- A one-off, or on occasion is fine; but having to constantly reassure someone that they aren’t the cause of every single frustration you encounter gets extremely exhausting. - Repetition of needing to correct someone else’s assumptions about my personal feelings is so frustrating. 
- Energy vampires 
- My mother. She made some bandanas for our dog, and gave them to us a week or so ago. We thought they were cool. Later, she said, “Sorry you didn’t like the bandanas.” I was like, “News to me, I thought they were great.” “Well, they weren’t what <my wife> was expecting.” - I didn’t even bother mentioning it to my wife until yesterday, who, of course, was fine with the bandanas, as I knew she would be. During that conversation, my wife and I talked about how we need to constantly walk on eggshells around her, because who knows what she’ll be upset about next. It’s exhausting. - I don’t know where my mother gets this stuff. The sad part is that this is actually one of the more sane incidents. 
- It’s emotional abuse. - You say that, but there’s a flip side to this. I’ve been in an abusive relationship where my SO was always a hair trigger away from a full on apeshit moment. You find yourself (regardless of your confidence) wondering if you’ve annoyed them and after a while, you flinch at any shift in tone of voice. It can be a sign of abuse, but not just in the way you mention. - This meme is relatable but what you said is absolutely true. I’ve been at the barrel end of this psychological abuse. Of course, she was physically abusive too. 
- It doesn’t matter if the behavior is the result of past trauma. Taking that trauma out on your partner by treating them like they’re an abusive person is abusive. - The behavior being understandable doesn’t make it alright. - Hold up… You’re saying that being paranoid of being hurt because you’ve been hurt in the past is abusive to the person the one with trauma is untrusting of? 🤨 - Yes. It’s on you to manage your emotions. It’s not alright to treat your partner like an abuser because you were hurt in the past. Trauma doesn’t give you a free pass to treat people poorly. - The people downvoting clearly haven’t been in a long term relationship with someone with severe PTSD. I’m going on 8 years, and while it’s getting better, it’s a huge struggle mentally to constantly be treated like you’re a bad person through absolutely no fault of your own. I’m in therapy specifically because of it. - I have my own traumas from my past, but I work hard to not let it affect my relationship because it’s not fair to my SO to take that trauma out on them. - You don’t seem to know the difference between “difficult to deal with” and “abuse,” or there’s something else going on in your relationship beyond them just not trusting you easily. A difficulty or inability to managing emotions is also a symptom of certain traumas like PTSD so putting the onus on someone you know has this difficulty like that is in really poor taste and shows a lack of understanding. - No one is responsible for your reaction to your emotions except for yourself. If your issues cause you to treat your partner poorly, it’s on you to address them. - Like I said at the beginning, having a reason for mistreating your partner doesn’t make it acceptable. 
 
 
- Yes. Relationships are built on trust. If you won’t trust your partner, you’re not being a good partner to them. - so is a person with trust issues who really struggled supposed to just go and die alone? - this is just victim blaming - No, they’re supposed to put in the work to move past it. No one is responsible for your response to your emotions but you. 
- They’re supposed to date someone who can take it, if they need to date. But dating someone who can’t handle it is abuse. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- Hypersensitivity to others is a bitch - Is it really being hypersensitive when it is wrong? 
- The opposite is worse… to others:-). 
- Ignoring the fact that your partner loves you isn’t sensitivity. - Is this contextual based on the comic? I’m not familiar with the comic strip 
 
 
- This can get complicated when you know that the “No” can actually mean “Yes, but I don’t want to get annoyed any further”. 
- May as well just say “only when you ask me that” and get to where you were going eventually anyways. 
- “I’m not.” - “Oh, god, I bet they’re mad that I thought they’d be mad at me for asking!” 
- Me every other time I meet up with a friend 
- Honestly, comics like this are eye opening to me as I never would have imagined feeling this way. 
- “Get some confidence, stupid.” 
- Better ask them 
- That’s not funny 










