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You are here: Home / Family / 10 Signs Someone You Love May Be Struggling — and How to Start the Conversation

10 Signs Someone You Love May Be Struggling — and How to Start the Conversation

0 · May 13, 2026 · Leave a Comment

Most people do not announce when they are falling apart. They cancel plans with a vague excuse, laugh a little less, or stop bringing up the things that used to excite them. People close to them feel the shift before they can name it and then talk themselves out of saying anything, afraid of overreacting or pushing someone away. Knowing the signs someone you love may be struggling, and knowing how to respond when you see them, can make the difference between catching something early and watching it quietly compound for months.

A woman sitting at a table with a plate of

Why Do People Who Are Struggling Rarely Say So?

Most people in distress stay quiet because they do not want to be a burden. Others are not yet ready to name what is happening to themselves, let alone to someone else. Shame is a powerful silencer — and so is the exhausting effort of maintaining a normal appearance when nothing feels normal.

This is why the people closest to someone often carry a responsibility they did not ask for. They are positioned to notice what others miss, and sometimes they are the only ones who will.

Woman sitting on the ground with her head

What Are the Signs Someone You Love May Be Struggling?

The signs someone you love may be struggling do not usually arrive as a single dramatic moment. They build quietly — small changes in behavior, mood, and appearance that individually seem explainable, but together form a pattern worth taking seriously.

The ten most common signs are:

  • Sustained irritability or emotional flatness that feels out of character
  • A mood that does not improve when the original stressor passes
  • Uncharacteristic silence or reluctance to talk about their life
  • Canceling plans repeatedly without a clear reason
  • Pulling back from people or activities they previously enjoyed
  • Disrupted sleep, irregular meals, or declining performance at work
  • Unexplained weight changes, exhaustion, or declining hygiene
  • Neglecting medications, skipping appointments, or ignoring symptoms
  • Increased alcohol or substance use alongside secretive behavior
  • Unexplained financial changes, new social circles, or heightened defensiveness around certain topics

Each of these signs can have an innocent explanation on its own. What makes them significant is duration, consistency, and how many appear together.

Are There Shifts in Mood or Personality?

Sudden or sustained mood changes are among the earliest indicators. A person who was previously warm becomes sharp or flat. Someone who is easygoing grows irritable over minor things. Someone who used to talk openly goes quiet for days at a time.

These changes are easy to rationalize as stress or a bad week. What distinguishes a passing rough patch from something deeper is duration and consistency — a shift that holds across several weeks and does not lift when the original stressor resolves.

Is the Person Withdrawing from People and Routines?

Social withdrawal is one of the most consistent warning signs across mental health conditions. Canceled plans become a pattern rather than an exception. A person stops showing up to things they used to enjoy. They become hard to reach and slow to respond.

Routine disruption accompanies this. Sleep becomes irregular. Meals are skipped. Responsibilities at work or at home quietly slide. The structure that held their day together starts to erode — and they often minimize it when asked.

Are There Physical or Health-Related Changes?

The body carries what the mind cannot always express. Unexplained weight changes, visible exhaustion, declining hygiene, or frequent illness are all signs that something is running the person down. These physical signals often point to depression, chronic stress, or anxiety that has gone unaddressed.

Health neglect is another pattern worth watching. A person who stops managing their medications, skips doctor appointments, or ignores symptoms they would previously have taken seriously may be struggling to care for themselves at a basic level. Understanding why medication management matters for the whole family is one way to stay informed about changes in a loved one’s health that might otherwise go unnoticed.

Could Substance Use Be a Factor?

Sometimes emotional pain finds a chemical outlet. A person may increase alcohol use to manage anxiety, or turn to other substances to dull something they cannot process in any other way. The behavioral signs — withdrawal, mood swings, secretiveness, declining function — overlap significantly with other mental health struggles, which makes it easy to miss.

Therefore, spotting substance misuse early is far easier when you know the specific patterns to look for, rather than waiting for a crisis point that can no longer be explained away. Changes in financial behavior, unexplained absences, new social circles that feel off, and heightened defensiveness around certain topics are worth noting alongside the broader emotional changes.

Woman sitting on window sill, looking

How Do You Start the Conversation?

The most effective approach is direct and calm. Focus on what you have observed, not what you have concluded. “I’ve noticed you seem exhausted lately, and I’ve been worried about you” lands very differently than “I think something is wrong with you.” One opens a door. The other puts someone on trial.

Choose a private moment when neither of you is rushed. Avoid staging the conversation as an intervention — that dynamic creates pressure and defensiveness rather than safety. Active listening without rushing toward solutions is one of the most effective tools for supporting someone in distress. Ask questions. Stay quiet long enough to hear the answers.

What If They Deny It or Push Back?

Denial is not a dead end. Most people need several conversations — spread over weeks — before they feel safe enough to acknowledge what is happening. A single refusal does not mean the conversation failed. It means they are not ready yet.

What matters is that you said something, and said it with care. Leave the door explicitly open: “I’m not going anywhere, and whenever you want to talk, I’m here.” Research from the American Psychological Association shows that people with serious mental illness are more likely to seek help when they believe at least one person in their life truly understands what they are going through. That belief takes more than one conversation to build.

What If You Cannot Be There in Person?

Distance does not eliminate the ability to notice and respond. Regular video or phone calls reveal a great deal — changes in appearance, energy, how someone talks about their days, and how often they deflect. Paying attention to what shifts from call to call is a form of presence even when geography separates you.

For family members supporting older relatives, the question of how to monitor well-being from a distance is especially pressing. The tips on how simple tech is changing senior safety touch on tools and habits that help families stay connected to a loved one’s daily reality without becoming intrusive.

Woman on a call with a cell

You Can’t Support Someone Else on an Empty Reserve

Supporting a person who is struggling is emotionally demanding. And sustained support over weeks or months can quietly deplete the person providing it. Setting realistic limits on what you can offer is not a failure. It is what allows you to show up consistently rather than burning out and disappearing.

The parallel to any serious caregiving situation is direct. Anyone who has navigated what it means to support a loved one who may need home care knows that caring for yourself is not optional. It is how you stay available to someone who needs you over the long term. The same principle applies here.

Say Something — the Right Time Is Now

Recognizing the signs someone you love may be struggling does not mean you need all the answers before you act. Your job is not to diagnose or fix. It is to make sure the person knows they are not invisible. Most people who eventually get help can trace it back to one moment when someone who cared about them said something. Be that person. Start with what you have noticed, stay patient through the discomfort, and understand that showing up consistently matters far more than finding the perfect words.

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Heather from Whipperberry
Hello... my name is Heather and I'm the creator of WhipperBerry a creative lifestyle blog packed full of great recipes and creative ideas for your home and family. I find I am happiest when I'm living a creative life and I love to share what I've been up to along the way... Come explore, my hope is that you'll leave inspired!

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