You can’t change anyone. But you can inspire them.
If you’re frustrated with your partner’s habits, whether it’s…
- phone use
- communication style
- dishes left in the sink
- or how they show up in your relationship
Here’s the truth: nagging won’t work. Lectures won’t work. Ultimatums create temporary change but build resentment
Here’s what does work: Becoming the person you want them to be
The principle: People mirror energy more than they follow advice
Try this instead:
- Model the behavior you want to see. Want more presence? Put your phone down first. Want a cleaner kitchen? Do your dishes without commentary. Want better communication? Speak clearly about your needs without expecting them to read your mind.
- Focus on what you can control. Annoyed by how they load the dishwasher or leave their shoes by the door? You have two choices: do it yourself without resentment, or let it go. Complaining about it just drains both of you.
- Master the first thought/second thought moment. When your partner says something that surprises you or feels like criticism, pause. Your first thought is reactive, probably defensive. Your second thought is intentional. Take that beat. Respond from clarity, not emotion. Be the person who doesn’t freak out when someone brings you something hard. That calm? It’s a decision you make in the moment, every time.
- Hold your boundaries without apology. “I need quiet when I’m resting” isn’t controlling, it’s self-respect. Say it once, mean it, and follow through.
- Stop over-functioning. If you’re managing their awareness, handling their responsibilities, or softening every hard moment for them, you’re robbing them of growth. Let them experience natural consequences.
- Celebrate progress, not perfection. When they show up better, acknowledge it. Positive reinforcement beats criticism every time.
Here’s the truth: Your partner’s growth is their responsibility, not yours. You’re not their teacher, therapist, or project manager. You’re their equal.
The benefit? When you focus on what you can control: your actions, responses, and boundaries, you stop exhausting yourself trying to change someone else. You become happier. More peaceful. And ironically? That peace becomes magnetic. They’ll either rise to meet you, or they won’t. Either way, you’re good.
Try this today: Pick ONE behavior you’ve been nagging about. Stop talking about it. Instead, model the opposite for 30 days and see what happens. And the next time something catches you off guard, take that breath between first and second thought. Choose your response.
Share your thoughts below!
