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Budget and the Bees
Budget and the Bees
Latrice Perez

They Don’t Need to Yell to Control You — They Just Need to Shrink You

relationship behaviors
Image source: shutterstock.com

Toxic relationships rarely start with explosions; instead, they start with shrinking. It is a slow, methodical process where your world gets smaller day by day. You stop seeing certain friends. Then, you quit the hobby that takes up “family time,” and eventually, you stop wearing the dress that gets too much attention. Before you know it, your entire life fits inside the tiny box your partner has approved. This isn’t love; it’s containment. In fact, it happens so gradually that you often mistake the cage for a home.

The “I just miss you” guilt trip

It sounds sweet, doesn’t it? However, every time you go out with friends, you get a text saying they are lonely or sad without you. Slowly, you stop going out because the guilt isn’t worth the fun. They aren’t forbidding you from leaving; rather, they are just making sure you don’t enjoy it. Ultimately, this behavior weaponizes your empathy against you, making you feel responsible for their boredom or unhappiness whenever you aren’t present.

The budget veto

They scrutinize every penny you spend on yourself while ignoring their own spending. Consequently, you start second-guessing buying a coffee or a book. Your financial world shrinks to essentials only, while they maintain their freedom. This creates a dynamic where you have to ask permission to exist. Furthermore, this financial shrinking limits your options; you can’t travel, learn, or grow if you don’t have the resources to do so.

The subtle mockery of your interests

Perhaps you love painting, but they call it your “little hobby.” Or maybe you like a certain band, and they roll their eyes. These small digs make you feel foolish for having passions outside the relationship. Eventually, you drop them to avoid the ridicule. By devaluing what brings you joy, they remove the things that make you an individual, leaving only the parts of you that serve the relationship.

The chaos manufacture

Every time you have a big event—a presentation at work, a girls’ trip, a family reunion—they suddenly have a crisis. For instance, they get sick, start a fight, or have a breakdown. You learn that your success or independence triggers chaos, so you stop planning things. Therefore, you start to associate your own milestones with stress rather than celebration, so you stop reaching for them.

The “they don’t like me” wedge

They claim your family or friends don’t like them or are rude to them. This accusation forces you to defend them or distance yourself from your loved ones to avoid awkwardness. Effectively, it isolates you by painting your support system as the enemy. Consequently, you slowly cut ties with the people who would tell you that this relationship isn’t healthy, leaving you on an island with only your partner for company.

The sleep deprivation tactic

They want to talk about heavy relationship issues right when you need to sleep. By keeping you tired, they limit your cognitive ability to think clearly or maintain your own schedule. As a result, your world shrinks to a haze of exhaustion where you just want to get through the day. A tired mind is easier to manipulate, and when you are surviving on fumes, you don’t have the energy to fight for your space.

The car passenger syndrome

They always drive. While it seems helpful, it means they control when you leave and where you go. You lose your literal mobility. If you get into an argument at a party, you are trapped until they decide it is time to go home. Ultimately, this physical dependency reinforces the psychological one; you literally cannot move without them.

The jealousy masquerading as protection

“I don’t want you going there because it’s not safe.” “I don’t like that guy because he looks at you wrong.” They frame their control as concern for your safety. Instead of feeling secure, it makes you feel like the world is dangerous and they are your only shield, shrinking your comfort zone to zero. Therefore, you stop trusting your own judgment and start relying entirely on their threat assessment.

Expand Your Borders

Love should make your world bigger, not smaller. If you look around and realize you have no hobbies, no friends, and no money of your own, you haven’t just compromised—you have disappeared. It is time to push back the walls and reclaim the territory of your own life.

Have you noticed your world getting smaller? Tell us which behavior you recognize in the comments.

What to Read Next…

The post They Don’t Need to Yell to Control You — They Just Need to Shrink You appeared first on Budget and the Bees.

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