Frustrated by a relationship? Questions to ask yourself to move forward

感情受挫?思考以下问题以助你前进

Life Kit

2025-10-21

19 分钟
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If you feel overwhelmed or stuck in a close relationship, therapist KC Davis, author of Who Deserves Your Love, has a list of questions to help you decide whether you should continue to engage. Davis provides guidance on how to create boundaries you feel good about without cutting people out of your life. Take our survey at npr.org/lifekitsurvey Follow us on Instagram: @nprlifekit Sign up for our newsletter here. Have an episode idea or feedback you want to share? Email us at lifekit@npr.org Support the show and listen to it sponsor-free by signing up for Life Kit+ at plus.npr.org/lifekit Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy
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  • You're listening to Life Kit from NPR.

  • When someone is hurting you maliciously, intentionally, yeah, that's probably the right decision.

  • But these situations so often exist in shades of gray.

  • Casey Davis is a licensed professional therapist, and she gave me some examples.

  • It could be someone going, okay,

  • I'm married to someone who I don't feel like is emotionally available to me,

  • and I feel like we've been having the same conversation for 10 years.

  • And they continue to, you know,

  • not show up for me in ways that I think are really vital to this relationship and to my health.

  • It could be someone that says, I have a strained relationship with my father,

  • but he has recently gotten some health problems and needs someone to take care of him.

  • And, you know, am I obligated to do that?

  • Should I do that?

  • Casey is the author of a book called Who Deserves Your Love?

  • And in it,

  • she gives a list of questions that she as a clinician will ask clients when someone they care about is behaving in a way that's bothering them.

  • And so I think that that's what this book is really about,

  • is helping you, not necessarily giving you the answers, but giving you the right questions.

  • Because when you ask yourself the right questions,

  • you can start to parse out what bothers you about their behavior,