2563: How Can You Change Your Boyfriend Without Him Getting Insulted by Evan Marc Katz
Optimal Relationships DailyApril 22, 2025
2563
00:09:42

2563: How Can You Change Your Boyfriend Without Him Getting Insulted by Evan Marc Katz

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Episode 2563:

Evan Marc Katz unpacks the delicate dance between offering feedback and unintentionally pushing a partner away, showing how even well-meaning comments can feel like rejections. By highlighting the power of empathy, timing, and emotional language, he reveals how to build deeper trust instead of resentment.

Read along with the original article(s) here: https://www.evanmarckatz.com/blog/communication/how-can-you-change-your-boyfriend-without-him-getting-insulted-2

Quotes to ponder:

"Constructive criticism is given for the benefit of the recipient. Destructive criticism is given for the benefit of the speaker."

"What he hears: 'She doesn’t love me the way I am.'"

"We change because WE discover that something is wrong and we want to make it right."

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[00:00:30] Now before we start, you might want to check out our other podcasts covering topics like personal development and minimalism, money, health, relationships, and more. So to optimize your life in other areas, just search for Optimal Living Daily in your podcast app. Now onto the show. This is Optimal Relationships Daily. How Can You Change Your Boyfriend Without Him Getting Insulted? By Evan Marc Katz of evanmarccatz.com

[00:00:59] Oh no, what did I just do? I've been dating this guy a few months and I'd say we're pretty close to each other. Intimate enough to be honest with one another. And normally he's a mellow, genuine guy. Tonight though, his older brother was in town. And for some reason, he became a huge braggart. And it made me really uncomfortable.

[00:01:20] He was talking about nothing but himself and showing off all sorts of things around the house. From the big TV to his micro brew collection in the fridge to how he's trained his dogs. Even the brother looked bored. It was a little sickening to see him ingratiate himself to his big brother. Personally, I think my guy is better than his older brother, who is stuck in the 50s with a housewife at home and three kids in parochial school.

[00:01:45] After he dropped his brother back off at the hotel, I had a word with him about his behavior tonight. I tried to be really gentle and to get him to see things from his brother's perspective. I tried not to sound like I was criticizing him. I asked him what he thought a conversation should be. And whether or not he thought he'd really been exchanging ideas with his brother or just talking at him.

[00:02:07] I said it was understandable that he'd grown up as the kid brother and so he'd still feel eager to please his older sibling. I wanted to make him feel I understood him and that I accepted him no matter what. Long story short, he got mad at me for bringing it up at all. He said he didn't appreciate me psychoanalyzing him. He said I ruined his night and then went to bed mad at me. I'm now typing alone in his spare room and I think I'll end up sleeping here tonight just to give him some space.

[00:02:34] Evan, I know women aren't supposed to try to change men. In my mind, I honestly did first try to make the distinction between A. asking him to change himself without reason and B. suggesting that he become more aware of the thought or intent behind the things that he says. I know I screwed it up along the way tonight. Any pointers as to how I should have handled this? Jules

[00:02:58] Dear Jules, I love your question because I don't really know the answer, but that's never stopped me before. My book, Why You're Still Single, points out the subtle difference between constructive criticism and destructive criticism. Constructive criticism is given for the benefit of the recipient. Like, you might want to get less emotional when asking your boss for a raise. Destructive criticism is given for the benefit of the speaker.

[00:03:27] Like, your constant complaining is making me very unhappy. While I have no doubt that you intended to teach your boyfriend a useful lesson, unfortunately, what came across was that you felt that he was being immature and unlikable. So because you were uncomfortable with his behavior, he had to listen to a lecture psychoanalyzing his motives for acting that way. Your criticism was designed more to improve him so that he doesn't embarrass you,

[00:03:55] as opposed to him asking why you thought the night was so tense. Your letter makes it clear that you're self-aware, and that you were really doing your best to tread lightly on this sensitive area. And yet, he still got upset at you. What's a well-meaning girlfriend who wants to change her boyfriend to do? I'm teasing, Jules. Because asking our partners to become who we want them to be is a very subtle exercise. We're wired a certain way from childhood.

[00:04:21] And for the most part, the only reason we ever change is because we decide to change. You don't lose weight when your mom says you need to lose weight. You don't stop smoking because your best friend thinks it's disgusting. You don't get a new job because your boyfriend thinks you need to earn more. We change because we discover that something is wrong and we want to make it right. Which is why all constructive criticism, as truthful and well-intended as it might be, comes across as destructive.

[00:04:49] What you think is I want him to be happier, healthier, more self-aware, better adjusted, wealthier. What he hears is she doesn't love me the way I am. I'm not just writing this from an expert perspective. I'm writing this as a guy who's wrestled with this in a few relationships. I had one girlfriend who constantly wanted me to change. She thought it was awful that I sometimes looked at X-rated content on the internet or glanced through Maxim magazines at the airport.

[00:05:17] She was stricken every time I talked to another attractive woman at a party. Despite the fact that I was in love with her, she called me everything from chauvinist to sociopath in an attempt to shame me into changing. The change didn't take. We broke up after seven months and I swore I'd never go out with a woman who criticized me like that again. The next girlfriend knew about the previous girlfriend and made a concerted effort not to criticize me.

[00:05:44] The problem was that she had some valid concerns about me. I was moody. I was anxious. I was financially unstable. And just as I thought we were going strong, she dumped me. All because I stifled her impulse to tell me what was on her mind. It wasn't out of the blue at all. I just didn't want to hear her concerns. That was my own past coming back to haunt me. Now, I'm in a relationship with a woman who lets me be myself.

[00:06:12] She doesn't flip out that I find other women attractive. She doesn't berate me when she feels I've done something wrong. If there's ever any unrest between us, we talk about it. Like adults. It's never, You were wrong for making plans without including me. You must not really love me. But rather, I felt hurt that you didn't want me to come out to meet your friend. That subtle shift between placing blame and letting me know how she felt makes the same point much more palatable.

[00:06:41] So, Jules, put yourself in his shoes. Ask how you'd feel if he dissected your behavior. Ask how he could criticize you without offending you. It's not that easy. People are sensitive, especially if a criticism hits too close to home. No one will ever be perfect. You're not either. And I trust you'd rather feel accepted for your flaws than to be with someone who wants to iron all of them out.

[00:07:09] You just listened to the post titled, How Can You Change Your Boyfriend Without Him Getting Insulted? by Evan Mark Katz of EvanMarkKatz.com And thanks a lot to Evan for another wonderful post. I really like the themes he touched upon today, and especially this really simple yet effective pivot of speaking to someone's own benefit rather than your own benefit when offering criticism. This is a great tool to keep in mind,

[00:07:36] yet difficult to execute sometimes if we aren't actively trying to. One way to do it though, folks, comes down to what we often talk about when having difficult conversations, and that is asking someone questions rather than spitting advice at them. When we emphasize asking questions, even if you are guilty of asking leading questions sometimes, like I am, people get into a rhythm of making their own discoveries and rethinking things from a different angle.

[00:08:02] They also build trust with us because they see us not overstepping our boundaries or giving them directions in something that they may feel confident in and not want guidance in. This can be really impactful, and it can make people feel truly heard, which is rarer than you may think. That is going to wrap us up for now though, everybody. Big thanks for being here today and listening all the way through. Wishing you a great rest of your Tuesday, and be sure to come on back tomorrow. That's where your optimal life awaits.