GH 3-17-2026 || ABC General Hospital Spoilers Tuesday, March 17

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Okay, so I’ve been going over these Tuesday spoilers for General Hospital again and again, and the more I think about them, the more everything starts to feel heavier, like every storyline is quietly slipping into something darker without anyone fully realizing it yet.

The situation between Ric Lansing and Elizabeth Webber is honestly one of the most subtle but painful parts. On the surface, they’re just having a conversation about their future, trying to sound calm and reasonable, but underneath that, there’s this quiet sadness that keeps growing. Ric wants reassurance, something solid he can hold onto, but Liz feels more distant every time they try to be honest with each other. And what’s really getting to him isn’t some obvious betrayal. It’s the shift he can feel but can’t prove.

Because then there’s Dante Falconeri.

Liz is different around him. There’s warmth, ease, a kind of emotional safety that she doesn’t seem to have with Ric anymore. And that’s what makes it worse. Ric can see it in the way she speaks, the way she relaxes, the way she leans into conversations with Dante without even thinking about it. It creates this slow, creeping realization that Liz might be moving toward a version of happiness that no longer includes him. And that realization doesn’t explode. It just sits there, quietly breaking him.

At the same time, Portia Robinson makes a decision that throws everything else into chaos. She chooses to expose the truth that Jordan Ashford is pregnant with Curtis Ashford’s child, and the moment that secret becomes public, it stops being a private struggle and turns into a full-blown emotional crisis.

Curtis is hit hard. It’s not just shocking—it’s humiliating and destabilizing. Suddenly his personal life is no longer his own, and he’s forced to deal with the consequences in front of everyone. He’s caught between guilt, responsibility, and the fear of what this means for every relationship around him.

And Stella Henry sees the danger immediately. To her, this isn’t just a pregnancy. It’s the beginning of something much bigger, something that could tear apart whatever fragile balance the family still has. She understands that this child won’t just bring joy—it will bring conflict, tension, and emotional fallout that no one is ready to handle.

Meanwhile, Carly Corinthos is dealing with a completely different kind of fear when she confronts Sonny Corinthos. Her warning isn’t about strategy. It’s about consequences. Sonny believes he can stay ahead in his conflict with Ross Cullum and Jens Sidwell, calculating every move like he always has. But Carly knows better.

She knows these kinds of wars don’t stay controlled.

The deeper Sonny gets, the harder it becomes to protect the people closest to him. And that’s where her fear shifts into something almost unbearable—because it’s no longer about power or territory. It’s about Donna Corinthos. A child. Someone completely vulnerable. Someone who could become a target simply because of who her father is.

And Carly has seen this pattern before. Enemies don’t always attack directly. They go for the weakest point. The most emotional target. The one thing that will hurt the most.

That’s what makes her warning feel so urgent. She’s not questioning Sonny’s decisions. She’s trying to make him see that this situation may already be slipping beyond his control.

At the same time, Alexis Davis is starting to look at Willow Tait in a completely different way. What started as a vague suspicion is turning into something much more serious. The more Alexis observes, the more she feels like Willow isn’t just overwhelmed or making bad choices.

There’s something darker there.

And that suspicion becomes even more dangerous when it connects to what’s happening with Drew Cain. What looks like a personal crisis starts expanding into something far more explosive. Alexis begins to realize that the secrets surrounding Drew might not just be unfortunate circumstances—they could be part of something deliberate.

Each lie, each hidden detail, keeps pushing the situation closer to collapse.

If Alexis is right, then Willow isn’t just caught in the middle. She may be helping drive everything forward. And if that truth comes out, it won’t just damage reputations—it will destroy relationships and expose crimes that no one is ready to face.

Then there’s the situation with Jack Brennan and Ross Cullum, which feels like it could blow everything open on a completely different level. What starts as an interrogation could quickly turn into something much bigger, especially if Cullum begins revealing the darker side of the WSB’s past.

Not just missions. Not just secrets. But cover-ups, betrayals, and actions that may have destroyed innocent lives.

If that information comes out, it doesn’t just affect the present—it rewrites the past.

And then there’s Ric again, but this time from a different angle.

Something about him is shifting.

For Sonny Corinthos, that shift feels dangerous in a way that’s hard to define. Ric isn’t acting like someone who’s simply angry or hurt. He’s becoming more calculated, more intense, and more unpredictable. And that combination is what makes him truly unsettling.

Because Ric doesn’t see himself as unstable.

He sees himself as justified.

That’s what makes every decision he makes more dangerous than the last. He can rationalize anything. Convince himself that every line he crosses is necessary. And once someone reaches that point, they don’t stop easily.

Sonny can feel it.

And that feeling starts turning into something heavier than anger. It becomes vigilance. The kind where every conversation is analyzed, every move is questioned, every silence feels suspicious.

Because Ric isn’t just an external threat.

He’s too close.

Too connected to Sonny’s personal life, his history, his family. And that means any damage Ric causes won’t stay contained. It will spread, hitting emotional pressure points instead of obvious targets.

That’s what makes this entire storyline feel so intense right now.

It’s not just about conflict. It’s about tension building quietly in every direction. Relationships weakening. Secrets expanding. Characters making decisions that feel small in the moment but are clearly leading toward something much bigger.

And the worst part is that no one seems fully aware of how close everything is to exploding.