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5 Signs That You Are Suffocating Your Partner
By: Kratika Fri, 27 Aug 2021 11:21:37
A quick sweep across the internet on the topic of love, and it swiftly becomes apparent that conventional wisdom on the subject would have us believe that you simply can’t have enough of it. Whilst the truth of that matter is open to debate, what certainly is true is that love doesn’t necessarily always manifest itself in the healthiest of ways.
What one person perceives as a loving and heartfelt gesture, another might see as creepy. What one person sees as committed and undying devotion, another might see as stalking. What one half of a relationship might see as giving their all to make it work, the other might see as suffocation.
# Your partner is becoming withdrawn
This is the most common sign that something is wrong with your relationship. There are many reasons why it could be happening, but working out exactly what that might be comes with being honest with yourself and asking the question: am I suffocating my partner?
If your partner is the kind of person who needs their personal space, but just isn’t getting it because you insist on being with them around the clock, they will find the strangest ways to draw up lines to keep you out.
# You don’t spend quality time together
Time and quality time spent together are two very different things. Time is a qualitative, not just a quantitative, entity. Spending all your time together is not particularly a good thing, and it can just make things seem tense and claustrophobic.
Quality time, on the other hand, is about putting aside any distractions and committing to a period of conversational, spiritual and physical exploration – re-aligning your relationship so to speak. However, spending quality time together is almost impossible when one of you is insisting on spending too much time together, which can then reduce the quality of said time.
# It shows in their body language
Although not always a feel safe indication, body language will often reflect someone’s need to escape, which is a prime indicator that one half of a couple is feeling stifled. Some signs of suffocation to look out for are the following:
– When hugging or kissing you, the upper body is pressed firmly against yours but their hips and feet are turned away, ready to take themselves elsewhere as soon as they have finished.
– When talking to you, their body is turned aside and their eye contact is only fleeting, indicating they are trying not to commit to a conversation, which might lead to further one-on-one time.
– Conversations often take place in doorways, with your other half subliminally trying to show you that they have other things to attend to and don’t have time for a lengthy conversation.
– In bed, hugs no longer consist of full on body contact. Instead, it’s a draped arm or hand half-heartedly fulfilling the constant contact that your partner feels they must dutifully attend to.
None of these things mean that your partner has fallen out of love with you, but choosing to engage in only fleeting conversations and bodily contact may mean that they’re trying to get away.
# You’ve become a Checkpoint Charlie
Even the most suffocated of individuals will find an opportunity to temporarily obtain freedom from his or her clingier half. This may sometimes work, but can also backfire to epic proportions. In such situations like this, it’s fine to send a text message or two with a ‘how’s it going’ or ‘I love you’. That’s kind of what being a couple is all about, and if the other half objects to that then it is they who have the problem.
# Your partner is hesitant to be around you
There used to be a time when your other half would finish work as soon as the clock struck 5pm so they can run home to you. Now they’re finishing off their work first before they leave the office, and they’re less eager to catch the quickest ride home. This can show that any activity that isn’t as smothering as spending time with you is way more preferable in your partner’s book.
Even if it means clocking in some overtime work or volunteering in causes that your partner isn’t all that into, he or she will take it as long as it means time away from being smothered. It’s as if they’d take any excuse, no matter how mundane, just to get away from you.