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Relationships

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How would this comment from your partner have made you feel?

115 replies

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 11:57

I have been with my partner for 5+ years. We are both older (50s).

For a few reasons, I don't have huge self confidence or particularly high self esteem. I don't really share these thoughts irl.

I live with a lot of insecurities that I'm not 'good enough' and, whilst I use all the skills I've developed to challenge this, I'm not immune to experiences that knock my confidence.

I'm posting about a specific incident but I'm happy to clarify and add detail if necessary. It's not the only thing of this nature that has happened but the comments seem to be ill considered rather than intentionally malicious.

I recently went to a local event with my partner and some friends. It was a really big deal and there were a lot of people there. As part of the event, there was a bit of karaoke.

My friend suggested we did something together for old times' sake as we used to do a lot of singing etc together for fun when we were younger. She is a professional musician/singer now. I am not. And, whilst I can carry a tune fairly well, no one is ever going to pay me to hear me sing!

I've been struggling a lot with my confidence recently for a few reasons and, as such, as I wanted to do it for a laugh and for old times sake but also so as not to let my insecurities win. I was really nervous about it and wasn't really looking forward to it at all. But I wasn't going to back out either.

As it was our turn, I stood up thinking it's OK, this'll be over in 3 mins and its not that big a deal, just have fun. It'll be fun... and my partner leant over to me and whispered, "You're up! Just make sure you take the microphone. She doesn't need any help to be heard!"

And just like that, i was floored. All I heard as I walked the 20 feet to stage was, you're just a bit shit really. She's so much better than you. And, whilst she is and I know that, I didn't need to be reminded of it by him just as I was about to put myself out there.

Instead of enjoying it, I just stood there for 3 mins thinking he's looking at me and thinking I'm shit, too quiet, too far from the microphone. Am I even in tune? When those thoughts wouldn't have entered my head otherwise. We all know what karaoke is like and we were supposed to he having a light hearted moment of silliness.

This was over a month ago and I haven't been able to bring myself to sing in front of him since. I normally sing around the house like most people do. I haven't even engaged in any conversation about the event in general in case he says something about it.

I just feel like a tiny piece of the "I'm ok" narrative I feed myself has just died. It's just chipped away another flake of confidence.

I know that won't have been his intention. I haven't spoken to him about it because I've felt too ashamed. He'd say he was just trying to be supportive. He wouldn't see (until I explained) that being supportive doesn't look like reminding someone they're a bit shit at something just as they're about to do it in feont of other people. He is often well intentioned but a bit of an emotional/verbal bull in a china shop.

I don't know whether I should speak to him.

And I don't know if it's something that sounded bad to me coming through the Not Good Enough filter or whether it was actually a dick thing thing say. Or whether it was fairly normal comment and most people would have had a different reaction/internal voice. I know it doesn't matter what other people would think/feel but it's important for me to understand other perspectives.

I just really wanted to know whether a comment like this from your partner, when you were already feeling a bit vulnerable/nervous, would have bothered you?

Is it something they'd have said?

I know it wasnt done to be malicious but it does reflect how he sees me.

OP posts:
Channellingsophistication · 29/06/2026 17:13

I would also interpret the comment in a different way to the way you did. I would see the comment as him saying your friend is loud and doesn't need the microphone and he wanted you to be heard.

Malinia · 29/06/2026 17:18

OP, I recommend some therapy, you can get six sessions free through your GP. I grew up with a negative parent. My dad still criticises everything I do, only the other day he told me I don't know how to cook, mansplained gardening to me like I was an idiot, and nothing I do is ever right. It used to really bother me but now I just laugh internally at his nonsense. It's a him issue, not me, but it took therapy and work to get to this stage.

Do it because you'll feel amazing once you've broken this.

BotterMon · 29/06/2026 17:21

The fact that you turn a compliment into a negative says a lot about you. I think you need some professional help to change your mindset.

MorrisZapp · 29/06/2026 17:41

Singing is one of the few things it's entirely normal to be shite at. There is absolutely no expectation on anyone to be a great singer. You can be the world's worst (like my mother in law) and literally nobody will think an iota less of you.

I'm sure you're as good as anyone op but it's not something to judge yourself on.

Sometimessmiling · 30/06/2026 18:08

Malinia · 29/06/2026 11:59

I think you completely misunderstood the comment. I took it as him saying your friend is loud and might overshadow you and he wanted to be sure you were heard.

Exactly this for me too

Pickledonions12 · 30/06/2026 19:06

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 13:44

Thank you.

Yes, what he meant and my interpretation don't necessarily match in my mind. Obviously!

So I needed to know how other women would interpret it. I can also understand that the way you would all interpret it is driven by understanding what was meant by it.

I don't have that.

I'm happy to accept that my interpretation was off.

To me, it felt like an opportunity to remind me that I wasn't 'good enough' generally. Not 'not a good enough singer' but just fundamentally not good enough. And it felt like it made something that should have been light hearted and fun in to a competition. It didn't actually matter if I couldn't be heard. That wasn't the point of it.

You have zero self belief therefore anything anyone says which you choose to interpret as a criticism BECOMES a criticism

Even if what the other person said was NOT a criticism

This is very very unfair of you

SourdoughSally · 30/06/2026 19:19

Malinia · 29/06/2026 11:59

I think you completely misunderstood the comment. I took it as him saying your friend is loud and might overshadow you and he wanted to be sure you were heard.

Yes, this is what I thought he meant too. I think it was meant to be a nice comment

pineapplecrushed · 30/06/2026 19:56

he didn't mean it that way, you have totally over thought this.

JJWT · 30/06/2026 20:11

Yep, agree with others. My take is he's saying she's a gob on legs so make sure you get your fair share of the limelight. Its a shame for you both that it has affected you the way it has. Very unfortunate. I hope you can shake it off and enjoy yourself bit more.

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 30/06/2026 20:16

Thanks.

I would just say that there have been some quite unkind comments towards my friend.

She is a lovely person and she isn't a gob on legs or a loudmouth as some have suggested.

But I do appreciate the sentiments and clarification and other people's interprtations, thank you. It has been really helpful and also useful.

OP posts:
MMUmum · 30/06/2026 20:47

Surely what he meant was her voice would carry because that's how she's been trained, but with no professional training you would need the mike to assist you, he never said you were no good Op, please rethink this and be kind to yourself

SENsupportplease · 30/06/2026 23:29

You know one can be both lovely AND loud
They don’t contradict each other
Loud also isn’t necessarily a bad thing

Mere1 · 30/06/2026 23:40

Malinia · 29/06/2026 11:59

I think you completely misunderstood the comment. I took it as him saying your friend is loud and might overshadow you and he wanted to be sure you were heard.

Agree

Dilemma999 · 01/07/2026 00:28

Have you had proper psychotherapy? I’d look into this with a therapist you feel comfortable with. Your feelings about this comment are out of proportion. You have some insight into why you might have interpreted it one way but it sounds like you have a lot of emotional stuff to unpack. It can take a long time.

SpringSunshines · 01/07/2026 14:07

My impression from what you say he said is
He thinks you are ace, he wanted everyone else to hear that you are ace!

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