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What Happens When We Assume the Worst of People We Love

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“Before you assume, learn. Before you judge, understand. Before you hurt, feel. Before you say, think.” ~Unknown

There we were on a Saturday afternoon doing such benign things as running errands at Costco, Trader Joes, and the post office. Excitement galore.

Yet, it would be a day I came to a major realization, understanding something I already knew in theory but wasn’t putting into practice.

Here’s the realization: Mind reading in relationships leads to confusion, resentment, frustration, and name-calling.

I’m not talking about psychic mind reading either! I’m referring to the kind of mind reading that you likely do every day, all the time, likely without even realizing it.

Mind reading is when you assume you know what another person is thinking or feeling without direct evidence. In other words, you’re assuming their thoughts, beliefs, and intentions (and you’re usually assuming the worst).

Big mistake.

What Does Mind Reading Look Like?

Here’s an example from the day I mentioned at the start of the post: We went to Costco and got a few things, and I asked him if he wanted to grab some sushi for lunch after. “Nope. I’m good” was his reply.

“Hmmm. Well, thanks for asking me if I’m hungry,” I thought to myself. At this point I was sort of simmering in my own irritation but trying not to think about it.

I’ve been battling this theory in my mind that no one really cares about me or my needs at all and that everyone else on the planet is selfish twit.

So, another twenty minutes went by and he said, “We can go grab something small to eat if you want.”

Cool! I was starving. That red bull on an empty stomach sure didn’t help.

We needed to drop off the stuff at home first. As I was putting our groceries in the fridge, I pulled out two leftover sausages and threw them up on the counter to dump in the trash. We needed room and they looked icky.

He immediately grabbed the sausage and a plate and started cutting them into pieces.

I was mortified and pissed. What the hell????

All I could think to myself is, “He doesn’t care about me or if I’m hungry. He’s hungry, so he’s going to eat and he’s going to do what he wants like he always does. Jerk.”

My mind leapt right to it. I went right to assuming bad intentions and to assuming he doesn’t care about me or my needs. Quite a leap from him eating two sausages, I know.

But instead of saying, “I’m hungry. I thought we were going to go eat. What’s up?” I yelled at him and blurted out, “It seems like you don’t care about me and the fact that I’m hungry, and you’re going to do what you want and you only care about yourself and you’re being a selfish jerk.”

Oooops.

What’s the Truth?

His response was to look at me like a deer in headlights because he had absolutely no idea what I was getting so mad about, why I was yelling, or why he was suddenly a selfish jerk.

At first, I was happy with myself. I had told him my feelings, right? I had stood up for myself. I had told him how I felt instead of pretending I wasn’t mad and always letting everything be okay. This was good, right?

Actually, no, it wasn’t good.

I had to stomp around for a while and simmer down, but as time went on, I realized we needed to resolve the issue, so I calmly asked him if he understood why I was upset.

Of course, he didn’t. I tried to explain my side and where I was coming from and how my feelings were hurt by his insensitivity, but as he kept talking, I concluded that the issue wasn’t him being selfish. The issue was that I misunderstood him. I assumed he was being selfish. I inferred negative behavior toward him when all he wanted was a sausage.

The truth is he thought I was putting the sausage up there for him to eat. He would eat the two sausage, still be hungry, and then we’d go have lunch. No harm. No foul.

The poor guy thought he was doing what I wanted him to do and instead I called him names. My bad.

I realized that my natural inclination to think that people are out to get me (which stems from childhood sexual abuse) is a problem, and that it’s my job to curtail this problem and stop acting out on it. I may feel a certain way, but that doesn’t make those feelings true.

I need to be more careful about assuming the worst in my partner, and I need to be better at communicating my feelings more effectively (that’s an entirely different post).

What to Do Instead of Assuming the Worst

If you can relate to my story, first, you should try to remember that most people have good intentions. We all act to increase pleasure and avoid pain, and very few people go out with the intention to hurt you. Even when people do hurt you, they are likely still acting with good intentions for themselves rather than bad intention toward you.

This doesn’t mean you put up with an abuser or a toxic relationship. It means when you are in a relationship with someone who cares but doesn’t always get it right according to your grand plan of the way the world should be, you stop assuming their intentions (especially if they’re negative), you give them the benefit of the doubt, and when in doubt, you ask.

If you go around assuming the worst about your partner, you’ll get the worst.

If you assume your partner doesn’t care about you, then you’ll end up with someone who doesn’t care about you.

If you assume you know what your partner is thinking, think again.

If you assume your partner knows what you’re thinking, think again.

We go around assuming everyone else lives in our model of the world, and that’s just ridiculous. You have your childhood, your life experiences, your intelligence, your beliefs, and your emotional make-up, and everyone else has theirs.

What we need is more compassion and understanding, and less mind reading and negativity.

The truth is our entire argument (one-sided though it was) was based on a miscommunication and misunderstanding of the facts in evidence. The only true facts were 1. I put sausage out on the counter and 2. He started cutting up the sausage.

Everything else was a complete assumption on my part.

So, think about it next time you get upset with your partner. Do the facts support your belief(s), or are you assuming you know how they feel or why they’re acting the way they are? Are you assuming the worst of them, or are you assured that they care but maybe just suck at showing it the way you expect it?

Only you have the power to control your thoughts, emotions, and reactions. Only you can seek to create a harmonious rather than a contentious relationship.

About Carrie L. Burns

Carrie L. Burns is a blogger on a mission of self-discovery. As a sexual abuse survivor that struggled for years with depression anxiety, low self-esteem, lack of self-love, and relationship issues, she found her purpose through writing and sharing her story with others. Check out her other writing at www.acinglife.com.

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Ann Lumbes
Ann Lumbes

haha thanks Carrie I’m laughing literally while reading your article, I can relate. 🙂 I’m still learning to eliminate mind reading and I’m excited to master this one 🙂

Glaiza Binayas

Just this morning, I mind read and assume the worst of my partner and I hurt him for doing it. I was so sorry after but the guilt is still there. I should be more careful next time 🙁

Helena Cook
Helena Cook

It really helps to modify these behaviours by understanding that they are abusive. Decide that you don’t want to behave that way with your partner, someone you love.

Sangeetha Vandeyar Appavoo
Sangeetha Vandeyar Appavoo

Beautiful piece!!!
Succinct. To the point. Personal. Descriptive.
I love everything about this – emotionally, technically, objectively and spiritually.

I’m inclined to write the response article after years of deafening work to iron-out my ego and its obsession with control (by way of assumptions). Now I’m on the other side, and it’s still shocking when someone thinks the worst of me, even though I understand. Now my plight is to release the reactive hurt of the assumptions for my own wellbeing and to create a safe space for the other. If their intentions are truly and ultimately loving, as yours are for your partner, I believe they will come around – just as you did.

Namaste
💜🙏🏽💜

lv2terp
lv2terp

GREAT POST!!! Thank you and wow, yes spoke to me big time! One of my biggest flaws with my close relationships, and so challenging to reprogram and create a habit to not let my knee jerk emotional reaction take over. Instead to ask the questions to clarify or stay curious! How did you achieve success in silencing that negative assumption roommate in your head and automatically assume good intention? (I can do this with my outer circle of friends and acquaintances no plm! So weird! Expectations are out of control with those close to me) Thank you for writing, sharing this! I look forward to more advice on this topic! 😀

Helena Cook
Helena Cook

Shouting and name calling can be considered abusive behaviours.

You responded that way to your partner attempting to eat a sausage you were throwing away.

He responded like a deer in headlights.

You say he’s selfish but in this situation after saying that he wasn’t hungry, he suggested he’d come with you if you wanted something.

He responded the way you wanted but not in the exact timeframe.

And now you’re explaining your behaviour away asserting that your partner is selfish. Think about it.

Carrie Burns
Carrie Burns
Reply to  Ann Lumbes

I think we all struggle with it at times!

Carrie Burns
Carrie Burns
Reply to  Helena Cook

I don’t think telling someone they are being selfish is abusive. In truth he can be totally selfish at times (which is partly why it triggered me) and none of us are perfect. There’s a big difference between speaking your mind and abusing someone IMO.

Helena Cook
Helena Cook
Reply to  Glaiza Binayas

I’m guilty of the same myself. It can be difficult to change our behaviour but all we can do is recognise our actions and try to do better.

I find it helps reminding myself of who I’m talking to – someone who loves and cares for me.

Also, that these negative assumptions are coming from within and designed to hurt us.

I’m currently trying to communicate with my partner the thoughts when they crop up without misplacing blame on him.

Carrie Burns
Carrie Burns
Reply to  Helena Cook

I understand if you read it that way.

Gomek
Gomek

When two people come from abusive pasts, they tend to spend most of their time waiting for the other shoe to drop. Almost as if it is some sick fulfilling prophecy that this is the way it should be, so I am expecting them to hurt me. It normalises the bad behaviour.

Sam
Sam
Reply to  Carrie Burns

Hi Carrie I just read this article. It really rang true for me. I learned long ago through years of counselling that no one can read my mind, so I learned to speak up and ask questions. My husband has Aspergers and often can’t reply to me. I feel that he is less affectionate and intimate than the first two years together and when I stay, do you still love my body, are you still attracted to me? He says nothing, and in that silence, I assume the worst. He can’t even nod! This has been going on for five years (I don’t ask him weekly or anything, about every six months.) We still continue with our lives and have intimacy but he can’t say anything nice to me. I’ve decided I have to ask it differently by assuming the best, ask him, you still love my body don’t you? I haven’t tried it yet but any other help is appreciated. I have to stop assuming the worst. It’s funny because I came from a very open, loving family so this is what I expect to receive from him. He just can’t do it.
I’m really trying to adapt to assuming the best from his every silence.

Giancarlo Martinez
Giancarlo Martinez

Great post! Just went through this moments ago, and googled ‘why does my fiancé assume the worst intentions when we talk?’ And boom your post stood out. I never understood what I said, how, body language, facial expressions I must’ve been unaware of and how they’re interpreted. Almost had me convinced of her interpretation of myself! That’s crazy isn’t it? I shared this post and reassured how much I love her and that if something is eating at her during these ‘silly/irrelevant stories I share, then I’d want to listen to her, and not try to make her laugh by telling a lame story that she’s passively projecting her feelings onto, haha. The alleviation in her eyes after I shared your conclusion and the root of the issue made too much sense and we both learned something from this resolution. Thank you for taking the actual time to self-reflect and put forth efforts towards repairing the situation instead of the latter. You helped my relationship tonight

LMAO
LMAO

I got the point of this, but one thing struck me: You could’ve avoided the entire drama by directly and clearly stating what you wanted by saying you were hungry, could we stop for something?….As u noted, he can’t read your mind, nor should he be expected to… nor should he be punished for not doing so. Don’t assume he’s picking up on your subtext.) Communicate what u want directly and clearly without that “ooh i hope he picks up on my signal” nonsense. If you’re hungry, and he said no to sushi – you then say, “well, i’m hungry so i’m going to get some.” Prob solved. Done. Drama thwarted.

Memedawn
Memedawn
Reply to  LMAO

That is pretty much what she summed up. You just reiterated her conclusion.