
A personal reflection on consent, emotional fatigue, and how relationship agreements change over time.
It was a grey Amsterdam morning. The kind that makes the city look sober and unsentimental. I was standing by the kitchen window with a warm mug of coffee in my hands, steam fogging the glass.
Despite the warmth, I felt cold inside.
From the outside, my life looked deliberately chosen. We had opened our relationship. Not impulsively. Not recklessly. We talked endlessly. We used the right words. Consent. Autonomy. Honesty. All the vocabulary that signals you are doing love correctly.
There was no betrayal. No secrecy. No obvious villain.
And yet something in me had already started to pull away. Quietly. Without asking for permission.
What I felt wasn’t jealousy. It was a low, constant pressure I kept interpreting as maturity. A kind of moral weight. As if staying comfortable with my discomfort was proof that I was doing the right thing.
I remember thinking this must be growth. People say growth is uncomfortable. So I treated the unease as evidence that I was evolving, that this was simply the cost of loving without illusion.
After all, I had agreed to this.
For a long time, I believed agreement was a kind of moral anchor. Once you had said yes, you were meant to stand by it. Especially in a culture that treats freedom as the highest virtue and discomfort as something to overcome.
What I didn’t yet understand is how easily clarity can turn into self-discipline. Not imposed from the outside, but enforced from within.
I could explain what we were doing. I could defend it convincingly, even elegantly. I could talk about it over dinner, in the calm, reasonable tone of someone who had done the reading. But my body lagged behind. And instead of listening to that lag, I corrected it.
There is a particular mindset that treats endurance as virtue. If something hurts but aligns with your values, you are expected to push through. Wanting relief starts to feel like weakness. Doubt becomes something to manage, not examine.
So I stayed quiet. Longer than was honest. I adapted faster than was true. I assumed the unease was my personal failure, not shared information.
What shifted for me wasn’t a dramatic realization. It was smaller than that. I simply stopped overriding myself quite so efficiently. I began to notice how quickly I translated discomfort into responsibility, and how rarely I paused to ask what it was actually asking of me.
Only then did it occur to me that consent is not a single moment. It is not a promise you make once and then service indefinitely. It is something that lives in time.
It changes when attachment deepens. When circumstances shift. When the person you are becoming no longer fits neatly inside the agreement you once made in good faith.
Once I started listening differently to myself, I began to hear the same tension in others.
Thoughtful people. Emotionally literate. Politically progressive. And deeply tired.
Not because anyone had crossed a clear boundary. But because the relationship had moved on while the agreement stayed frozen.
They would say, “But we agreed to this,” as if that sentence should still the room. As if revisiting consent meant failure rather than accuracy.
What rarely gets named is renegotiation fatigue. The slow erosion that comes from constantly overriding your own signals in order to remain reasonable. Resentment does not always arrive loudly. Sometimes it just flattens things. A dulling. A thinning.
We have been sold a comforting story. That there is one right way to love, and that everything else is either progress or failure. That if something hurts, someone must be doing it wrong.
I no longer believe that.
Love that lasts is rarely built on perfect agreements. It survives because people are allowed to update reality together, without shame.
That does not mean destabilizing everything at the first sign of discomfort. It means recognizing that loyalty to an old yes can quietly become disloyalty to yourself.
The hardest sentence for many people is not “I disagree.”
It is “Something in me has changed, and I don’t yet know what that means.”
Not as a threat. Not as leverage. Just as truth.
So if you find yourself thinking, we agreed to this, so why does it still hurt, perhaps the question is not what is wrong with you.
Perhaps it is whether you have been listening closely enough to what you have been pushing away.
And whether the version of love you are practicing still makes room for who you are becoming.
February 3, 2026
@2026 victoria onken
brand + website by i know a gal
Victoria Onken is a relationship coach who blends human empathy with AI insights to guide people in non-traditional relationships to feel secure, understood, and aligned with love.
Based in amsterdam
coaching worldwide online
open to travel for live events
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