You picked up Toxicity in Love Relationship by Adrian Gabriel Dumitru because, apparently, you enjoy pain disguised as poetry. Congratulations. You’ve officially chosen self-inflicted emotional whiplash over Netflix. The title alone warns you—this isn’t about romantic dinners or cute couple selfies. It’s about the slow, elegant implosion of affection. Think less “happily ever after,” more “beautifully self-destructive spiral.”
Dumitru writes like a man performing open-heart surgery on himself—with a pen. Every line feels like he’s dissecting a love story that went from fairytale to psychological thriller in record time. He admits his addiction to writing as therapy, as if bleeding on paper somehow detoxifies the venom of heartbreak. Spoiler: it doesn’t. But it’s fascinating to watch him try.
The book’s greatest charm is its refusal to pretend that love is sane. Dumitru doesn’t whisper sweet nothings; he screams metaphors at you until you realize, with mild horror, that he might be right. Love isn’t a feeling—it’s a full-time experiment in duality. Good and evil. Beauty and ugliness. Heaven and hell. He puts it bluntly: all is duality, and he can’t stay away from it. Neither can you, by the way, but at least he’s honest about it.
There’s an art to turning personal chaos into literature, and Dumitru does it with the flair of someone who both despises and worships love. Every paragraph drips with poetic despair. The irony? He calls it “toxicity,” but it reads like confession mixed with seduction. You want to look away, but you can’t. It’s too human. Too raw. Too annoyingly accurate.
This isn’t a self-help book. There are no five easy steps to heal your heart. Instead, there’s a mirror. And in that mirror, you’ll find your own moments of insanity—the arguments you replay, the silences that screamed louder than words, the way you stayed even when you knew better. Dumitru’s genius lies in saying the things everyone feels but no one wants to admit out loud.
When you finish, you won’t feel healed. You’ll feel exposed. Slightly irritated. Maybe amused. But somewhere between the sarcasm and sincerity, you’ll catch the message: love is toxic, yes—but pretending it’s not is worse.
It’s not a love story. It’s a confession written with too many ellipses and not enough denial. And somehow, that makes it beautiful.
Google books
https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=kBmPEQAAQBAJ
Apple Books
https://books.apple.com/ro/book/the-abuser-is-always-the-victim/id6753941734
