The Small Things You Stopped Doing

In long-term relationships, it's rarely one big event that creates distance — it's the quiet disappearance of small kindnesses. This episode explores why micro-affirmations erode over the years, what that erosion actually feels like from the inside, and five concrete ways to start rebuilding the daily texture of connection — one small thing at a time.

The Small Things You Stopped Doing
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There's a particular kind of distance that doesn't announce itself. No fight, no betrayal, no clear turning point. Just a slow, quiet drift — and one day you realize that a lot of the little things you used to do for each other have stopped happening.
That's what this episode is about. Not the big relationship ruptures, but the micro-erosion: the texts that used to come just because, the coffee made without asking, the "how was your day?" that actually meant something. In long-term relationships, these small kindnesses tend to be the first things that slip away — quietly, incrementally, without anyone deciding to let them go.
Drawing on John Gottman's decades of research on "bids for connection" and what actually predicts relationship satisfaction over time, this episode walks through why micro-affirmations erode (habituation, the "we're fine" assumption, exhaustion), what it feels like to be on the receiving end of that erosion — when there's nothing to point at, but something to grieve — and five concrete shifts for rebuilding the daily texture of connection. Not through grand gestures, but through the ordinary, unremarkable contact that makes a relationship feel inhabited rather than managed.

Sources

This episode draws on publicly available relationship psychology research, including John Gottman's foundational work on bids for connection and turning toward/away behavior, habituation research in attachment psychology, and clinical observations on long-term partnership drift. No external URLs were used in production.

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