Etikett: trust

How jealousy destroys love and creates distance

Jealousy That Kills Love

The jealousy that kills love is often mistaken for care, when in truth it grows out of fear. When jealousy is allowed to take place in a relationship, everything shifts: the tone, the trust, the everyday moments, and eventually the very core of what was meant to be warm and free.
Here, I explore what jealousy really is, why it arises, why some people never feel it – and how both the person who experiences jealousy and the one who lives with a jealous partner can understand it and break its grip.
I weave in personal reflection, concrete examples, current research, strategies that actually work, and questions that help you recognize yourself along the way.

Read this post in Swedish ->Svartsjukan som tar död på kärleken


When jealousy begins to kill love – fear disguised as love

Jealousy is often portrayed as something romantic, as if it were proof that you love more when you become afraid.
But jealousy is never an expression of love.
It is an expression of fear.

Fear of not being enough.
Fear of being replaced.
Fear of not being as valuable as you hope you are in someone else’s world.

Jealousy often dresses itself in the language of concern:
“I just want to know.”
“I just want to understand.”
“I care.”

But beneath the surface there is always vulnerability – a body sounding the alarm, a nervous system trying to protect.

This is why jealousy so quickly finds a place outside itself to land.
It is easier to get angry than to be honest.

That is precisely why the jealousy that kills love so often begins as a small feeling that grows in silence.

Symbolic image of the jealousy that kills love – two people drifting apart as fear replaces connection.

Reflection on the jealousy that kills love – when fear replaces safety

A question for you, the reader:

When in your life has a small worry grown larger than the situation itself?
How would someone else have reacted?


My important thread – safety in practice

I think of that evening when we were on our way home, and a woman stopped us.
She spoke to my husband in that way people sometimes do after a few drinks – direct, confident, without filters.

Suddenly she told him he should stay with her.
As if I didn’t exist.

My husband responded calmly and naturally:
“I’m married, and my wife is right here.”

The woman looked at me and said:
“You can ignore the wife.”

And he replied, just as naturally as breathing:
“That will never happen.”

It went straight into me –
not as jealousy,
not as worry,
but as pure safety.

A confirmation of something larger than words:
that we know where we stand, even when someone else tests boundaries or tries to take space.

I didn’t need to get angry.
I didn’t need to feel threatened.
It just became warm.
Because that was love in action.
Safety in practice.

And that’s when it became so clear:
When love is safe, you don’t have to guard it. It carries itself.

I also felt proud.
That is my husband — the man who loves me.
Others see it too, the beauty in who he is.


When jealousy begins to kill love – how would someone else react?

Imagine someone saying to you:
“That was jealousy.”

Where does the feeling go then?

Toward the person who said it?
Toward your partner?
Or inward – to the place you rarely want to look?

Jealousy often places itself outside the self.
It is rare that someone says:
“I’m afraid I’m not enough.”

More often it becomes:
“Why did you talk to him?”
“Why did you laugh like that with her?”

But the feeling always begins inside.

When I see how the jealousy that kills love affects people, it becomes so clear how much of it actually springs from fear.


Why jealousy arises – layer by layer

Insecurity in self-worth

When you don’t believe you are enough, you look for signs that you can be replaced.
The smallest glance or comment can feel like a threat.

Past betrayals

The body remembers even when the mind forgets.
If you’ve been betrayed before, fear can awaken automatically, even in a safe relationship.

Norms and learned behaviour

If you grew up where love was mixed with control, jealousy becomes normalized, even when it harms.

Fear of loss

Sometimes jealousy isn’t about the relationship at all – but the panic of being alone.


Current research – woven in and understandable

Jealousy is linked to self-esteem and attachment
Frontiers in Psychology (2022) describes low self-esteem, sensitivity to stress, and insecure attachment as clear risk factors.

Secure attachment is the greatest protective factor
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet show that securely attached people react less to perceived threats.

Jealousy triggers controlling behaviours
Studies show that emotional, cognitive, and behavioural jealousy often lead to monitoring, suspicion, and withdrawal.

There is a lack of clinical methods
Karolinska notes that there is “almost a total absence” of treatments specifically targeting jealousy.

It tells us something important:
We talk too little about this.
Too little about the feelings beneath it.


Everyday examples – how jealousy can feel

• Someone compliments your partner. Your stomach tightens, not your heart.
• Your partner laughs with someone else – your body hears threat, not joy.
• A text message pings. You interpret tone, timing, and intention all at once.

Question:
What happens first in you – the thoughts, the body, or the worry?


A case story – when fear becomes visible

A woman told me she often withdrew when her partner received attention from others.
When she began writing down the situations, she saw a pattern:

She wasn’t afraid of losing him.
She was afraid she wasn’t as valuable as she thought he saw her.

When she dared to say it out loud to herself, everything changed.
The jealousy didn’t disappear – but the drama did.

She began asking:
“What is this feeling trying to show me?”


Why some people never feel jealousy

Some people simply don’t react with jealousy.
It doesn’t mean they don’t care.
It means they are secure.

They think:
“If someone chooses someone else over me, it says nothing about my worth.”

Their nervous system doesn’t interpret others’ appreciation as a threat.

Question:
What does safety look like for you in relationships?


When jealousy takes over – love can’t breathe

When the jealousy that kills love takes over everyday life

The dangerous part isn’t the feeling.
The dangerous part is when the feeling takes control.

When questions become interrogations.
When worry becomes control.
When closeness becomes monitoring.
When freedom becomes suspicion.

Love can’t breathe there.

How the jealousy that kills love creates distance where closeness should exist – two hands losing contact.

When jealousy comes – what you can do

  1. Stay in your body (the three-breath method)
  2. Write the situation down
  3. The friend test – what would you say to a friend?
  4. Own the feeling – don’t accuse
  5. Work on self-worth

If you live with a jealous partner

  1. Set boundaries early
  2. Acknowledge the feeling – not the behaviour
  3. Keep being you
  4. See the difference between fear and power
  5. Seek help together

Questions for you

• Have you experienced jealousy in yourself or from someone else?
• What do you think the jealousy was really about?
• What are you afraid of losing when the feeling comes?
• Which situation in your life triggers the most insecurity?
• How would your relationships look if trust led more than fear?
• Where in you lives safety – and where does fear live?


Between the lines – my voice

This isn’t about judging.
It’s about the fragile, the human – where fear is strong and longing is larger than words.
About how small you can feel when someone else sees the beauty in the one you love.
But also about the strength in staying with yourself.


AHA – Between the lines

Safety doesn’t come from control.
It comes from self-worth.
When you stand in your own worth, you don’t need to guard love.
You can share it.

Gratitude often works as an anchor, something I wrote more about in Gratitude and Self-Healing – When Gratitude Finds Its Way Home.


Call-to-action – in your tone

If you want to talk more about this,
feel free to leave a comment.
Your words might help someone who sits with a feeling they don’t know how to handle.
There are more of us carrying this than we dare to say out loud.


Closing – your signature tone

Yesterday has already settled into history,
and tomorrow waits somewhere ahead.
But right now – in this moment –
you have the chance to understand yourself
and the one you love,
a little better.
It is here, in the now, that love can breathe again.

Carina Ikonen Nilsson


It is painful how often it is the jealousy that kills love that takes over, when what is really needed is safety and self-worth.

A quiet bench representing the jealousy that kills love – the silence left when trust fades

When love falls silent, the bench becomes empty.


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And finally – your therapy line

As I write this, I am also shaping my therapy page.
I am taking on a small number of clients right now, at a gentle pace, so each session has room to breathe.
If you feel you want to continue the conversation — I am here.

You and I — we are only one conversation away.

Gratitude and healing reflected in the morning mist over the lake.

Blog Statistics malix.se October 2025

Blog statistics malix.se October 2025 shows two quiet weeks without social media sharing, yet readers kept finding their way here. On trust, quiet weeks, and a blog that stands on its own

Read this on Swedish here.


Blog statistics malix.se October 2025 – when I stopped sharing

Blog statistics malix.se October 2025 reflects two quiet weeks when I chose not to share any posts on social media.
No links on Facebook, no Threads updates – just quiet publishing.
It wasn’t planned as an experiment, but it turned out to be one.
A test of trust.

What happens when I let my words travel on their own, without pushing them forward?
The answer came slowly but clearly: the blog lives, even in silence.


When words find their own way

Even without sharing, readers still found their way here.
Not as quickly as before, but with a different kind of presence.
It feels as if people now come because they want to, not because a link appeared in a feed.

That thought makes me quietly happy.
malix.se seems to have become a place people return to – not just pass by.


Blog statistics and what they tell about direction

Looking at the most-read posts, a familiar pattern appears.
Texts about positive psychology, gratitude, and the slower rhythm of everyday life continue to speak to people.
When I write straight from the heart – about calm mornings, autumn colors, or a simple act of presence – those words stay alive the longest.

Maybe that’s why the traffic remains stable, even without social media.
When words come from honesty, they find their way.


Readers from near and far

Blog statistics malix.se October 2025 also shows that readers keep coming from many parts of the world.
Mostly from Sweden, but also from the United States, India, and Greece.
It feels almost magical to imagine someone far away reading about my misty morning swim at a Swedish lake – and perhaps recognizing the same stillness in their own way.


When the blog carries itself

A few readers chose to support the blog through PayPal.
That means more than words can tell.
Behind each click is someone who recognized something in what I wrote,
someone who wants the writing to continue.
That quiet encouragement is a sign that the blog truly carries itself.


Two weeks of reflection – blog statistics malix.se October 2025

Two weeks without social media became two weeks of trust.
I learned that I don’t need to shout to be heard.
The blog stands there like a steady friend, breathing on its own when I let it.

Maybe life works the same way – sometimes we need to rest from chasing,
to see that what we already have actually works.


Looking back – two quiet weeks

The week before was much the same.
I shared sparingly, almost not at all, and expected the traffic to drop.
But it didn’t.
Views remained steady, readers stayed, and malix.se continued in its own rhythm.
It feels like the blog has grown into something larger than my efforts –
a space that lives on, even when I am silent.


AHA – between the lines

When we release control, we discover the quiet strength in what we’ve already built.


Two weeks of reflection – blog statistics malix.se October 2025

Two quiet weeks gave me peace.
No scheduling, no posting, no links – only writing, publishing, and letting go.
Maybe that’s where I want to stay for a while –
somewhere between movement and stillness,
between doing and simply being.


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malix.se/ Carina Ikonen Nilsson

Yesterday has already settled into history, tomorrow waits ahead.
But right now – this is where life happens.
– Carina Ikonen Nilsson

If you want to read more, visit
Living with Positive Psychology – as I see it
or Gratitude in Everyday Life – A Cold Swim and a Warm Evening.
If you’d like to read more about how gratitude supports emotional well-being, visit PositivePsychology.com.


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