When a marriage slips into a state of co-existence, it’s usually because of an abundance of efficiency. We get so good at the logistics of our lives including the bills, the kids, the career milestones that we accidentally automate the relationship right out of the room.

Moving back toward a place of genuine connection is the deliberate work of de-automating your daily life together. It’s about deciding that the person across from you is more than just your co-pilot in adulthood.

The Exhaustion Of The Good Life

In a recent survey of couples aged 18–35, a staggering number of respondents noted that they felt “most lonely” when their lives were technically at their best. Everything was running smoothly, the emotional intimacy had become a casualty of their success though. One participant shared that she felt like a cog in a very well-oiled machine, where her value was based on her productivity rather than her presence.

This illustrates the identity debt of a functional marriage: you’re paying for a stable home with the currency of your soul. To get back to “us,” we have to be willing to let things be a little less efficient and a little more human.

1. Stop Being Useful For 20 Minutes

We’ve been conditioned to believe that every conversation must lead to a result. We talk about what’s for dinner, what’s happening this weekend, or how to fix the broken sink. The first shift is simply reclaiming useless time. Spend 20 minutes where logistics are strictly off-limits. Talk about a weird dream, a song you heard, or a memory from your childhood. When you stop being useful to each other, you start being interesting again.

2. Learn the Art of the Micro Check In

We often wait for date night to have a deep conversation, but by the time it rolls around, we’re too exhausted to do anything and look at our menus in silence. Connection happens in the cracks of the day. A micro check in is “What was the weirdest thing that happened to you today?” or “What’s one thing that’s been on your mind that you haven’t told me yet?” These tiny bridges keep the path between you clear of debris.

3. Break the Navigational Silence

In the previous article, we talked about moving around each other like clockwork in the kitchen. To break that, you have to introduce intentional friction. Touch their arm as you pass, look up from your phone when they enter the room, acknowledge their physical presence with more than just a grunt or a nod. You’re reminding your nervous system and theirs that you’re a team that actually likes each other.

4. Rediscover The Stranger Across The Table

We fall into the trap of thinking we already know everything there is to know about our spouse. Remember that people change every single day.

The person you married three years ago isn’t the person sitting across from you now, so approach them with a sense of curiosity rather than a sense of certainty, and ask questions you think you already know the answer to. You’ll be surprised at how much you’ve both evolved while you were busy paying the mortgage.

5. Create A Sacred Space For Conflict

Often, we stay in roommate mode because we’re afraid that if we start talking, we’ll start fighting. We avoid the depth because the depth feels dangerous.

Image source: Pexels

Transitioning back to connection means creating a way to talk about the messy stuff without it becoming a war. It’s about saying: “I’m feeling a little disconnected lately,” and having that be a vulnerable invitation rather than an accusation. Connection requires the bravery to be “not okay” together.

Key Takeaway

Moving from co-existing to connecting is a daily choice to prioritize the person over the project. If you don’t have a vibrant connection, you’re just managing a building. The most successful marriages are the ones where both people refuse to let the business of life become the only thing they share.

Reflection

If you’re ready to start closing the gap, consider these shifts in perspective:

Where in your relationship have you become “too efficient”? Is there a part of your day that’s become so automated that you’ve stopped actually seeing each other?

What’s one thing about your partner’s internal world right now that you have absolutely no clue about? What would happen if you asked them tonight?

How can you change the way you “come home” to each other, even if you’ve both been working from home in separate rooms all day?

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