RSD and Your Partner: Breaking the Reaction Loop
Key takeaway
Rejection sensitive dysphoria turns ordinary partner interactions into perceived attacks, and your reaction to that perceived attack typically triggers a real one — closing a loop neither person started on purpose. Breaking it does not require either partner to change personality, suppress feelings, or “communicate better” in the abstract. It requires recognizing the specific moment your nervous system shifts from listening to defending, and choosing a single, repeatable interruption that buys you the seconds you need to respond instead of react.
Why this matters
Untreated, the reaction loop does not stay neutral. It compounds. Each cycle deposits a small layer of resentment, withdrawal, or self-protective distance, and over months and years the relationship hardens around the loop rather than the love. Couples affected by ADHD already face elevated rates of relationship breakdown, and emotion dysregulation is one of the strongest predictors of decline. Catching the loop early — while both partners still want to fix it — is the single highest-leverage move you can make for the relationship.
