Relationships
fromSlate Magazine
1 hour agoHelp! I'm Making a Big Change in My Love Life. Being Honest About My Past Could Sabotage It.
Honesty about past relationships is crucial for building trust with new partners.
According to a 2025 poll by Rassmussen, 37% of single adults under 30 in the US report that they are "not interested" in dating at all. It appears that many young Americans have effectively given up on romance. This begs the question of why so many young people would forego one of the most basic physical, social, and emotional human needs: an intimate relationship with a loving partner.
Some people enter relationships looking for a witness. They want someone who will laugh at the right moments, validate the right feelings, and remain captivated by the ongoing narrative of their life. This sounds harsh, and it can be. But it often doesn't look dramatic or narcissistic on the surface. It looks like charm.
Relationship research has made it distinctively clear that most relationships don't fail because of singular, isolated, catastrophic events. More often, they disintegrate because of our patterns-the ones that once felt safe and protective, but have turned corrosive and misaligned with our relationship over time. We might keep asking ourselves, "Why do I keep ending up here?"without any good answer coming to mind, or assume that we always "attract the wrong partners."
Profound love is about the desire to live with a partner who can thrive in a mutual relationship. Sometimes, life wins out over love, and one partner may say, "I will always love you, but we cannot flourish together." Profound love isn't always synonymous with long-term love; some couples divorce despite deep affection. The heart of enduring love is the capacity to bring out the best in each other.
To have a good relationship, you have to put in effort. Your effort should go towards communicating well, for example, learning to bring up concerns in a considerate way and working on listening rather than getting defensive. You should also have the necessary, but uncomfortable, conversations that help a relationship thrive, such as conflict repair discussions and talks that help you work as a team to meet each other's needs.
What they say instead is something softer, more nuanced: " I just want space." They describe feeling overwhelmed when their partner asks for physical affection, quality time, or emotional closeness. Not because those requests are unreasonable, but because they feel they have nothing left to give. What can look like withdrawal from love in fact often seems more like emotional exhaustion.
These patterns are what dating coach Frances Kelleher refers to as "micro-compatibilities." Since we don't have access to the big picture all the time (and mostly in retrospect), we have to rely on the tiny patterns for clues about how we're really doing in our relationship. These micro‑compatibilities are rooted in decades of social and health science. They shape emotional co‑regulation, perceived responsiveness, fairness, and even shared physiological states.