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18 Things People Do in Relationships That Quietly Make Them Hard to Love

Updated on January 31, 2026 by TMM Staff · Dating & Confidence

A Man Sitting in Front of a Laptop Beside an Upset Woman
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

Most relationships do not collapse because of one explosive moment. They weaken through small behaviours that repeat until affection feels strained and connection feels unsafe. Many of these habits are not obvious because they can look like personality, stress, or “just being honest.” Over time, though, they create emotional distance and make a partner feel unimportant, unheard, or unsupported. This list is not about labeling someone as unlovable, but about naming behaviours that make love harder to feel and express. When these patterns change, relationships often soften quickly.

Making Everything About “Winning”

An Upset Woman Sitting at the Table Beside a Man
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

When every disagreement becomes a contest, the relationship stops feeling like a team. Winning may provide temporary satisfaction, but it usually costs trust and warmth. Partners begin to hide feelings because honesty becomes ammunition. This creates defensiveness, not closeness. Over time, the relationship feels exhausting rather than supportive. Love struggles when ego becomes more important than repair.

Being Chronically Negative

Young couple having conflict at home
©Alex Green/pexels.com

A negative mindset can turn everyday life into a complaint session. Even when complaints are valid, constant negativity makes a relationship feel heavy. Partners often stop sharing joy because it gets dismissed or minimized. This reduces playfulness, which is a key part of connection. Many people pull away emotionally when optimism is punished. Love is harder to sustain when the emotional climate feels bleak.

Withholding Affection as a “Lesson”

Upset couple sitting on the bed apart from each other
©Alex Green/pexels.com

Some people use affection, intimacy, or warmth as leverage after conflict. This may feel like self-protection, but it usually comes across as punishment. It teaches a partner that closeness is conditional and unstable. Over time, the relationship feels unsafe because affection can be removed at any moment. Healthy boundaries are different from emotional withholding. Love struggles when warmth becomes a bargaining chip.

Taking Without Noticing the Cost

Man Checking On Woman on bed unaffectionate
©Pavel Danilyuk/pexels.com

Many relationships become one-sided without anyone announcing it. One partner gives time, effort, emotional support, or planning, while the other receives and assumes it is normal. The giving partner eventually feels invisible. The receiving partner often feels shocked when resentment surfaces. Love depends on mutual awareness, not just good intentions. When costs are ignored, connection becomes fragile.

Turning Small Issues Into Big Scenes

Young couple having conflict at table
©Alex Green/pexels.com

Overreactions can make a partner feel like they are always one mistake away from chaos. When every inconvenience becomes a crisis, emotional safety disappears. A partner may start walking on eggshells, which kills intimacy. This pattern often comes from stress, anxiety, or unresolved emotions. Still, it creates a relationship environment that feels unstable. Love is harder when calm is rare.

Avoiding Accountability With Excuses

Man in Blue Long Sleeve Shirt Looking Stressed
©Antoni Shkraba Studio/pexels.com

Excuses can sound reasonable while still blocking change. “That’s just how I am” or “I was tired” becomes a repeatable escape hatch. Over time, a partner feels like their pain does not matter because nothing improves. Accountability is not self-hate, it is responsibility and repair. A relationship cannot grow without ownership. Love becomes difficult when effort is always postponed.

Keeping Score Instead of Building Solutions

An Arguing Couple in a Psychotherapy Session
©Antoni Shkraba Studio/pexels.com

Scorekeeping creates resentment and competition. It turns love into a ledger where everything must be repaid. Instead of asking, “How do we fix this?” the focus becomes “Who did more?” This reduces generosity and increases defensiveness. Partners start holding back effort to avoid being “the one who tries.” Love thrives on teamwork, not tallying.

Listening Only to Respond, Not to Understand

A Man Holding a Woman on her Shoulder
©Mikhail Nilov/pexels.com

Many conflicts escalate because listening becomes performance. A partner can sense when their feelings are being tolerated, not understood. This makes them repeat themselves more loudly, which creates more conflict. Real listening includes curiosity, reflection, and patience. It also includes pausing the need to be right. Love is harder when someone feels unheard in their own relationship.

Acting Like Appreciation Is “Unnecessary”

Woman consoling unhappy boyfriend on sofa at home
©Alex Green/pexels.com

Some people believe love should be obvious, so gratitude feels extra. The problem is that effort becomes invisible when it is not acknowledged. Partners often stop doing kind things when they feel taken for granted. Appreciation is not flattery, it is recognition. Small thank-yous can prevent big resentments. Love is harder when someone feels like a utility.

Using Sarcasm and “Jokes” That Sting

Man and Woman Having a Conversation
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

Humour can strengthen relationships, but sharp jokes can create quiet contempt. If a partner regularly feels mocked, they stop being vulnerable. Sarcasm can become a socially acceptable way to show irritation. Over time, it poisons closeness because emotional safety drops. A partner who feels laughed at will eventually stop trying. Love struggles when respect is inconsistent.

Being Emotionally Unavailable on Purpose

Couple having argument with each other in street
©Keira Burton/pexels.com

Emotional unavailability often looks like refusing deep conversations, dismissing feelings, or changing the subject. Some people do this to avoid discomfort, but it creates loneliness. A partner may feel like they are dating a wall instead of a person. Emotional presence does not require constant intensity, only consistent care. When intimacy cannot grow, the relationship becomes hollow. Love is harder when connection is blocked intentionally.

Turning Every Need Into a Criticism

Upset woman crying staring out window
©Liza Summer/pexels.com

Some people interpret requests as attacks. “Could you help more?” becomes “You think I’m useless.” This defensiveness discourages honesty because it is too exhausting to bring things up. Partners then stay silent until resentment boils over. Needs are normal in relationships, and requests are part of teamwork. Love is harder when basic communication gets punished.

Prioritising Everyone Else Over the Relationship

A Man Touching a Woman's Forehead
©Pavel Danilyuk/pexels.com

Work, friends, family, and responsibilities matter, but chronic neglect creates emotional distance. When a partner consistently gets the lowest priority, they feel unwanted. This is especially damaging when attention is given freely to others but rationed at home. A relationship needs time and intentional connection to stay alive. Neglect can feel like rejection, even when it is unintentional. Love struggles when the relationship is always “later.”

Breaking Trust in Small Ways Repeatedly

Man Standing Beside Woman Feeling Disappointed
©Polina Zimmerman/pexels.com

Trust is not only broken by big betrayals. It is also damaged by repeated lying, hidden messages, broken promises, and inconsistency. Small breaches tell a partner they cannot relax. They start checking, questioning, and doubting, which creates more conflict. Reliability is one of the strongest forms of love. When trust becomes unstable, love becomes guarded. A guarded relationship cannot feel warm for long.

Refusing to Repair After Conflict

Upset black woman sitting on floor in room
©Liza Summer/pexels.com

Repair is the difference between healthy conflict and slow relationship death. Some people end arguments with silence, avoidance, or pretending nothing happened. The partner who was hurt feels abandoned and unseen. Over time, unresolved pain turns into emotional withdrawal. Repair can be simple: a check-in, an apology, and a plan to improve. Love becomes harder when wounds stay open.

Being Controlling While Calling It “Caring”

Couple Arguing Indoors
©Polina Zimmerman/pexels.com

Control often disguises itself as concern. It can show up as monitoring, excessive rules, or constant questioning. A partner experiences this as mistrust, not love. Over time, it creates rebellion, secrecy, or emotional shutdown. Healthy care supports autonomy and respect. Control reduces intimacy because it replaces safety with fear. Love struggles when freedom is treated like a threat.

Making the Partner Responsible for Your Mood

Couple Having Confrontation Inside the Living Room
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

Some people treat a partner like a mood manager. If the day is bad, the partner must fix it, absorb it, or suffer with it. This creates emotional pressure and resentment. Partners can support each other without becoming emotional punching bags. Emotional regulation is a personal responsibility, not a relationship demand. Love is harder when one person is assigned the job of “making everything feel okay.”

Refusing to Grow Because Change Feels Threatening

Man and Woman Having a Conversation in the Living Room
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

Growth requires humility, and humility can feel uncomfortable. Some people refuse to learn, apologise, or adjust, even when the relationship is clearly hurting. They stay attached to being right, being in control, or being unchanged. A partner eventually feels hopeless because nothing improves. Love is easier when both people believe they can become better. Without growth, resentment becomes permanent.

Hard to Love Is Usually a Habit, Not an Identity

Woman After Argument with Man
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

People are not inherently hard to love, but habits can make love difficult to feel and sustain. Many of these behaviours are quiet, common, and easy to justify, which is why they persist. The good news is that small shifts often create fast results when they are consistent. Relationships improve when accountability, respect, and emotional presence become normal. Love needs safety, not perfection. When habits change, love often becomes easier again.

Dating & Confidence

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About TMM Staff

The Modest Man staff writers are experts in men's lifestyle who love teaching guys how to live their best lives.

If an article is published under TMM Staff, that means multiple writers worked on it. For example, sometimes several of us have experience with a certain brand, so we collaborate to publish a more thorough review.

Or, if an article was originally written by one person, but then it was updated by someone else, we'll re-publish it under TMM Staff.

Remember: all of our articles (including those below) are written by real people with decades of combined experience in men's fashion and lifestyle topics.

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