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If you've ever thought this-or felt guilty for even thinking it-someone finally put it into words.
"Do you still love me?" "Are you sure you want to marry me?" You give reassurance ten times a day. And no amount of reassurance is ever enough.
So you learn to walk on eggshells-the tightness in your chest when they go quiet, the faster heartbeat when their name pops up on your phone at an unusual time, that sudden drop in your stomach when you forgot to text back immediately.
Somewhere along the way you became their emotional babysitter instead of their romantic partner.
Everything flows one way. You pour in, they take. You hold them up, they lean harder. It never stops.
And then you feel like a jerk for needing a damn evening to yourself. For wondering if you even love them anymore, or if you're just... exhausted.
Because you DO love them. They're not a bad person. But you can't keep drowning to keep someone else afloat.
The voice in your head already knows: "If I leave, they'll be destroyed. And it'll be my fault."
Not just you. "Is this normal?" "Am I being unreasonable?" "Am I enabling them?" "When is it time to leave?"
None of this makes you a bad person. And this book finally gets into all of it:
The thing that keeps you up at night? That you're pouring yourself into something that will never change. That if you leave, you'll destroy them. And if you stay, you'll destroy yourself.
This doesn't fix itself.
The question isn't "Do I love them enough to stay?"
The question is: "Are they doing the actual work required for this to change?"
This book helps you figure that out. And then shows you what to do either way.