Listen

Description

Send us a text

What if the control you reject is the control you practice when you feel hurt, scared, or ignored? We take an unflinching look at the “inner mirror,” the moment a man turns inward and asks a harder question than Am I right: What is my behavior doing to the relationship? That shift from intention to impact is where responsibility begins, and where real change starts to feel possible.

Across a focused, honest conversation, Kim Lee, child and adolescent psychotherapist, maps how subtle controlling behaviors show up in everyday dynamics: withdrawing affection to steer choices, chronic correcting that erodes confidence, rewriting events that breed doubt, emotional punishment, and the spike of anger when a partner chooses independence. We trace these patterns back to insecurity and past pain without confusing explanation for excuse. The heart of the work is psychological honesty—asking whether a partner feels safe, equal, free, heard, and respected—and being willing to hear the answers without defense.

We dig into language that heals rather than harms. Instead of “No, that’s not what I said,” we practice “You felt that, and I’m sorry; that wasn’t what I intended.” Two truths can sit together: the impact that hurt and the intention that wasn’t malicious. We underline a critical principle: feelings are not opinions. When someone says “I feel scared,” there is nothing to agree or disagree with—only something real to accept and respond to. From there, we offer practical steps to replace control with connection: ask direct, open questions; validate felt reality; clarify instead of correct; and make concrete behavior changes that build trust over time.

By the end, you’ll have a clear framework for recognizing control within yourself, tools for validation that defuse conflict, and a preview of where we’re heading next: the turning point between responsibility and justification. If this conversation helps you see even one small shift you can make today, you’re already moving toward a safer, more equal relationship. Subscribe, share this episode with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help others find these tools.