Let’s be real: no relationship is perfect, and we can all vouch for this in our lives. Every couple argues, gets on each other’s nerves, and has off days. But sometimes, things evolve in a way that goes deeper than little disagreements. That’s when relationships cease feeling fulfilling and start to feel draining.
Here are a few of the biggest ways relationships can suck — and what to do about them.
1. Communication Turns Into a Battlefield
When every conversation ends in defensiveness, sarcasm, or raised voices, the relationship starts to feel more like a war zone than a partnership.
It’s not just about what’s said — it’s how it’s said. If both sides stop listening, resentment takes the wheel and drives the relationship off a cliff.
Maybe Pat Benatar was onto something when she said that love is a battlefield.
Fix: Slow down and take a deep breath. Choose your words with care, and watch your tone. Listen more than you speak. And if you can’t talk without fighting, take a pause until you can.
2. One Person Stops Trying
Relationships are two-way streets. When one person checks out of the Relationship Hotel — ceases putting in effort, stops showing affection, or acts like they’re “over it”— the imbalance becomes crystal clear. It leaves the other person exhausted from carrying all the weight.
Fix: Call it out. Don’t ignore the lack of effort. Either the spark needs to be rekindled or it’s time to re-evaluate the future.
3. Trust is Damaged
Whether it’s cheating, stealing, or other acts of betrayal, trust is unequivocally the backbone of any relationship. Once it cracks, everything feels unstable. Even small suspicions can quickly snowball into full-blown doubts that shatter the bond.
Fix: Though there are no guarantees, trust can be rebuilt — but only if both people are fully committed to repairing it. If not, it’s better to walk away than stay stuck in a perpetual cycle of suspicion.
4. You Start to Feel Lonely Together
There’s nothing worse than being in a relationship but still feeling alone. When the emotional connection fades — no laughter, no profound talks, no real intimacy —it makes you wonder why you’re even together.
Fix: Aim to reconnect so that you don't feel like mere roommates. Spend intentional time together sans distractions. If the effort still isn’t mutual, though, loneliness will keep rearing its ugly head.
Final Thought
Relationships don’t suck because they’re hard—they suck when the basics (trust, effort, communication, connection) are missing or lackluster. When those break down, it stops being love and starts being work, with no payoff in sight.
At the end of the day, a good relationship should bring more peace than stress, more growth than setbacks, and more smiles than tears. If it doesn’t, that’s your sign something needs to change, or that the two of you just aren't as compatible as you thought.
Anyone expecting a relationship to carry itself is in for a rude awakening. They take serious effort and sacrifice on the part of both partners.
Make sure to stay at the Relationship Hotel for can't-miss relationship tips, dating advice, and more.
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