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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Can emotional safety return after repeated conflict, or is this incompatibility?

33 replies

Oddnorth · 09/04/2026 21:34

I'm in dire need of some wisdom. I rearranged it and shorten for better reading. Sorry for the ong post.

I’m writing this because I genuinely need outside perspective. I’ve been going in circles in my own head for a long time and I don’t trust my own judgment anymore.

I’m 36M, she’s 33F. We’ve been together around 10–11 months. There is real love here. I care about her deeply, and she also loves me very strongly. She is very affectionate, emotionally intense, shows admiration, buys gifts, and tries to be close. In many ways, she really invests in me and the relationship.

At the same time, this relationship has become mentally exhausting for me, and I’m trying to understand whether what I’m experiencing is something that can improve, or something that reflects deeper incompatibility.

We are compatible in many ways. We spend time together easily, share hobbies, and there are moments where it genuinely feels like a strong best-friend and partner dynamic. She can be warm, affectionate, and expressive, and talks about building a future together. Honestly, in a big part of the relationship, she shows love very clearly and tries to be there for me, which is why this situation is so confusing.

When I love someone, I invest heavily. I’ve supported her emotionally, helped her through financial stress, helped with practical things, and tried to create stability. I’m not saying this in a transactional way, but it shapes how I experience the relationship. What I look for in return is peace, respect, softness, and emotional safety.

She has a difficult emotional background, including feeling unsupported growing up, abandonment fears, and painful past relationships. From what I see, she can become emotionally reactive under stress and sometimes brings past experiences into current situations. She has acknowledged she hurt me and says she wants to improve, and is open to therapy.

The issue is not one big argument, but a repeated pattern of smaller interactions. Over time I noticed sharp tone in small situations, frustration over minor things, feeling corrected or judged in normal moments, and tension appearing in otherwise neutral situations. There were comments about small messes, criticism about how I do things, irritation during normal planning, and tension even during situations I was trying to make enjoyable. Individually small, but over time they added up.

At some point I even started writing things down because it kept repeating and I started questioning my own perception. It stopped feeling like isolated incidents and more like a pattern. There were repeated moments of criticism over small things, tension during intimacy connected to past topics, stress before plans, anger during normal conversations, dismissive-sounding comments, sudden “you annoyed me” moments, and escalation during already stressful moments.

There were also more intense situations where arguments escalated close to “maybe we shouldn’t be together” more than once, and one heated situation where very hurtful things were said to me. She was very drunk during that moment (we had been drinking wine), and she latersaid she doesn’t clearly remember what she said and attributes it to emotional overload and past experiences.

More recently there have been moments where she shows visible frustration over small inconveniences even when I try to solve them, and a critical tone appears even in otherwise normal situations.

I’m not listing these to blame her, but because they became frequent enough to feel like a pattern. When I bring them up, she feels I’m not letting things go. From my side, I’m trying to explain how repeated experiences changed how I feel. It’s not about one event, it’s about accumulation.

At times, especially in daily situations like the kitchen, I feel like I’m walking on eggshells. Even when doing small things, I catch myself thinking “will this cause a reaction?” and that creates a constant low-level tension for me.

One moment affected me more than anything else. I was extremely sick, had a high fever (around 40°C), and had not slept at all for three full days. I was physically and mentally exhausted. During that time, we ended up in a prolonged argument that started over something very small about how food (cheese) was placed on a plate.

The discussion escalated and continued for hours. I remember clearly telling her during the argument that I hadn’t slept for three days and that I was very sick and needed us to stop, but the conflict still continued. That experience had a strong impact on me, because it made me feel like my condition and vulnerability were not fully taken into account in that moment.

Earlier in the relationship, even after conflict, I wanted to reconnect and felt drawn to her. Now I still care, but feel more distant. Affection feels more mechanical, I feel guarded, and instead of relaxing I feel like I’m observing and evaluating.

When I bring up past situations, she feels I’m not forgiving. From my side, I’m not trying to criticize, but to explain a pattern. I feel like I forgave emotionally, but my sense of safety hasn’t fully returned.

Recently she has been trying to improve. She acknowledges she hurt me, tries to understand more, is more careful, and is open to therapy. At the same time, we still sometimes see events differently, and she sometimes feels my reactions are too strong.

Another thing I’ve noticed is that this ongoing stress has started affecting me physically. I had acid reflux years ago and had fully recovered from it, but recently it has come back quite strongly. I’ve been experiencing nausea and noticeable reflux symptoms again, which I didn’t have for years. It feels like the constant tension and stress might be contributing to it.

This is where I’m confused. Because on one hand, she really loves me and shows it in many ways, and a big portion of the relationship is actually positive. On the other hand, these repeated patterns and certain key moments have changed how I feel internally.

I’m not asking whether I should leave or stay. I’m trying to understand what is happening psychologically. How do people differentiate emotional burnout from incompatibility? When repeated small conflicts happen like this, can emotional safety realistically rebuild? If someone understands later and tries to change, can it still repair things? Or does emotional distance usually become permanent?

OP posts:
Oddnorth · 10/04/2026 12:38

LapisBlue · 10/04/2026 12:32

You didn't write it yourself though. Did you? Bowing out now.

Ummm I SWEAR I wrote it all by hand in my room?

Anyways I need help with my situation at hand not try to convince people how I wrote it because i feel like shit atm.

OP posts:
mini124 · 10/04/2026 12:42

Your relationship is still new and there shouldn't be anywhere near this level of angst and conflict. I don't think it is incompatibility as such, but simply that she isn't in the right place emotionally to be in any kind of a relationship right now - either with you or anyone else, quite honestly. She has some long-term issues resulting from previous experiences/ trauma/whatever and she needs to work on those before embarking on a relationship with someone.
You can't fix this relationship, however hard you try. Sorry, but there it is (and in case you are wondering, I would say exactly the same if the sexes were reversed).

This is the best advice anyone can give you. She needs to work on herself before she can invest further in the relationship. It also sounds like there is some level of anxious attachment in there. I am not telling you to walk away as nobody is perfect but her moods and reactions are unhealthy. Allow her to seek help & support her. If she manages to overcome her problems and the relationship is healthy then you can invest further into the relationship.

SheilaMaid76543 · 10/04/2026 12:52

In answer to your question: it shouldn’t be this hard early on op! If love doesn’t blind or smooth over one another’s faults in at least the first couple of years then I don’t think the relationship is sustainable.

Your girlfriend obviously comes from a more combative environment which makes her prickly and defensive because that probably was her survival mechanism as a child.. And you come across as a bit too perfect and I get a bit of a visceral ick when you state you want peace and softness from a woman bc it sounds like something off Instagram and more importantly like she isn’t allowed to raise any of your less than optimum traits.

I see you have tried o explain the softness comment in your update:

I told her her "Can you please stop talking so we can eat in peace?" even though it was a reaction to her frustration again to some thing about food cooking, I saw her visibly sad so I stopped it permanently. Never once raised my voice at her, never critisized her etc. That's softness and making your spouse feel safe

Sorry, I may have misunderstood your writing style, but if you think telling a woman to “stop talking so we can eat in peace” is a way of creating softness and making your spouse feel safe then you have a lot to learn about relationships. It’s not up to you to be in charge in that moment. She is your equal partner, not your child! The way to create softness is to listen, validate, discuss, apologise if necessary and resolve. If you ask a woman to stop talking it comes across as controlling and cold which is the opposite of soft.

Also I don’t really trust ops under the Relationship topic which lay out a problem by describing all the faults of the other person but includes no negative reflection about themselves.

People can learn and change and it’s evident that your gf is trying to regulate herself more, but this relationship feels too far gone from what you have written!

Look op, you may be a paragon of a boyfriend, the perfect person, and she may be unreasonable, but I strongly get the impression that you are not compatible and she would be better off with someone who is a bit more easy going and less defensive.

UpDownAllAround1 · 10/04/2026 13:02

seems lots of angst around food. Is food an issue for her?

Oddnorth · 10/04/2026 13:12

@SheilaMaid76543
Sorry, I may have misunderstood your writing style, but if you think telling a woman to “stop talking so we can eat in peace” is a way of creating softness and making your spouse feel safe then you have a lot to learn about relationships.

What I was trying to tell here is that I made one huge mistake at the start of the relationship and seeing her upset made to do stop saying these things completely. I don't think I'm perfect at all. I'm just trying to understand what's happening in my relationship. Trying to create a balance between being a good partner and not being an emotional punching bag. Maybe I'm not perfect but I try my absolute best for her.

I know she has a very troubled past, but sometimes I feel like she takes it all out on me.

But another part of me telling me why do I feel like walking on eggshells, why is she keep doing the things I told her time and time again that upsets me. Why after 5 years my acid reflux is back?

I love her, I really do. And the reason I'm writing a forum mainly for women is maybe I can gain some wisdom to continue, there is a way to both heal myself and her.

she would be better off with someone who is a bit more easy going and less defensive.

I don't know why did you think I'm not easy going and defensive but if you knew me you wouldn't say that I'm sure.

OP posts:
ForTipsyFinch · 10/04/2026 13:14

Would you tolerate a friend who makes you feel like this? If the answer is no, why accept it as something you want in a romantic parter? Feeling emotionally burned out by someone’s behaviour when it hasn’t even been a full year is not a good sign of things to come.

ForTipsyFinch · 10/04/2026 13:15

Oddnorth · 10/04/2026 12:22

By the way again I CANNOT emphasize this enough, other than these situations she's sweet as hell, always telling me she loves me so much, wants to hug me, giving me gifts, telling me she misses me all the time. Thinks about me, telling my I'm the best man in every aspect she has. That's why I'm confused and I'm in this forum :)

All that just sounds like love bombing tbh. It’s what keeps people hooked when their day to day behaviour doesn’t line up with what they claim.

SheilaMaid76543 · 10/04/2026 18:38

Oddnorth · 10/04/2026 13:12

@SheilaMaid76543
Sorry, I may have misunderstood your writing style, but if you think telling a woman to “stop talking so we can eat in peace” is a way of creating softness and making your spouse feel safe then you have a lot to learn about relationships.

What I was trying to tell here is that I made one huge mistake at the start of the relationship and seeing her upset made to do stop saying these things completely. I don't think I'm perfect at all. I'm just trying to understand what's happening in my relationship. Trying to create a balance between being a good partner and not being an emotional punching bag. Maybe I'm not perfect but I try my absolute best for her.

I know she has a very troubled past, but sometimes I feel like she takes it all out on me.

But another part of me telling me why do I feel like walking on eggshells, why is she keep doing the things I told her time and time again that upsets me. Why after 5 years my acid reflux is back?

I love her, I really do. And the reason I'm writing a forum mainly for women is maybe I can gain some wisdom to continue, there is a way to both heal myself and her.

she would be better off with someone who is a bit more easy going and less defensive.

I don't know why did you think I'm not easy going and defensive but if you knew me you wouldn't say that I'm sure.

Fair enough op, I don’t know you, it’s impossible to get a full picture from a few paragraphs, so I apologise if my posts came across too harshly.

Fwiw imho you definitely should not be continuing a relationship where you feel you have to walk on eggshells. Definitely not. That’s totally unfair on you and too stressful,

I think you come across a little defensively in what you have written here, and your very detailed answers don’t exactly give the impression of someone who is easy going, but as you say, it’s hard to know without meeting someone.

In summary, I’m afraid no, I don’t think you can heal her, and moreover it’s not your job to do so. We can only ever work on ourselves. Ultimately you have to love someone for who they are, warts and all, and not always have the expectation of them changing. I’m sorry but sometimes love isn’t enough.

Good luck to you whatever you decide,

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