@mekki_mekki1: #CapCut

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Tuesday 14 July 2026 09:56:16 GMT
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Being listened to isn't the same as being emotionally safe. Plenty of people caught in an emotionally abusive relationship will say their partner seems understanding, attentive, even brilliant at making them feel heard, most of the time. The real test is what happens when what you're raising is actually about them, or about the relationship itself. That's usually where things shift. In a genuinely safe relationship, you shouldn't need evidence prepared in advance, a rehearsed argument, or the energy to survive a difficult conversation just to have your point taken seriously. Disagreement isn't the warning sign either, it's completely normal for two people to see things differently and still come out the other side feeling a little closer. What marks an emotionally abusive relationship apart is the pattern afterwards, one person consistently trying to be heard while the other deflects blame, minimises feelings, and leaves them feeling small. But the clearest sign is often the quietest one. If you find yourself hiding parts of who you are, softening your personality, or constantly working on yourself just to keep the peace, that isn't safety, no matter how wonderful the person seems at other times or how much everyone else adores them. Feeling like a problem within a relationship is always worth taking seriously, whatever the supposed problem is Official accounts and resources: www.ellyanastasiades.com #emotionallyabusiverelationship #relationshipabuse #emotionalabuse #relationshiptips #relationshiptok
Being listened to isn't the same as being emotionally safe. Plenty of people caught in an emotionally abusive relationship will say their partner seems understanding, attentive, even brilliant at making them feel heard, most of the time. The real test is what happens when what you're raising is actually about them, or about the relationship itself. That's usually where things shift. In a genuinely safe relationship, you shouldn't need evidence prepared in advance, a rehearsed argument, or the energy to survive a difficult conversation just to have your point taken seriously. Disagreement isn't the warning sign either, it's completely normal for two people to see things differently and still come out the other side feeling a little closer. What marks an emotionally abusive relationship apart is the pattern afterwards, one person consistently trying to be heard while the other deflects blame, minimises feelings, and leaves them feeling small. But the clearest sign is often the quietest one. If you find yourself hiding parts of who you are, softening your personality, or constantly working on yourself just to keep the peace, that isn't safety, no matter how wonderful the person seems at other times or how much everyone else adores them. Feeling like a problem within a relationship is always worth taking seriously, whatever the supposed problem is Official accounts and resources: www.ellyanastasiades.com #emotionallyabusiverelationship #relationshipabuse #emotionalabuse #relationshiptips #relationshiptok

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