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    Over familiarity vs needs

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Relationships
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    • rinsiderR Offline
      rinsider @thebottomsupblog
      last edited by

      @thebottomsupblog I think daily dinners are great for bonding. Or when either of us suddenly ask, “wanna go out?” and the other says, “sure!”
      But it rarely happens nowadays… Daughter has school, son comes home about 9p, partner after 1030pm.
      I kinda envy regular hour households actually. Since all of us are “on shifts”, I have to do weekly check-ins! Sometimes one of them will be “nah, next time”.

      I do try to chat with my partner though as he’ll usually eat before he sleeps after midnight.

      Funnily enough, I’m rambling while he’s chewing n going, “mmm.” But he has extreme clarity on our one-sided convo the next day! 😅

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      • rinsiderR Offline
        rinsider @sharonkhoo
        last edited by

        @sharonkhoo what a heartwarming reply, thank you! 🫰Are the sparks recreated once you have established that time just exclusively for yourself and your hubby?

        sharonkhooS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • sharonkhooS Offline
          sharonkhoo @rinsider
          last edited by

          @rinsider said in Over familiarity vs needs:

          @sharonkhoo what a heartwarming reply, thank you! 🫰Are the sparks recreated once you have established that time just exclusively for yourself and your hubby?

          Since we never stopped having exclusive time, even during the busiest stages of life, I guess we never stopped having sparks. But we are realistic - we never expected to have the same level of “sparks” constantly. There have been stressful, difficult or busy times when what kept us going was commitment, trust, reliance on the other’s care, etc. No energy for sparks - maybe just a few glowing embers! During those times, we would try to at least check in with each other daily, even if it was just stealing time to talk a bit after the kids went to bed. The main thing is for both to be committed to the relationship however limited the time and energy available, and a bit of ingenuity of how to carve out little scraps of time just to reconnect. Then when things are more relaxed, you can fan the embers rather than having to restart the fire.

          thebottomsupblogT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • thebottomsupblogT Offline
            thebottomsupblog @sharonkhoo
            last edited by thebottomsupblog

            @sharonkhoo @rinsider

            Wondering how you both define “sparks?”

            I think physical chemistry/attraction is essential when you first meet someone and want to date them.

            In long-term partnerships, I feel like what I value more is not needing to worry about someone. Trusting that we’ll each hold up our end of the bargain. With this trust comes space and energy to focus on our own goals, especially if kids are becoming independent.

            Also, I would say, go for the easy wins, like physical contact while watching a show together. I think a lot of people get stressed if they feel like a so-called “date” is actually a reason to fix something in the relationship or have a heavy discussion… it’s hard to get buy-in.

            I also think that sometimes, counselling/coaching can help to teach us new strategies for processing our emotions. My husband and I don’t trigger each other as often as in the earlier years… maybe we have learned some hacks on our own! I do have one or two other trigger individuals in my life haha — I’ll start another thread on that.

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            • sharonkhooS Offline
              sharonkhoo @thebottomsupblog
              last edited by sharonkhoo

              @thebottomsupblog said in Over familiarity vs needs:

              @sharonkhoo @rinsider

              Wondering how you both define “sparks?”

              I think physical chemistry/attraction is essential when you first meet someone and want to date them.

              “Sparks” - physical attraction, but also just the excitement in spending time with the person? As you said, like the early years of courtship and marriage.

              My take is that it’s unrealistic (and emotionally exhausting!) to experience that all the time through a long marriage. But the occasional spark is good (maybe essential) in a long marriage? Expectations of how this will look like and feel like should change over the years; if not, there is bound to be disappointment. It would be sad (I feel) if there is no longer that joy when we meet after a day apart, or that interest in hearing what the other is currently working on, feeling deeply or concerned about etc. And there’s great joy in being able to share memories, build on shared experiences, share jokes, etc. My kids sometimes complain that we read each others’ minds, and they can’t follow our thought processes because they aren’t verbalised!

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