You Need Help: My Girlfriend is So Annoying, Should I Break Up With Her?

Q:

Uh, so… I find my girlfriend annoying, like SO annoying — and I can’t tell whether it’s a) I need to get a grip and be kinder b) tell her (kindly) when she bugs me c) a combo of both or d) this is the sign we should break up?

I’m just finding… so much about her annoying. The way she chews with her mouth open, calls me “bubs” (I’m not a child), doesn’t know how to act in public sometimes, I could go on! And I know that I also annoy her and part of being in a pair is annoying each other but I feel more and more like I’m babysitting and less and less like I’m in an adult relationship.

And I also acknowledge I’m still very much in a growth phase and am still learning to communicate instead of shutting down — my go to used to be pleasing my partner at any cost and I try so hard not to do that but when do we tell someone that something is bugging and when do we let it slide and love them for their flaws? I think I was bunking off when they had that class in school!

Uhhhh, let me know! Thanks!

A:

Babe.

“I find my girlfriend annoying. Like SO annoying.”

Please imagine your girlfriend writing that sentence about you, and then ask yourself how it would make you feel and if you would like to be with someone who felt this way about you.

I am known, amongst my friends and amongst readers of this very website, as being very pro-breakup to the point of sometimes over-prescribing breaking up as a solution. And I will say, as I have entered my thirties, I have become more open to the idea of nuance and compromise, to the fact that not all relationship issues need to be solved with a hard and fast no-contact breakup, to the reality that life is often complicated and we all make the choices we can personally live with.

But this one is easy! You’re dating a person you find annoying. Not just regular annoying, but SO annoying. Who cares if it’s because you’re cranky, because your girlfriend’s behavior is inappropriate, because her quirks that would be cute to someone else are hideous to you or because you’re actually being mean and overcritical… YOU ARE *SO* ANNOYED BY THE PERSON YOU ALLEGEDLY LOVE AND WANNA SPEND A LOT OF TIME WITH. This can’t go on!

You’re right, there is often some genuine soul searching to do when considering a break up. Sure, we’re all a little more cranky than usual, seeing as the world has descended into literal hell across multiple planes and seems to only be getting worse. And yes, sometimes when someone we love exhibits annoying behavior it’s nice to find a kind way to approach that behavior, especially if it’s something a person could work on (not calling you by a nickname you dislike, for example). And! Of course being in a partnership isn’t all hot sex and easy mornings, and sometimes you just have to accept a rough patch or the “flaws” that make us each individually ourselves. But that’s not what you’re describing here. What you’re describing is that the person you currently call your girlfriend is a person you don’t like that much and are not that compatible with. The reasonable, kind, and appropriate thing to do here — in fact, in my opinion, truly the only option — is to break up. ASAP.

The final paragraph of your question has a couple of additional questions/points that I think are worth continuing to work on after you break up with this specific person. Learning to communicate instead of shutting down is an excellent goal, and one that we should all be working on for our whole lives. Avoiding people pleasing tendencies and figuring out your actual truth, and then expressing that truth in a kind and honest fashion, is no small task. Speaking up for your needs while also empathizing with and validating your partner to be their whole true selves is big stuff! I don’t think you were necessarily bunking off when they had that class, I think it’s more that this is the literal ongoing life changing work we are all placed on this planet to do, and the growing never ever stops. We can do this work in relationship and we can do this work alone. I’m proud of you that you’re acknowledging it and wanting to go deeper in it. I think therapy, healthy friendships, and a lot of practice can make up a great syllabus for this work.

But that doesn’t change what needs to be done now. None of those final points are really about your current girlfriend. And I hope my advice has helped you realize the answer is very much D — your feelings about her are a great big neon sign spelling out the word B R E A K U P. I’m excited for you both, because you deserve to be with a person you don’t find annoying and she deserves to be with a person who doesn’t find her annoying.


You can chime in with your advice in the comments and submit your own questions any time.

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

Join AF+!

Vanessa

Vanessa is a writer, a teacher, and the community editor at Autostraddle. Very hot, very fun, very weird. Find her on twitter and instagram.

Vanessa has written 404 articles for us.

8 Comments

  1. LW, if I can add to the brilliant response Vanessa has laid out here, you do not need to explain to your girlfriend why you’re breaking up with her. Perfect closure is a myth and “I find you so annoying” is liable to scar your girlfriend for life. Since you maybe seem new to breaking up with people, now’s a good time to break out classics like “I just don’t love you anymore” and “We both deserve someone who’s a better match for us”. Best of luck.

  2. I agree vehemently with Vanessa on this one– I’ve been in many long-term relationships in which, at some point, everything my partner did seemed to annoy and aggravate me. In all of those instances, it turned out that my inner guidance system, otherwise known as my ‘gut” was telling me the relationship had run its course. Surely you weren’t this aggravated at the beginning, otherwise you wouldn’t have entered the partnership in the first place. When everything someone does is irritating, the last thing you need to do in response is keep spending time with them! You need space, and more importantly, you need to end this dynamic. Perhaps you’d function better as friends.

  3. I…just don’t know about this advice. Relationships are a whole string of annoyances and inadvertent hurtful behavior. A massive part of being in a relationship is communicating to your partner what your boundaries and needs are. Resentment is born of a lack of boundaries. If you’re not articulating your needs, you’re not doing your half of the work. “Hey, I don’t like the nickname ‘Bubs.’ Can you stop calling me that?” Easy! If the gf crosses the boundary going forward or reacts badly to the boundary being communicated, those are major red flags, and leaving might be the best option. But, she might be happy to respect your boundaries if only you’d communicate them! Also, annoyance and resentment are often clues that we need to tune into ourselves instead of looking for an outward cause. I’d recommend getting curious, asking the part of you that feels annoyed “What are you trying to tell me? What do you need?” Often, we react to our partners from young, hurting parts that have been around since childhood. We are so wrapped up in old, outdated stories that we start projecting. Reacting outwardly instead of looking inward isn’t the most mature approach. Maybe the answer that your system will give you is to leave your gf. But maybe it’s actually that you’ve been abandoning yourself in some way, and there are some areas that need healing. In short, you have the right to ask for what you need in a relationship. And, we have to work on our own shit instead of projecting it onto our partners.

  4. 1000% concur — if you find your GF annoying you both deserve better

    also echo the other commentator that you should not tell her she is annoying when breaking up, that is cruel and unnecessary

  5. While I don’t disagree with the advice above, I also want to add a gentle reminder that sometimes extreme irritability can be related to depression/anxiety/mania or other psych disorders! My bipolar first manifested as this kind of “even the most MINOR things piss me off beyond all reason”, and I’m glad that I didn’t burn bridges during that period. If you consistently find your girlfriend annoying, go for it and dump her, but perhaps also watch to see if it’s only with your girlfriend or if you’re experiencing that in other relationships too! It doesn’t feel good to be on edge all the time, no matter the reason, so I hope you’re able to address this all!

  6. Bro I think anyone that invalidates that you feel uncomfortable with things you consider immature and indecent ,for you ,can respectfully stop projecting.
    For some reason women /men feel entitled to just act any type of way with people and for some people it’s not okay, it’s not attractive and it’s not acceptable. I don’t want to date a 5 year old and grown people can enjoy themselves fully without being obnoxious.

Contribute to the conversation...

Yay! You've decided to leave a comment. That's fantastic. Please keep in mind that comments are moderated by the guidelines laid out in our comment policy. Let's have a personal and meaningful conversation and thanks for stopping by!