U-Haul and Unpack - Break Free from Toxic Relationships, Emotional Abuse, and Trauma Bonds to Rebuild Your Identity

Episode 10: Your Partner Is Not Your Therapist - Emotional Labor, Resentment, & Relationship Burnout

Lauren & Vicky | Married Hosts Breaking Down Toxic Relationships, Trauma Bonds, and Healing Episode 10

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In episode 10 of U-Haul and Unpack: Friendships, Betrayal, and Healing After Toxic Relationships, we talk all things understanding emotional support, emotional labor, and accountability in healthy relationships.

At some point, relationships can cross a quiet line, where support turns into emotional labor, and partners start feeling responsible for each other’s emotions. In this episode, we name that line and talk about what happens when it gets crossed.

We unpack the belief that love means fixing, rescuing, or carrying someone else’s emotional weight. We talk about how expecting your partner to process your trauma, regulate your emotions, or solve your internal struggles leads to shutdowns, irritability, and defensiveness. Not because either person is “bad,” but because the roles are misaligned.

We also get clear about what your partner can be responsible for:

🔑 What is support and what is therapy?

🤝 Your partner can’t “fix” problems 

💔 Feeling responsible for someone’s emotions 

🚩Emotional labor and shutdowns 

We share how this dynamic showed up in our own relationship, how it created distance instead of closeness, and what changed when we moved that work into therapy and took responsibility for our emotional regulation. The result wasn’t less connection, it was more safety, clarity, and mutual respect.

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Episode 10 Transcript – Your Partner Is Not Your F*cking Therapist: How Emotional Labor Breaks Connection

Description: In this episode, Vicky and Lauren unpack the blurred lines between support and emotional labor in relationships. They share personal experiences of relying too heavily on each other for emotional regulation, how that created resentment, and what healthy support actually looks like. Learn how to set boundaries, stop outsourcing your mental health, and build stronger, more balanced connections.

Timestamps & Topics:

[00:00] New Year Reflections & Relationship Conversations
 [03:12] Why Your Partner Isn’t Your Therapist
 [06:45] The Difference Between Support vs. Emotional Dependence
 [10:18] Anxiety, Panic Attacks & Misplaced Responsibility
 [14:52] When You Make Your Emotions Someone Else’s Problem
 [18:30] Defining Support vs. Therapy (Real Examples)
 [23:10] Why Friends & Partners Give Biased Advice
 [27:44] Taking Responsibility for Your Mental Health
 [32:05] When Support Turns Into Emotional Labor
 [36:22] Resentment: The Hidden Cost of Over-Reliance
 [40:11] Mood Contagion & Expecting Your Partner to Match You
 [44:08] Healthy Communication: Asking for Support Properly
 [47:35] “Do You Want Advice or Just to Vent?”
 [50:02] Emotional Capacity & Saying “I Don’t Have It Right Now”
 [53:20] Burnout in Relationships & Emotional Overload
 [57:14] When Emotional Labor Starts Breaking the Relationship
 [01:00:40] Setting Boundaries Without Guilt
 [01:04:18] When to Seek Therapy vs. Lean on Support Systems
 [01:08:05] Accountability in Relationships
 [01:12:10] Love Languages & Miscommunication in Support
 [01:16:02] Final Takeaways: Stay in Your Lane & Protect Your Energy

[00:00] New Year Reflections & Relationship Conversations

Vicky Machtinger:
As we head into the new year, it naturally brings up reflection — not just individually, but in relationships too. And one of the biggest things we’ve had to learn is how we show up for each other emotionally.

[03:12] Why Your Partner Isn’t Your Therapist

Vicky Machtinger:
Your partner is not your therapist. And I don’t think people realize how often they blur that line — we did it for a long time.

Lauren:
Yeah, we thought leaning on each other meant handling everything for each other. But taking on someone’s mental health is very different than supporting them.

[06:45] The Difference Between Support vs. Emotional Dependence

Vicky Machtinger:
Support is being there. Emotional dependence is making someone responsible for regulating you.

Lauren:
There were times where it felt like, “I’m not okay, so now it’s your job to fix it.” And that’s not fair.

[10:18] Anxiety, Panic Attacks & Misplaced Responsibility

Vicky Machtinger:
There’s a difference between asking for help during a panic attack versus expecting someone to manage your anxiety for you long-term.

Lauren:
Right — one is support. The other is outsourcing your emotional regulation.

[14:52] When You Make Your Emotions Someone Else’s Problem

Vicky Machtinger:
When you consistently bring your chaos to someone and expect them to stabilize you, that’s when it crosses the line.

[18:30] Defining Support vs. Therapy (Real Examples)

Lauren:
Support is “I’m here for you.”
Therapy is “Let’s unpack why this is happening and how to fix it.”

Vicky Machtinger:
Friends are for venting. Therapy is for guidance.

[23:10] Why Friends & Partners Give Biased Advice

Vicky Machtinger:
Your partner and your friends are biased — they love you. A therapist is there to give you an objective perspective.

[27:44] Taking Responsibility for Your Mental Health

Lauren:
You have to take responsibility for your own mental health. Someone can support you, but they can’t do the work for you.

[32:05] When Support Turns Into Emotional Labor

Vicky Machtinger:
When you start taking on someone else’s emotions daily, that becomes emotional labor.

[36:22] Resentment: The Hidden Cost of Over-Reliance

Lauren:
That’s where resentment builds — when one person is constantly carrying the emotional weight of the relationship.

[40:11] Mood Contagion & Expecting Your Partner to Match You

Vicky Machtinger:
Just because you’re in a bad mood doesn’t mean your partner has to be too.

Lauren:
We both used to get upset if the other person didn’t match our mood — and that’s toxic.

[44:08] Healthy Communication: Asking for Support Properly

Vicky Machtinger:
There’s a difference between dumping your day on someone and asking, “Hey, can I talk to you about something?”

[47:35] “Do You Want Advice or Just to Vent?”

Lauren:
One of the best things you can ask is: “Do you want advice or do you just want me to listen?”

[50:02] Emotional Capacity & Saying “I Don’t Have It Right Now”

Vicky Machtinger:
It’s okay to say, “I don’t have the capacity for this right now.”

Lauren:
It doesn’t feel good, but it’s honest — and it prevents burnout.

[53:20] Burnout in Relationships & Emotional Overload

Vicky Machtinger:
When emotional labor builds up, even normal interactions start to feel exhausting.

[57:14] When Emotional Labor Starts Breaking the Relationship

Lauren:
You start shutting down, getting irritated, and pulling away — even when nothing is technically “wrong.”

[01:00:40] Setting Boundaries Without Guilt

Vicky Machtinger:
Saying “I’m not qualified to help with this” is a boundary — not a rejection.

[01:04:18] When to Seek Therapy vs. Lean on Support Systems

Lauren:
If it’s something only you can work through, that’s when you need a professional — not just support.

[01:08:05] Accountability in Relationships

Vicky Machtinger:
You have to know what’s yours to carry and what isn’t.

[01:12:10] Love Languages & Miscommunication in Support

Lauren:
Sometimes we try to support people the way we want to be supported — not how they actually need it.

[01:16:02] Final Takeaways: Stay in Your Lane & Protect Your Energy

Vicky Machtinger:
Stay in your lane. Support your partner — don’t try to fix them.

Lauren:
And protect your energy, because you can’t pour from an empty cup.

. . .

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