20 Things You Should Never Accept in a Healthy Relationship
- Your partner is controlling Trying to dictate what you do, when you do it, or expecting you to adopt their beliefs and emotions without question is unacceptable.
- Your partner gaslights you Making you doubt your own feelings, memories, or sanity by denying reality or twisting facts.
- Your partner emotionally or verbally abuses you Insults, name-calling, belittling, yelling, or constant criticism.
- Your partner physically abuses you Any form of hitting, pushing, slapping, choking, or physical harm — immediate deal-breaker.
- Your partner pressures or guilts you into unwanted intimacy Consent is ongoing. Saying “you owe me,” “it’s your duty,” or getting angry when you say no is coercive and abusive.
- You don’t feel good about yourself around your partner A healthy partner brings out your best self, not your worst. Constantly feeling small, insecure, or “not enough” is a red flag.
- Your partner isolates you Discouraging or forbidding you from seeing friends, family, or pursuing hobbies to keep you dependent on them.
- Your partner insists you change who you are Trying to make you give up your passions, personality traits, values, or dreams to fit their ideal.
- You have physical anxiety reactions around your partner Tense muscles, racing heart, stomach drops, or panic when they walk into the room — your body is warning you.
- Your partner invalidates your experiences Dismissing your trauma, feelings, or past as “not a big deal,” “overreacting,” or “you’re too sensitive.”
- Your partner constantly judges you Criticizing your appearance, choices, body, personality, or shaming you (especially publicly).
- Your partner ignores your sexual boundaries Pressuring, begging, or proceeding after you’ve said no or shown discomfort.
- Your partner repeatedly violates your boundaries Even after you’ve clearly communicated them (about time, space, privacy, jokes, etc.).
- Your partner won’t acknowledge the relationship publicly Hiding you, refusing to define the relationship, or treating you like a secret or placeholder.
- Your partner constantly accuses you of cheating Unfounded jealousy, monitoring your phone/social media, or projecting their own guilt/insecurity onto you.
- Your partner talks over you or interrupts constantly Never letting you finish a thought or dismissing what you’re saying.
- Your partner shames you for your sexual history or body Slut-shaming, calling you names, or criticizing your past partners, body count, or clothing choices.
- Your partner belittles your career or ambitions Mocking your job, dreams, education, or trying to hold you back from opportunities.
- Your partner never takes accountability Always blaming you, others, or circumstances — never apologizing sincerely or changing behavior.
- Your partner knows they’re hurting you and doesn’t care or change The biggest red flag: awareness of the pain they cause + zero effort to stop. Remorse without change is manipulation.
A healthy relationship is built on mutual respect, trust, safety, kindness, and support. If several of these feel familiar, please consider reaching out to a trusted friend, therapist, or hotline. You deserve to feel safe and valued.