Maintaining communication during life changes
Successfully navigating relationships through major life changes (career shifts, children, relocation, health challenges) requires rituals of connection. These are small, repeated behaviors couples do intentionally to stay emotionally connected. They might look simple on the surface, but they’re powerful because they create consistency, safety, and shared meaning in the relationship.
This dedicated time is a sacred space to actively cultivate connection and proactively avoid disconnection. Without intentionality, partners easily drift into parallel lives, losing emotional attunement, which often precedes major relational distress.
Sharing worries with your partner consistently is essential. When worries are kept silent, they can fester and become overwhelming emotional burdens. To reduce their negative impact, partners can turn toward each other and voice their fears. This act of sharing the load transforms the relationship into a safe haven, allowing change to become a chance to deepen intimacy and strengthen partnership resilience.
How We Can Help: Gottman Tools
Stress-Reducing Conversation
This is a daily 20-30 minute talk to address external stress (work, finances, etc.) and build “we-ness.” Partners take turns sharing, while the listener offers empathy, validation, and acceptance without problem-solving or criticism. This strengthens the emotional bond and resilience against outside pressures.
Managing Conflict
Conflict is inevitable, and the goal is to manage it effectively, not eliminate it. Couples must avoid the Four Horsemen, the destructive communication styles that predict relationship failure. Here are the Four Horsemen and their corresponding antidotes.
- Criticism: Attacking character. Antidote: Gentle Start-Up (using “I” statements to express needs).
- Contempt: Insulting or abusing the partner. Antidote: Culture of Appreciation and Respect (single greatest predictor of divorce).
- Defensiveness: Blaming, excusing, or counter-complaining. Antidote: Taking Responsibility (for your part).
- Stonewalling: Withdrawing or shutting down. Antidote: Physiological Self-Soothing (taking a 20+ minute break to calm down).
Replacing the Horsemen with the antidotes turns disagreements into opportunities for growth and deeper intimacy.
While big changes and transitions can be scary, they are a natural part of life. If you can approach them as a couple and embrace the possibilities they present, rather than being worried about things changing, it can bring about a new exciting phase of life.














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