
Falling in love is a special feeling, but rushing into commitment without knowing your potential partner well can soon lead to a heartbreak that you never saw coming. And so, spotting red flags early on in a relationship can help save your time, emotional energy and create healthy bonds with the right people.

Imagine being in a relationship with someone new. In the initial days things are all rosy-- they constantly text you and make you feel special, the next day they ghost you for days with lame excuses. If your communication with your potential partner is inconsistent, then it is a classic red flag in a budding relationship. It signals emotional unavailability or divided attention - maybe they're juggling options or just bad at prioritising you. Healthy love is based on reliability; flaky replies erode trust from day one. Don't ignore this pattern thinking "they'll change." Instead, ask directly about their communication style early. If they dodge or deflect, it's a sign they're not ready for serious commitment with you.

True connection respects your "no" as much as your "yes." A major warning sign is someone who pushes your boundaries. This isn't passion - it's disrespect and control being shown as care. In serious relationships, boundaries make you feel safe; ignoring them breeds resentment. If they guilt-trip you ("You're overreacting!") or test limits repeatedly, it hints at deeper issues like narcissism or poor empathy.

If your new partner constantly dodges any future-oriented chats with you-- be it about having a trip together or meeting the family--- then it's a major red flag. Serious relationships need shared life goals. But avoid "we" language shows that they view your relationship as something temporary. This may be due to their fear of commitment, unresolved past drama with an ex, or parallel dating other people. Test them gently by asking: "Where do you see us in six months?" Vague answers or discomfort show that they're not all-in in the relationship.

A little protectiveness in the relationship can feel flattering, but excessive jealousy - ike constantly checking your phone, grilling about your friends from the opposite gender, or sulking over social media likes on your post - is toxic behaviour one should not ignore. It stems from insecurity, not love, and escalates into control. In healthy relationships are based on trust.

Sparks fly, but if your core values about life and your relationship don't match then your bond cannot survive the test of time. For instance, you want to have children but they don't, or you're ambitious while they lounge endlessly, then you have misaligned values in life. Remember, surface chemistry fades over time; it's your shared values that keep the relationship going in the long run.