Lived Through This

Why ‘Passionate’ Relationships Are Often Just Toxic Relationships

It took healthy love to appreciate the abuse I had excused

Nina Renata Aron
Human Parts
Published in
6 min readApr 16, 2021

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Photo: David Wall / Getty Images

“Just a heads up, I might write about our relationship,” I recently said to my boyfriend. “But I promise I won’t do it without your permission.”

“Consent,” he said.

“What?”

“Without my consent,” he repeated. “You don’t need my permission to do anything.”

“Oh. Right,” I said, laughing a little, and we exchanged the knowing look — a tender, amused wince — that has become commonplace in our relationship. The look is a mutual acknowledgment that I am really fucked up. Or, to be kinder to myself (which is on my self-care list!), that I am still learning how to have a healthy romantic relationship.

My previous significant relationship lasted nearly a decade. It was on and off, but mostly on. Urgently, helplessly, dramatically on. It was a classic addict-codependent love story, and it was so confusing and combustible that I had to write a whole book about it in order to move into a new phase of life. In writing it, I sought to understand where I’d learned certain ideas about romance in the first place. I went back through my entire love arsenal: songs, movies…

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Nina Renata Aron
Human Parts

Author of Good Morning, Destroyer of Men’s Souls: A Memoir of Women, Addiction, and Love. Work in NYT, New Republic, the Guardian, Jezebel, and more.