Side By Side: The Partner Program 8 Week Program SBS - Week 5 - Your Feelings Are Valid
Side by Side™ — Week 5: Your Feelings Are Valid
Side by Side · Partner Program
Week 5 of 8
Week Five

Your Feelings
Are Valid

“Jealousy. Fear. Grief. Pride mixed with confusion. This week they all get named — because a feeling you can name is one you can actually do something with.”

35 min read
🤞 The feelings inventory
💬 How to say it out loud
💻 Deepest Zoom call
🔶 Honesty badge
8-week program
62%
This Week

Nobody told you your feelings
were allowed in this.

Every resource about bariatric surgery and GLP-1 medication is written for the patient. The partner’s role in all of it is to be supportive — to adjust, to accommodate, to hold things together. There is almost no space in the care system for the partner to have their own emotional experience of what’s happening.

So the feelings went somewhere else. They showed up as hovering, or as withdrawal, or as tension around meals, or as a vague unease that neither of you could quite name. They didn’t disappear just because there was no container for them. Unfelt feelings don’t vanish — they find other exits.

This week they get a container. Jealousy. Fear. Grief. Resentment. Pride mixed with anxiety. The sense of being left behind. The worry that your partner is becoming someone who doesn’t need you the same way. All of it is valid. None of it makes you a bad partner. A feeling you can name is one you can actually do something with. A feeling you suppress becomes the thing that quietly damages the relationship.

Week 5 is the week Side by Side has been building toward. Come with everything.

Official Permission
You are allowed to have
complicated feelings
about your partner’s transformation.
Supporting someone’s growth and having feelings about what that growth brings up in you are not opposites. You can be genuinely proud of your partner and also scared of what it means. You can want them to succeed and also feel uncertain about your place in that success. Both are true. Both matter. Neither cancels the other out.
🌿
A note from Melissa

“My husband told me, about a year after my surgery, that he had been jealous. Not of a person — of the attention I was getting, of the confidence I had found, of the version of me that was emerging and that he sometimes felt hadn’t been there for him specifically. He felt guilty about it for months before he said it. When he finally did, I didn’t feel defensive. I felt relieved. Because the jealousy had been in the room the whole time — I could feel it — and having it named meant we could finally talk about what was actually happening between us.”

The Core Teaching

Feeling it and acting on it
are two different things.

The reason so many partners suppress complicated feelings about their partner’s transformation is a conflation of two things that are actually separate: having a feeling and acting on a feeling.

Feeling jealous doesn’t mean you behave jealously. Feeling resentful doesn’t mean you punish your partner for what you’re carrying. Feeling afraid doesn’t mean you create obstacles to your partner’s growth. The feeling is information. The behavior is a choice.

This week is about the feeling — naming it, acknowledging it, giving it the room it needs so it stops finding exits through behaviors that damage the relationship. What you do with the feeling after you’ve named it is a separate conversation, and this program gives you the tools for that too.

“The feelings that aren’t named don’t disappear. They show up as the thing you said that you didn’t mean to say, or the distance that appeared from nowhere, or the argument that was never really about what it was supposed to be about.”
— Melissa · Week 5 Zoom Call
The Feelings Inventory

What have you been carrying
without naming it?

This is private. Tap anything that’s been present — even quietly, even occasionally, even with guilt attached to it. The guilt is part of why it’s been hard to name. Name it anyway.

Partner Feelings Inventory
Tap anything that has been part of your experience. This stays private.
Jealousy of the attention my partner is receiving
Other people treating them differently; compliments; the social shift
Fear that my partner will outgrow me
Worry that who they’re becoming won’t have room for who I am
Grief for the person and the relationship as it was
Missing certain things about before, even things that weren’t good
Resentment about the invisible support work
Carrying a lot that nobody has acknowledged or noticed
Pride and discomfort at the same time
Genuinely proud of their progress; unsettled by what it surfaces in you
Feeling left behind or irrelevant
Your partner seems to be thriving; you’re not sure where you fit
Anxiety about your own body or health
Your partner’s transformation has surfaced feelings about yourself
Uncertainty about who we are as a couple now
The relationship worked for who you both were; this feels new and unmapped
You named some things. That took more honesty than it probably felt like. Here’s what matters: every feeling you just flagged is normal, documented, and shared by partners in programs like this one everywhere. Not one of them means you’re a bad partner. Not one of them means you don’t support your partner’s transformation. They mean you’re a human being watching someone you love go through something significant — and having your own experience of it. The rest of this week is about what to do with what you just named.
Both Are True

The feelings that live
side by side in you.

The most disorienting part of being a partner in this situation is the coexistence of feelings that seem like they should cancel each other out. They don’t. Holding two contradictory truths at once is not confusion — it’s accuracy.

Both of these are true
Proud+Afraid they’ll outgrow me
You can watch your partner become someone extraordinary and simultaneously be frightened of what that means for your place in their life. The pride is real. The fear is real. Acknowledging the fear doesn’t diminish the pride.
Both of these are true
Supportive+Exhausted by it
You can be genuinely committed to your partner’s success and also bone-tired of the adjustments, the considerations, the invisible labor of reorganising your shared life around a journey that isn’t yours. Both are true. Week 7 is specifically about you.
Both of these are true
Glad they’re thriving+Grieving what was
Your partner’s transformation is a genuine gain. It is also, for both of you, a loss — of the shared food culture, of certain patterns and comforts, of the simpler version of the relationship. Loss and gain coexist. Grief doesn’t mean you want things to go back.
Both of these are true
Want them to succeed+Uncertain about my role
You can fully back your partner’s journey and also feel genuinely uncertain about what your role looks like in the partnership they’re building. Wanting them to succeed and needing to understand your place in that success are not in conflict.
By Track

How partner feelings differ
by journey type.

The Speed of the Change
Bariatric surgery produces rapid, visible change. Partners often describe feelings they weren’t prepared for because the transformation happened faster than the psychological adjustment. If your feelings feel out of proportion to events, it may be because they’ve been accumulating quickly without a place to go.
🧡
The Caretaker Transition
Partners who were deeply involved in surgery preparation and recovery sometimes experience a grief-adjacent feeling when the caretaker role fades. It can be hard to distinguish between “I miss being needed in that way” and “I’m glad they don’t need me like that anymore.” Both can be true.
👀
Being Seen Alongside Them
As your partner becomes more visible, you may find yourself wondering how you’re being perceived alongside them. This is rarely spoken aloud but extremely common. Your own relationship with your body and appearance may surface in ways you didn’t anticipate. That’s worth naming too.
🕐
The “Before and After” Narrative
The bariatric world loves before-and-after. Your partner may be celebrated in terms of their transformation. Partners sometimes feel invisible in that narrative — the uncredited support person in someone else’s story. If that lands, it’s worth saying so — to your partner and to this group.
📈
The Slow Accumulation
GLP-1 changes are gradual, which means partner feelings often accumulate slowly and without a clear trigger. You may not be able to pinpoint when the feelings started, which can make them harder to name. “Something has been different for months and I can’t say exactly what” is still worth surfacing.
💉
The “Is This Permanent?” Uncertainty
GLP-1 protocols are ongoing and open-ended. Partners sometimes feel uncertain about whether to invest emotionally in the changes — what if the medication stops? What if it doesn’t work long-term? That uncertainty is a real feeling that deserves acknowledgment, not suppression.
💥
Feeling Like It Happened to You Too
When your partner starts GLP-1, your household changes. Food culture changes. Social patterns change. Partners on this track sometimes feel like a significant life change happened to them without their full consent or preparation. That’s not resentment — it’s an accurate description of the situation.
⚙️
The Medication as Third Party
Some partners describe feeling like the medication is a third presence in the relationship — something that shapes their partner’s moods, appetite, and energy in ways they can’t predict or respond to. That feeling of navigating around something you don’t control is real and worth naming.
What to Do With What You Feel

How to say it out loud
without making it a grenade.

Naming a feeling to your partner is different from acting it out. The goal is to share what’s true for you in a way that opens conversation rather than closes it. These four steps work.

1
Pick a neutral moment
Not during a meal, not during a conflict, not when either of you is tired or stressed. A walk, a quiet evening, a drive. Lower-stimulus environments make harder conversations easier to have and easier to hear.
Not: “I need to talk to you about something” said at 10pm after a hard day. Yes: “Can we take a walk this weekend? There’s something I’ve been wanting to say.”
2
Own it as yours with “I” language
The difference between “you make me feel jealous” and “I’ve been feeling jealous” is significant. The first assigns responsibility to your partner for your feeling. The second owns it. Own it. Your partner didn’t cause your feeling — the situation produced it. Language matters here.
“I’ve been feeling [jealous / scared / left behind / resentful] and I haven’t known how to say it. I’m saying it now because I think it’s affecting us.”
3
Name it without demanding a response
After you name the feeling, give your partner a moment before asking anything of them. The most common mistake is immediately adding “so I need you to…” right after naming something vulnerable. Let the naming land first. The response will be better for the space.
Name the feeling. Pause. Then: “I’m not asking you to fix it. I just needed you to know it was there.”
4
Ask for what you actually need
After the feeling has been heard, you’re allowed to have a need. Not a demand — a need. “I need to feel like I matter in this” is a legitimate ask. “I need reassurance that we’re still building something together” is legitimate. Ask for it specifically. Vague needs get vague responses.
“What I actually need from you is [to feel seen in this / to hear that you’re still here for us / to know this isn’t happening at my expense]. Can we talk about that?”
💡
What to do if your partner responds defensively. Some partners will respond to these conversations with defensiveness — especially if they’ve been managing guilt about their own transformation affecting you. If that happens: slow down, don’t escalate, and say: “I’m not criticising your journey. I’m telling you something about mine.” Then give them time to come back to it. Most defensiveness fades when the person feels safe that you’re not asking them to stop.
The Conversation Guide

Five situations.
How to handle each one.

You’re feeling jealous of the attention your partner is getting
✗ Don’t express it as
“You’ve been really enjoying all the attention, haven’t you.” Said lightly but not lightly.
Passive expressions of jealousy — the almost-joke, the loaded comment — put your partner on the defensive without giving them anything real to respond to. The feeling doesn’t move; it just creates friction.
✓ Express it as
“I’ve been feeling something I’m embarrassed about. I’ve been jealous — of the attention, of the confidence. Not jealous of a person. Just complicated. I wanted you to know.”
Naming it directly, owning the embarrassment about it, and being specific about what it is and what it isn’t gives your partner something real to respond to. Most partners respond to this kind of honesty with warmth.
You’re afraid your partner is going to outgrow you
✗ Don’t express it as
Nothing. Keeping the fear private where it runs as background anxiety and shapes every interaction.
Unexpressed fear tends to express itself anyway — as neediness, as withdrawal, as subtle undermining. None of those are the relationship you want. Say the fear instead.
✓ Express it as
“I’ve been scared that as you become more confident and more yourself, there’s going to be less room for who I am. I don’t want that to be true. I needed to say it.”
Fear named is fear shared. Your partner is almost certainly not aware this is what’s underneath some of your recent behavior. This conversation tends to be a turning point.
You feel resentful that you’ve been carrying a lot of invisible support work
✗ Don’t express it as
“I do everything around here.” (During an unrelated conflict.) Or silent withdrawal that looks like indifference but is actually resentment.
Resentment expressed sideways — through other arguments, through withdrawal — corrodes the relationship without addressing the actual thing. The resentment needs its own conversation.
✓ Express it as
“I’ve been carrying more than usual and I don’t think it’s been fully seen. I’m not angry about it — I just need you to know it’s been heavy, and maybe to hear that you’ve noticed.”
This names the resentment without accusing and asks for the specific thing — acknowledgment — that resentment is usually actually asking for. Simple acknowledgment resolves a lot of this.
Your partner’s transformation has brought up feelings about your own body or health
✗ Don’t express it as
Self-deprecating comments about your own body. Or comparisons — either made out loud or felt privately without being addressed.
Self-deprecation used as a coping mechanism in this context puts your partner in a difficult position — they can’t reassure you without the reassurance seeming conditional on their own changes.
✓ Express it as
“Watching your journey has made me think more about my own health. I don’t know exactly what to do with that yet — but I wanted to say it.” Or take it to Week 7, which is specifically about you.
Naming it separates it from your partner’s journey. Your feelings about your own body are valid and separate. Week 7 gives them their own full session.
You feel proud of your partner and also genuinely complicated about it
✗ Don’t express it as
Only the pride. Editing out the complicated part because it feels less acceptable.
Editing your emotional experience into only the acceptable half doesn’t make the other half go away. It just means your partner only ever hears one side of what you’re actually carrying.
✓ Express it as
“I’m genuinely proud of you. And I’ve also been carrying some complicated feelings alongside it that I’m working through. Both things are true and I wanted you to know both.”
Sharing the full picture — even when the full picture is messy — builds more genuine intimacy than a curated version. Your partner can handle the complexity. Let them.
Week 5 Check-In

The honest version.

Week 5 Worksheet
Your Feelings Are Valid
Save as you go
1. Which feeling from the inventory is the hardest to admit — and why has it been hard to name?
Name the feeling and the thing that made it feel unacceptable. Usually it’s the belief that having the feeling makes you a bad partner.
2. Which of the “both are true” pairings from this week describes your experience most accurately?
3. Is there a feeling you’ve been expressing sideways — through hovering, withdrawal, or arguments that weren’t really about what they seemed to be about?
Be honest about the connection between the feeling and the behavior.
4. Using the four-step expression guide — write the version of the conversation you want to have with your partner. Draft it here first.
Use “I” language. Name the feeling. What do you actually need?
Saved privately to your account.
Before the Zoom Call

Come prepared for this one.

Reflection — Week 5
“What’s the feeling you’ve been most reluctant to admit — and what do you think it actually needs?”
Bring This Thursday
“The one feeling you’re going to name out loud in this group — the one you’ve been carrying the longest without saying.”
This Week’s Live Call

The deepest call
in the program.

Week 5 — Your Feelings Are Valid: The Witnessing Call
Thursday · 7:30 PM CT · 75 min
🤞 Format: Deep Share Circle · 75 min this week
  • 0–8 min
    Check-in: the feeling from the inventory that was hardest to flag. One word or one sentence. No context required yet.
  • 8–15 min
    Mini teaching: feeling vs acting on feeling, the “both are true” framework, Melissa’s husband’s jealousy story. Brief — the call is for the group this week, not the teaching.
  • 15–55 min
    Deep share circle — each member names the feeling they’ve been carrying. Melissa witnesses and reflects without fixing. The group hears each other. This is the most important 40 minutes of the program.
  • 55–65 min
    The expression round: each member names which feeling they’re going to say out loud to their partner before next Thursday, and the one sentence they’ll start with.
  • 65–75 min
    Grounding close — each member names one thing that is solid and certain about their relationship right now. Non-optional. The container has to be closed before the call ends.
Join This Week’s Call
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Week 4: When the Dynamic Shifts
Week 5 of 8 · Side by Side
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