There are shows you “watch,” and then there are shows that sit in your nervous system for a few days afterward like they’ve forgotten to check out.
Should I Marry a Murderer? is very much the second kind.
At first glance, you think you’re signing up for true crime curiosity with a side of “wow, people make questionable romantic choices.” But it quietly becomes something else: a psychological slow burn about attachment, self-concept, and how easily the human mind can go from “this is a red flag” to “but he did say he loved me in a very intense, slightly alarming way.”
The central arc is hard to watch. Not because it’s sensational, but because it’s intimate in a way that feels almost intrusive. A woman, already a high achiever, already someone the world might label as “together,” drifts into a destabilizing relationship after another destabilizing relationship. There’s a rapid engagement. There’s a “manly man” narrative that reads like it was assembled from clichés in a thriller writers’ room. And then came the confession. He tells her he killed someone.
And somehow the story doesn’t end there.
What unfolds instead is the part of human psychology we don’t like putting on brochures. The cognitive dissonance, the attachment loops, the way fear and affection can braid themselves together until you can’t easily tell where one ends and the other begins. She turns him in. And then continues to stay connected to him. Because the psyche, inconveniently, does not always behave like a clean moral decision tree.
One of the most uncomfortable threads in the series is how quickly the internet and even parts of the commentary around it, reach for the “she should have known better” narrative. As if intelligence is a shield against emotional vulnerability. As if achievement inoculates someone against manipulation, impulsivity, or relational trauma.
It doesn’t.
High-functioning people can still have fragile attachment systems. Brilliant people can still override their own alarm bells in the name of connection. And sometimes what looks like “irrationality” from the outside is actually a very coherent internal logic built on fear, longing, and survival strategies that once made sense in earlier chapters of life.
What complicates things further is the mental health deterioration that becomes visible over time in the series. The emotional volatility, the spiraling, the break from baseline functioning, whatever language you want to use, it’s difficult to ignore that her system is under extreme strain. Not because she is “weak,” but because sustained relational instability can do exactly what it did here. It eroded reality testing, impaired judgment, and narrowed the field of perceived options until every road leads back to the same person, the same story, the same loop.
That’s the part the show handles with a kind of uncomfortable honesty. Not neatly. Not diagnostically. But humanly.
And then there’s the perspective shift that makes the series more interesting than its premise suggests: the idea of someone who participates in turning a partner in, while also struggling with the emotional fallout of that decision. It complicates the usual true-crime binary of “victim” and “villain” and replaces it with something messier in that there’s a person in a relational system that has collapsed under its own contradictions.
You don’t walk away from that kind of story feeling like you’ve solved anything. If anything, you walk away slightly more suspicious of your own certainty.
Because here’s the uncomfortable truth the series keeps brushing up against. People don’t always make decisions from a place of clarity. Sometimes they make decisions from attachment. Sometimes from fear. Sometimes from a nervous system that is so activated it mistakes intensity for safety.
And yes, sometimes from patterns they don’t fully understand yet.
The hardest part, to me, wasn’t the crime subplot. It was watching how easily someone can be reduced, in public commentary, to a cautionary tale about intelligence. As though being smart is supposed to immunize you from emotional collapse.
But emotional life doesn’t run on IQ points.
It runs on history. On attachment. On regulation capacity. On the stories we tell ourselves about what love is supposed to feel like even when those stories are actively hurting us.
If there’s anything quietly brave in the series, it’s not just the willingness to show the worst moments of a relationship. It’s the willingness to show how messy the aftermath can be when someone realizes they are both participant and survivor of their own choices.
And maybe that’s the part worth sitting with a little longer.
Not “how could she not know?”
But, what does it mean that so many people including high achieving, intelligent, self-aware people, can still lose themselves in dynamics that feel like love until they don’t?
That question doesn’t come with a tidy ending. Which, inconveniently, is what makes it real.
Categories: identity, mental health, Pop Culture, Psychology, society, women





Indeed Dear Miriam Who We Think We Are And How We Might Assess
That With Standardized Means of IQ Measuring Systemizing Intelligence
Doesn’t Nearly Reflect the Totality of All We aRe Evolved to Be And Do Over
Millions of Years and far Beyond Even that in Other Forms in Essence Where
No Chain Could
Be Broken in Life
For Us to exist today
Yes as ironically even modern Science
Shows Our Word Thinking Reasoning Mind
Only comprises about .5 Percent of Our Being Human Whole
And Much of That Far Beyond Measure Yes both in Subconscious and
Conscious Ways So Is it Any Surprise that Neuroscience Modernly Also
Suggests We Basically Hallucinate
Our Realities Now Based On what
We Basically Hallucinated Before
In Other Words Yes All Stories of
Life Come and Go Spoon Fed From
Birth We Solo and Group Create for our
Realities Always Changing Now where Our Feelings
Our HeARTS Belong Only to Us Where We May Attempt
to More Fully in Verbal and Non-Verbal Way express what
We Feel and Sense and Do About Life Now in a Mutually
Consensual Way Just Giving Sharing Caring Healing at Best
For All with
Most Respect
And Least Harm
And As Far as Relationships
Go And How Easy our Evolved
Real HeART SPiRiT And SoUL Felt
Ways of Being Goes with Others
One Connection of Eyes May Stun
Us With a Love That Never ended
Before Until Met Now Forever More
Indeed the Depth of Human Feelings
Senses and Connections May Be Difficult to Put into Words
As Love HeARTS SPiRiTS SoULS All Feelings and Senses in
Synergy Are Beyond the Tape Measure Rule for Real as Flesh and
Blood Reality
Flows as a River
Doesn’t Necessarily
Obey Banks for coming Floods
It Just Does
As We Do Too
Meanwhile We Either
Ride the River Wave in
Balance or Fall off Now
And Then for What Floods Next
As Waves continue to Come and Go
And The Gravity of Who We aRe Pulls
Us and Pushes Us every which way and Loose
Tides Real
We Come
to Be and
Do Next
Far Beyond Even Any Metrics
of Poetry in Only Rhyme and
Reason Measured as Meter too
The River Flows And So Does Love
As Mountain Streams come and Go
Dam It and Control it or Let it Flow Free
To be and
Do in Balance
For the Play
of Art Life continues
to Evolve
or Devolve
As True
Rivers Dry up too
Meanwhile We aRe Conductors
And Players of the Orchestras We Create
Whenever someone Says Love is Crazy i Look
Back to Examples Like Young Women Who Sent
Love Letters to Ted Bundy Awaiting the Death Penalty
for the Most
Horrid realities
of this Human Experience
And there is the 70-80 Million
or so Who Follow a Leader who
Clearly Said They Would Still Support
Him if He Shot someone on 5th Avenue
From the
Beginning
of the Grift
They still
truly Insanely
consider gift
Anyway i’ve evolved
to being a Hybrid Vehicle hehe…
It’s Not Really Hard to Predict “The Condition”
True when all is said and Done We Can’t Predict
IT
As there
is always
another
‘Orange
Gutter’ Waiting….
Mean while i ride my wave
in
balance
best i can and will do for real
Always Subject to “The Condition”..:)
LikeLike
Ask yourself how unsatisfying the lives and loves of some people must be that they’re emotionally manipulated by online (or phone, for the older generations) scammers.
If you don’t have a satisfying life, and someone seems to be paying you a LOT of focused attention, and telling you how wonderful you are, you WILL be tempted.
I have the writer’s equivalent: almost every day I get emails from someone who claims to have read ‘my book’ (they usually don’t say which).
I have the first two volumes in my mainstream trilogy Pride’s Children, PURGATORY and NETHERWORLD, for sale on Amazon, and I am really happy with the way they turned out, but am having very few sales while working on the third volume, LIMBO, so I am ripe for the seeming praise that comes from a supposed new reader. Most writers don’t get enough praise for the books they spent so much time and love on, so are constantly needy.
So in comes what always turns out to be a scammer. Praise first. Then they offer a suggestion, which leads to them doing something for you, because of course all ‘your book’ needs is a book trailer/their exclusive book club with so many readers/marketing to X…, which they can do for you for a very low price… Apparently once you engage and hand over money, it just keeps getting worse.
I fell (but not to the point of paying for anything) the first time it happened, and chatted back and forth with my ‘new reader’. But these scammers are so greedy they vastly overdo it, and many more scammers come to you with more offers, so they bring their own waving red flags…
Sigh.
To this we have come.
And the scammers have learned how to use AI so their praise is so lilting, so perfect, so exactly what a writer wants to hear about their work…
LikeLike