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You just sat down with a cup of tea and a good book. You’re deeply invested in the plot and sinking into glorious alone time, when suddenly, you hear footsteps. Your partner appears in the room.
“What’s for dinner?” they ask.
Your entire body is instantly flooded with one feeling: irritation.
It’s a feeling that we all have from time to time, including with the people we love most in the world: our partners, family members, and friends. And yet, we can easily feel jolted by irritation or annoyance. “Oh no,” we might say to our selves. “What’s wrong with me/them/our relationship that I feel this way? Aren’t I supposed to always feeling loving, patient, and kindly towards them?”
In today’s episode, we’re exploring irritation in relationships, and what it might be pointing to when our skin crawls in response to the way our partner loads the dishwasher—or, God forbid, when a parent asks, “How was your day?”
And of course, we look for the gold shimmering just underneath this seemingly ungracious emotion.
References:
Sheryl's blog post: "When You Feel Irritated with Your Partner"
By Sheryl Paul and Victoria Russell5
156156 ratings
You just sat down with a cup of tea and a good book. You’re deeply invested in the plot and sinking into glorious alone time, when suddenly, you hear footsteps. Your partner appears in the room.
“What’s for dinner?” they ask.
Your entire body is instantly flooded with one feeling: irritation.
It’s a feeling that we all have from time to time, including with the people we love most in the world: our partners, family members, and friends. And yet, we can easily feel jolted by irritation or annoyance. “Oh no,” we might say to our selves. “What’s wrong with me/them/our relationship that I feel this way? Aren’t I supposed to always feeling loving, patient, and kindly towards them?”
In today’s episode, we’re exploring irritation in relationships, and what it might be pointing to when our skin crawls in response to the way our partner loads the dishwasher—or, God forbid, when a parent asks, “How was your day?”
And of course, we look for the gold shimmering just underneath this seemingly ungracious emotion.
References:
Sheryl's blog post: "When You Feel Irritated with Your Partner"

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