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LOVE LOST

Seven signs your partner secretly hates you from holiday planning to doing chores on weekends

Read on to find out what it means if your partner is on their phone all the time

IF your partner is always busy, glued to their phone or watches your favourite TV show without you, it can seem they are avoiding you – and it may be so.

Research found 69 per cent of people unhappy in their relationship spend more time alone.

Portrait of Jo Hemmings.
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Jo Hemmings, a behavioural psychologist and relationship counsellor, reveals the signs your partner would be happier without you

Natalie Clarke hears from behavioural psychologist Jo Hemmings about signs your partner may hate you . . .

THEY’VE STOPPED NAGGING

A couple arguing in their kitchen.
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If your partner is unhappy in your relationship, they won't care enough to nag youCredit: Getty

You might see this as positive, but how wrong you are.

I see it in clients all the time when their relationship is breaking down.

Your partner has gone from belittling you and being critical to saying nothing.

You think, “That’s a relief, I’m not being nagged”.

But it is sinister.

They can’t be bothered even to undermine you any more, they don’t care enough to nag.

It is a sign they’ve almost checked out, and is difficult to come back from.

ALWAYS ON THEIR PHONE

A woman sits on a couch looking at her phone while a man sits beside her looking upset.
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If your partner is always on their phone, they might be using it as a shield to protect themselves from youCredit: Getty

When your partner is suddenly glued to their screen, the immediate thought is: “They’re cheating.”

But very often it’s not that they’re texting someone else, rather that they’re using their phone as a shield to protect themselves from you.

THEY WATCH YOUR FAVOURITE TV SERIES WITHOUT YOU

Viewing a show together means snuggle-up time.

But if your partner now tunes in alone or with friends, it’s again about avoidance.

They don’t want to sit on the sofa with you. If their hand or knee accidentally touches yours, they will recoil.

Watching the show with friends avoids intimacy and even having to have a conversation about it.

Your partner can’t be bothered to engage with you, even about that.

If necessary, they will watch the show alone — but they know that might invite difficult questions.

THEIR EYES ROLL WHEN YOU SPEAK

One of the first things that people do when they start to hate their partner is avoid eye contact.

But another sure sign is eye-rolling.

People often aren’t even conscious they’re doing it, but if you catch your partner’s eyes heading skyward it’s a definite red flag.

THEY COULDN’T CARE LESS ABOUT NEXT YEAR’S HOLIDAY

Woman with yellow backpack hiking in mountains.
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If your partner is not planning your next holiday together, they don't see a future with youCredit: Getty

Your partner’s favourite topic used to be next year’s sunshine getaway, but now they don’t care if it’s Spain or Italy — or anywhere at all.

That’s because they’re not planning on going away with you next year.

They don’t see a future with you. In their mind, they’re somewhere else — away from you.

A lack of interest in something they were interested in before is a danger sign — and another can be if they encourage you to go off somewhere nice on your own.

They sound like they’re being kind but they just want space away from you.

One survey found 23 per cent of people encouraged their other half to pursue solo activities when not happy in the relationship.

THEY’VE STARTED USING WEIRD JARGON

It sounds unusual but is true.

A study found people use formal language as a means to suppress emotional intimacy.

You are now treated like someone at work.

They might say phrases like, “Let’s table this”, or, “Let’s put a pin in it for now”.

It sabotages any emotional connection, putting you in a different role — colleague rather than lover.

People do it subconsciously but it’s a subtle sign they’re moving aside from the relationship.

THEY DO CHORES ON SUNDAY MORNING – ONCE YOUR TIME FOR SEX

Man washing a saucepan in a kitchen sink, woman standing in the background.
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Your partner might start doing chores as a way to put off intimate time with youCredit: Getty

If your partner knows Sunday mornings are time you set aside for intimacy, they’ll arrange something else.

They might start DIY jobs they once put off at any cost.

Keeping busy around the house means no risk of intimacy.

Or they might take up golf or running — to avoid you

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