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Men Tell Themselves These 18 Things to Avoid Accountability

Updated on November 12, 2025 by TMM Staff · Dating & Confidence

Man in Blue Polo Shirt Holding a Smartphone
©SHVETS production/pexels.com

You think you’re in control, you think you’ve got the relationship game on lock. But you’re telling yourself the wrong stories. Every time you dodge accountability, you’re spinning a narrative that keeps you safe. It’s time to stop the flattering mirror and face the truth. 

Table of Contents

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  • “I’m busy with work, she should understand.”
  • “If she really loved me, she wouldn’t say that.”
  • “This is just how I am.”
  • “She’s just too emotional.”
  • “If I apologize all the time, I’ll look weak.”
  • “She knows I’m working on it.”
  • “I only blew up because she pushed me.”
  • “At least I’m not doing what he did.”
  • “It’s not my job to fix her.”
  • “We argued because I don’t like fighting.”
  • “I told her what would happen.”
  • “I’m just being honest.”
  • “She chose this lifestyle too.”
  • “I’m just having a rough period.”
  • “It’s just who I am with friends.”
  • “My intentions were good.”
  • “She asked for space, I gave it.”
  • “Someday things will just click.”

“I’m busy with work, she should understand.”

Photo Of Man Having Video Conference
©Vanessa Garcia/pexels.com

While you’re scheduling calls with clients, you’re missing the calls your partner wants to make with you. Deflecting responsibility in a relationship undermines trust and emotional safety. You’re choosing where you put your time. You’re short-circuiting the problem instead of owning it.  

“If she really loved me, she wouldn’t say that.”

Man in White Dress Shirt Holding Womans Face
©Yan Krukau/pexels.com

You flip the script onto her when you hear something that stings. Instead of asking what you did or didn’t do, you use deflection. Owning your part breaks the binary of “victim vs offender.” Pop open your own reflection and ask: what did I do to make her feel this way?

“This is just how I am.”

Arm Leaning Against Wall
©Nicola Barts/pexels.com

You’re using your personality as a shield. In a relationship, being yourself doesn’t mean being unchecked. Therapists say people who don’t take accountability often hide behind permanence: “This is how I’ve always been.” If you want to upgrade your relationship game, you can evolve. And it takes work.

“She’s just too emotional.”

Multiracial couple arguing with each other in street
©Keira Burton/pexels.com

You avoided being in the space where her feelings were pointing at something you did. Taking accountability means stepping in. The more you feel like you’re defending a mountain, the more likely you’ve ignored the trail of pebbles she tried to drop.

“If I apologize all the time, I’ll look weak.”

Shouting Man behind Sad Woman
©Karola G/pexels.com

You’re constantly guarding your status, your image. You think a real man doesn’t fall to his knees in front of his partner. The real man knows when he’s wrong, says sorry, and means it. Rejecting blame isn’t the same as owning your role and without this, you stall emotional growth in the relationship. 

“She knows I’m working on it.”

An Angry Man Staring at the Whiskey Glass
©Pavel Danilyuk/pexels.com

Real accountability shows through consistent action. Men often say they’re changing, but haven’t connected what they did to how it affected someone else. So, you, telling yourself, “I’m working on it,” is just you delaying the hard part: proving it.

“I only blew up because she pushed me.”

Man in Black Suit Jacket and Black Pants Standing Beside Woman in Black Long Sleeve Shirt
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

You explode, then act victim. But accountability means owning your trigger and reaction. Being pushed is real, but you have a choice how you respond. When you say “she made me,” you give away your power. And in relationships, the man who holds his power chooses his response. He doesn’t blame the push.

“At least I’m not doing what he did.”

Man in Black Suit Drinking Coffee
©Mikhail Nilov/pexels.com

You compare yourself to some other guy “I’m better than him.” That’s fine for your ego, but lousy for your growth. It’s like you’re measuring in second place and calling it a win. Shameless men often hide behind the story of “I’m not that guy,” instead of doing the work. 

If you anchor your value to not being someone else, you skip the part where you ask: “What kind of guy do I want to be?”

“It’s not my job to fix her.”

A Bearded Man in Black Sweater Sitting on the Bed
©MART PRODUCTION/pexels.com

You helped create part of the environment she’s in. Accountability means seeing the ripple. You’re not the lifeguard of her emotional ocean, but you’re in the water. You’re contributing waves. So you can’t ignore the splash. When you say “It’s not my job,” you’re avoiding the part that is yours.

“We argued because I don’t like fighting.”

Man in Black Long Sleeve Shirt Walking Away Feeling Upset
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

You’ll say this with a sigh. It implies you’re the reasonable guy. But you just fight differently: silence, walk-out, and avoidance. Fighting isn’t just a shout match. It’s how you handle the clash. Recognize your avoidance as part of your pattern. Because hiding from conflict is still conflict.

“I told her what would happen.”

A Couple having an Argument
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

You set boundaries and gave warnings. But then you walk away when she crosses them, and you feel justified. Accountability is owning the outcome. You should live by integrity. Because living by threats is control, living by integrity is trust.

“I’m just being honest.”

A Man Working in His Office Desk
©Thirdman/pexels.com

There’s weaponized honesty. You might say things like “I’m not like other guys,” or “You’re insecure,” under the banner of honesty. But honesty without empathy is a knife. Whenever you say that as a shield, you’re dodging compassion. Real accountability mixes truth with respect for her humanity.

“She chose this lifestyle too.”

Woman in White Sleeveless Dress Talking To A Man And Feeling Upset
©RDNE Stock project/pexels.com

You aren’t absolved from how you handle the fallout. You may have walked in with open eyes, but if you turned blind then, you still share blame. Accountability doesn’t let past consent serve as future absolution. Choices matter, but so does what you do after the results show.

“I’m just having a rough period.”

Angry Man Talking to a Woman
©Yan Krukau/pexels.com

Everyone hits rough patches. But your rough patch doesn’t get to be the excuse for neglecting the partnership. If you’re tired, stressed, burnt out, step up and say it. You don’t ghost and disengage. You don’t let your unavailable self become the normal. Using rough period to dodge accountability is a red flag.

“It’s just who I am with friends.”

A Man and Woman Bullying their Colleague
©Yan Krukau/pexels.com

You act one way with your buddies, another with her, and you pretend it doesn’t affect the relationship. But it does. Your identity with friends bleeds into your identity with her. If you’re dismissive, aloof, or constantly “one of the guys” while ignoring your relationship, you’re telling yourself “that’s separate” when it isn’t. The healthier man integrates both worlds with respect.

“My intentions were good.”

Man Trying to Focus
©Gustavo Fring/pexels.com

Intent matters, but it doesn’t equal impact. You may have meant well, but she’s left picking up the pieces. Owning your part doesn’t mean brushing off your partner’s hurt because your shoes looked shiny. Taking accountability is validating the impact.

“She asked for space, I gave it.”

Moody Indoor Portrait of Man Relaxing
©Wolrider YURTSEVEN/pexels.com

Space is healthy. But ghosting is avoidance. That’s an exit. When you actually respect space, you check in, set a timeframe, and communicate. If she’s feeling cut off and you say, “But I gave you space,” you just told yourself you dodged the fight instead of facing your part.

“Someday things will just click.”

A Man Talking to His Upset Partner
©Timur Weber/pexels.com

You’re playing the long game of hope, thinking if you ride it out, she’ll get fed up or you’ll wake up one day as the version you imagine. Relationships don’t fix themselves because you’ve been meaning to fix yourself. They advance when you act.  

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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