Should I Leave My Partner? A CBT Test & Guide to Clarify Your Decision

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
6 min read

This article is available in French only.

Should I Leave My Partner? A CBT Test & Practical Guide to Clarify Your Decision

You've been asking yourself this question for weeks, maybe months: "Should I leave my partner?" This question that haunts your nights, paralyzes you, and makes you oscillate between hope and doubt. It's one of the most difficult questions we face in life, and it deserves a thoughtful answer, based on facts rather than on the emotion of the moment.

As a CBT practitioner in Nantes, I regularly support individuals facing this dilemma. And I've learned that this question often conceals other issues: unhealed wounds, cognitive distortions, destructive relational patterns, or simply a loss of clarity about one's own needs.

This article offers a structured framework, inspired by Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, to explore this decision with honesty.

Why Is This Question Arising Now?

Before answering "Should I leave my partner?", it's important to understand what triggered this question. Rarely does a relationship end on a whim. There's always an accumulation, a moment when the cup overflows.

The three most common scenarios:

* A specific crisis: a betrayal, a lie, a major argument that makes you reconsider everything
* Gradual erosion: a relationship that withers, where love has turned into routine or indifference
* A growing awareness: you gradually realize that you no longer align, that your values diverge

As we discussed in our article on Gottman's Four Horsemen, certain signs (chronic criticism, contempt, defensiveness, emotional stonewalling) predict the breakdown of a relationship. But the presence of these signals doesn't automatically mean you should leave. It means you need to act.

The CBT Test: Clarifying Your Situation

Before making any decision, I suggest a self-assessment exercise based on CBT principles. This exercise helps you distinguish facts from automatic thoughts.

The 6 Fundamental Questions

1. What are the objective facts?

List without judgment what isn't working. Not "he doesn't love me," but "he hasn't spoken to me for three days," "we haven't had an intimate relationship in two months," "he lied about his expenses."

Facts are verifiable. Interpretations are not.

2. What are my unmet needs?

Do you respect each other? Is there emotional intimacy? Can you be authentic? Do your values align?

Note the three most important needs for you and honestly assess whether this relationship satisfies them.

3. Do I have cognitive distortions?

This is where CBT becomes powerful. You might think: "It's hopeless, nothing will ever change." That's catastrophic thinking. Or: "I'm incapable of finding anyone else." That's overgeneralization.

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4. Have we truly tried?

Have you communicated clearly about your problems? Have you considered couples therapy? Have you given a real chance for change?

According to research in couples therapy, many relationships can significantly improve with effort. But this requires mutual willingness.

5. What are my repetitive patterns?

Here, we delve into Young's Schema Theory. Do you tend to flee when things get difficult? To stay in toxic situations out of fear of abandonment? To seek love from unavailable people?

Explore Young's 18 Schemas to understand your underlying emotional wounds. This understanding is crucial: otherwise, you'll repeat the same pattern in your next relationship.

6. Who would I be without this relationship?

Have you lost your identity? Are you emotionally dependent on this person? Have you sacrificed your friends, your projects, your dreams?

Emotional Wounds Directly Impact Your Relationship. If you stay for the wrong reasons (fear, dependence, guilt), leaving won't solve anything.

Warning Signs: When It's Truly Time to Leave

Certain situations demand a clear and swift decision. I'm talking about:

* Physical or psychological abuse: no relationship is worth it
* Repeated infidelity: when trust is broken and the person doesn't change
* Chronic toxicity: a relationship where you constantly feel diminished, criticized, controlled
* Total lack of communication: when the person refuses to talk, to work on problems
* Fundamental incompatibility: radically opposing values or life plans

Signs of Hope: When It's Worth Staying and Working On It

Conversely, some elements suggest that a relationship can improve:

* Love is still present: you feel tenderness, even amidst conflict
* Communication is possible: you can discuss problems without destroying each other
* There is mutual willingness: both of you genuinely want it to work
* Problems are specific: it's a matter of misunderstanding, of patterns, not fundamental incompatibility
* You've grown together: you support each other through difficulties, you have common projects

Practical Exercise: The Decisional Balance Sheet

Here's a classic CBT tool to structure your reflection:

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Left Column: Reasons to Stay * Advantages of staying * Positive aspects of the relationship * Fears related to leaving Right Column: Reasons to Leave * Advantages of leaving * Negative aspects of the relationship * Fears related to leaving

Note that fears appear on both sides. This is normal. The decision is never without fear.

Now, evaluate each point. Not on a scale of 1 to 10 (too subjective), but in terms of frequency and intensity.

* How often does this reason apply? (daily, weekly, monthly)
* What is its intensity? (slight discomfort, moderate suffering, intolerable suffering)

When to Consult a Therapist?

If you're still hesitant after this exercise, that's precisely the time to consult. A CBT therapist can help you to:

* Identify your cognitive distortions
* Understand your relational patterns
* Clarify your true needs
* Communicate more effectively with your partner
* Make a decision aligned with your values

You can also explore our psychological tests to evaluate your relationship more deeply.

The Final Decision: Beyond Doubt

Once you've done this exploratory work, the answer usually becomes clearer. Not because it's obvious, but because you've built it on facts, not on the emotion of the moment.

Some principles for finalizing your decision:

  • Listen to your intuition, not your fears: your intuition has been speaking to you for a long time. Your fears paralyze you.
  • Act, don't dream: if you decide to stay, stop fantasizing about a life without this person. Truly invest. If you decide to leave, stop wondering "what if...". Move forward.
  • Accept that it will never be perfect: no relationship is perfect. The question isn't "is it perfect?" but "is it viable?".
  • Honor your past: even if the relationship ends, what you experienced together had value. You learned something.
  • Conclusion: The Real Question

    In reality, the question "Should I leave my partner?" hides a deeper question: "Am I happy? Am I respected? Am I free to be myself?"

    If the answer to these three questions is "no" and, after truly trying, nothing changes, then yes, it may be time to leave.

    But if you haven't truly tried, if you're paralyzed by fear or unconscious patterns, then this decision deserves more reflection.

    For personalized support in this reflection, visit psychologieetserenite.com. I am here to help you clarify your situation and make a decision that truly reflects you.


    Gildas Garrec, CBT practitioner in Nantes

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    Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

    About the author

    Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

    Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.

    📚 16 published books📝 1000+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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    Should I Leave My Partner? A CBT Test & Guide to Clarify Your Decision | Psychologie et Sérénité