. If vulnerability is punished, you must decide what to do. Do you keep trying to be nicer? Stop being honest? Accept this is how life will be? That choice determines the kind of relationship you will have. I don’t advocate unsafe conversations, but if the relationship has any chance, you must begin to be honest. If you still hoped it could work, that’s why you stayed — hope. The only path to real change is respectful, vulnerable honesty and telling your partner, “This relationship doesn’t work for me.” That’s the fork in the road: either you move toward health together, or you leave to move toward health alone. Either way, the toxic version of this relationship ends. You stop tolerating destructive patterns, stop burying feelings that later erupt in harmful ways, and stop making excuses. Either both of you do better, or you choose to do better on your own. You will no longer accept constant criticism, mockery, invalidation, or neglect of how you feel loved. You will be respectfully honest and create distance from people who punish your vulnerability. I hope they change — I hope it wakes them up, leads them to healing, genuine remorse and accountability, and that they learn to be a safe place again. I hope both of you can recognize dysfunctional patterns from childhood, own your parts, and make a concrete plan to restore connection, safety and trust. That was our journey, and it worked only because both of us committed to doing the work. Thank you for watching; I’ll continue praying for you, and I’ll see you next time.

How can you tell when it’s time to walk away from a relationship? That question feels one of the hardest to answer because we invest so much in someone and cling to the hope that things will improve. If we didn’t want it to continue, we’d already end it, yet deep down we sense something is off: we don’t feel consistently valued or prioritized, and this isn’t how love should feel. Most of you would be willing to do the work — read the books, go to therapy, learn to communicate better — if that would repair things. But chances are your partner shows no interest in those steps. For them, everything’s fine; it’s you who has the problem. So I want to remind you of what you already know: happiness, fulfillment, intimacy and connection in relationships require both people to contribute. After nearly a decade studying relationships and learning painfully from experience, I’ve learned love without sustained action won’t save a relationship. Think about a job: if you stop showing up, you’ll be fired, even if you claim to love the work. Feelings alone don’t replace the basic requirement to show up. The same is true for intimacy and closeness — they demand effort from both partners: trust, safety, accountability, the ability to apologize, consideration, and empathy. If another person has no interest in those things, you will never feel genuinely close to them. You can keep hoping they’ll change or keep dating their potential, but a relationship only works when two people decide to do the work together. My advice varies depending on whether you’re married with children or dating. If abuse is present, leave and get safe immediately. For those dating, the dating world may feel messy, but who you marry matters enormously — not to scare you but because marriage is inherently difficult. That’s why almost half of first marriages end, about 60% of second marriages end, and roughly 70% of third marriages end. Those glossy weddings and newlywed joy don’t guarantee a lasting union. From eleven years of marriage, I’ll say this plainly: if you’re with someone who is self-centered, refuses accountability, rarely cares about your inner life, and ignores your feelings, needs and dreams, it’s not negotiable — you need to leave. You might protest that nobody’s perfect, but love doesn’t excuse a lack of capacity to act lovingly. Love means thinking of someone else as much as you think of yourself; it’s mutual respect, curiosity about how the other person feels loved, and willingness to sacrifice. Often only one partner sacrifices selfishly — usually you — and you can’t build a sustainable relationship alone. At some point you must admit aloud: this relationship isn’t working for me. That admission matters because many of us hide the truth, excuse the other’s behavior, or stay silent out of fear of fights. That silence breeds disconnection, resentment and anger — and that anger is a signal, telling you you’re being mistreated or neglected in key areas. The goal isn’t to lash out but to listen to what that anger is saying. Admitting the relationship isn’t working doesn’t mean it’s doomed; it could still change. But foundations of trust, intimacy, and emotional safety always require two people. Ask yourself: does my partner want to change the relationship so it works for both of us, not just for them? It’s not enough to be capable of change — will they actually do it? Knowing you should act and actually doing it are very different, with very different results. Many of you have been shown repeatedly that your partner won’t take responsibility, reflect, or prioritize you. As Maya Angelou said, “When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” If you’ve realized this relationship isn’t changing, your choice is clear: leave, or continue feeling isolated and unfulfilled. It’s tempting to think that if you compromise more, ask differently, or be less “needy,” things might shift. But you’re already bending over backward — why should you be the only one? Why do you have to beg for the bare minimum? Time invested and emotional commitment don’t determine health or success; what matters is whether both partners are willing to meet the demands of trust, safety and intimacy. You don’t have to leave, but you should know what it takes not to be miserable: a mutual commitment to growth, maturity and emotional intelligence. If only one person is doing that work, the likely destination is loneliness and resentment. For those married with children, leaving feels impossibly hard and frightening, and I won’t pretend otherwise. People stay in unsatisfying marriages for many reasons and I’m not judging. But you leave when you’ve decided the relationship hasn’t led to fulfillment and you’re prepared to face the consequences of ending it. Some stay because of religious beliefs; that decision is yours. Staying doesn’t erase the consequences of being mistreated or neglected — your body and heart pull back from someone who isn’t safe; you can’t feel close to someone who dismisses or disrespects you. Mistreatment and complacency have repercussions, often leading you to withdraw, grow distant, and become resentful. Perfection isn’t the bar you need; safety, mutual respect and connection are. You don’t need perfect to be happy: you need someone who cares how you feel loved, who listens when you say you’re hurt instead of dismissing you, who lets you be honest without shaming you, and who still treats you with consideration. You need someone who puts in even a fraction of the effort they showed when dating. That’s available — we don’t require perfection, only consideration. Terry Real asks in The New Rules of Marriage: “Are enough of your needs being met to grieve the ones that aren’t?” That’s a powerful litmus test. No relationship will meet every need, but you shouldn’t settle for a partner who only offers the bare minimum. Step one is identifying what you need to feel valued, respected and connected. Step two is asking whether your partner will meet enough of those needs that you can grieve the rest and still feel whole. If the answer is yes, it’s worth trying; if not, it’s time to move on — or to accept that you’re choosing to stay despite not getting what you deserve. Every relationship requires grieving unmet needs to some degree, and that can still feel fulfilling if enough of your needs are met. What never leads to fulfillment is a partner who shows no interest in learning about or meeting any of your needs. If you decide to leave, expect some immature backlash: people often blame the one who walked away because they didn’t see what was happening inside the relationship. You’ll hear comments like, “Too bad you couldn’t make it work,” when in truth you were likely the one keeping it alive, carrying emotional labor and offering the apologies first. It’s rare that anyone blames the person who starved the relationship of what it needed. Don’t let the end of a relationship be read as your failure. This relationship taught you what you needed to know at this stage of your life; your task is to resist shame, reflect, give yourself grace and ask what lessons you should take forward. Many of us realize we missed red flags early on: love bombing, hot-and-cold inconsistency, using our efforts to prove our worth, avoiding conflict to seem easy-going, tolerating a dominant power dynamic that left us voiceless. Perhaps we didn’t understand equality and mutual respect then, but now we do, and those are non-negotiables. We needed to learn that honestly expressing our feelings, boundaries and needs isn’t being “too much”; it’s healthy when done assertively and respectfully. People who leave because you insist on being seen and valued aren’t your people anyway. Some of you had to learn you aren’t responsible for other people’s emotional reactions. It’s not your job to carry all the work of maintaining connection. You deserve the same respect, kindness and consideration you give others. It’s never acceptable for someone to call you names, yell, or silence you. Giving a person more of what they already take for granted isn’t love — it’s self-sabotage. When we bend over backward to keep the peace and walk on eggshells to predict emotions, we often enable bad behavior instead of standing up for what we deserve. If you avoided standing up because it would “start another fight,” that was a red flag you didn’t treat as seriously as you should have. People who care about you care about your feelings and limits; they don’t punish your honesty. So it’s your responsibility to choose who you share your life with, because you can’t control others — only your reactions and boundaries. You don’t owe anyone your time, energy or body. Don’t be baited into fights by someone who manipulates with lies or accusations; reacting plays into their control. Take the high road: recognize when you’re arguing with someone uninterested in your perspective or in acknowledging your worth. A mature person can accept responsibility, care about how their behavior affects you, and apologize in a way that leads to real change. Immature people blame their toxicity on you. It’s possible to have adult conversations about hurt and needs without them always turning into battles; two people who love each other can listen, hold space, validate and get curious about one another’s inner worlds. That is the bare minimum of love. We also need to understand why we so often settle into relationships where we feel we must earn love: familiarity. Dysfunction can feel familiar and, confusingly, safe. Healing from past trauma is essential so we stop abandoning ourselves to keep the peace. Whether you stay or leave, take accountability and stop only blaming the other person. Change into the person you want to be. When we shift our mindset, challenge old beliefs, and set a new, unapologetic standard for how we’ll be treated, we change the relationship — either our growth inspires our partner and the relationship improves, or their resistance and shaming reveal how wide the gap in maturity really is, making the choice to leave clearer. We do this for ourselves, not to manipulate anyone. We must reach the point where we can honestly think: if this relationship ends, I will survive. It will hurt, but I’ll be okay. Be willing to do everything in your power to save it, but not to carry the work of two people alone. We aren’t trying to force change; we’re freeing both of us to be who we will be while holding an unapologetic standard for how we deserve to be treated. That may sound cold or like removing “love” from the equation, but love alone hasn’t led to intimacy or trust here. If they say they love you yet the relationship isn’t sustainable for you, you must be prepared for that reality. Take responsibility: reflect, apologize, grow, and address the ways you’ve harmed the relationship — the times you yelled, were critical, passive-aggressive, or allowed your feelings to be ignored until you exploded. Admit if you didn’t set boundaries because you were scared; that’s on you, and now you can change. If vulnerability is punished, you must decide what to do. Do you keep trying to be nicer? Stop being honest? Accept this is how life will be? That choice determines the kind of relationship you will have. I don’t advocate unsafe conversations, but if the relationship has any chance, you must begin to be honest. If you still hoped it could work, that’s why you stayed — hope. The only path to real change is respectful, vulnerable honesty and telling your partner, “This relationship doesn’t work for me.” That’s the fork in the road: either you move toward health together, or you leave to move toward health alone. Either way, the toxic version of this relationship ends. You stop tolerating destructive patterns, stop burying feelings that later erupt in harmful ways, and stop making excuses. Either both of you do better, or you choose to do better on your own. You will no longer accept constant criticism, mockery, invalidation, or neglect of how you feel loved. You will be respectfully honest and create distance from people who punish your vulnerability. I hope they change — I hope it wakes them up, leads them to healing, genuine remorse and accountability, and that they learn to be a safe place again. I hope both of you can recognize dysfunctional patterns from childhood, own your parts, and make a concrete plan to restore connection, safety and trust. That was our journey, and it worked only because both of us committed to doing the work. Thank you for watching; I’ll continue praying for you, and I’ll see you next time.

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