A Psychologist Shares the Small Moments That Make Or Break Love

A psychologist shares how its the small moments that make or break a relationship - couple with backs turned away looking at their phones

The fate of a relationship is usually decided in passing moments. Not in anniversaries, declarations, or dramatic turning points, but in everyday exchanges of attention, tone, and care.


What years of clinical work reveal

When couples sit down with me, they often search for the event that caused the distance.

They expect something obvious.

Yet more often, the story sounds like this:

One person tried to talk, and the other was distracted with their phone.
Excitement met indifference.
Vulnerability met with impatience.
A bid for comfort and support landed nowhere.

Nothing catastrophic.
Just repetition that leads to disconnection.

Love rarely collapses in a single day. It thins gradually when partners stop feeling met.


Why do these moments carry so much power?

Humans are wired for responsiveness. When a reach for connection is answered warmly, the body settles. Safety registers. Trust accumulates.

When the reach is missed, uncertainty grows.

A relationship is built from thousands of these exchanges. The pattern becomes the climate. The climate becomes the story partners tell themselves about being together.


What is it that thriving couples do differently?

They are not more sophisticated. They are more responsive to each other regularly.

They look up.
They pause.
They ask another question.
They repair quickly after missteps.

Simple behaviours, repeated often, create emotional security.


What are the early warning signs most people miss?

Disconnection rarely announces itself loudly at first.

It appears as reduced curiosity.
A flatter tone. More time out.
Less turning towards.

This is the moment to act, long before resentment hardens.


This is the most useful question you can ask tonight

When my partner reached for me today, what did they receive from me?

Blame is not the aim. Awareness is.

Once you notice, you regain influence.


What partners report when they shift this

Change tends to be gentle.

We are kinder.
We recover faster.
I feel closer again.

Not fireworks.
Stability.

And stability is what allows affection to grow.


A practice that works in real homes

Next time your partner speaks, let there be a visible moment of arrival as you:

Turn your body.
Meet their eyes.
Respond with interest and curiosity.

You are communicating value.


Why dependability is deeply romantic

Intensity is exciting, but unpredictability is exhausting.

Knowing someone will be there, again and again, is what makes closeness sustainable.

Reliable connection is the soil romance grows in.


Frequently asked questions

Is something this small truly influential?
Yes. Repeated responsiveness reshapes how safe people feel with each other.

What if I am making the effort alone?
One partner’s shifting behaviour often softens the relational atmosphere. If progress stalls, support can help both people re-engage.

Do gestures and surprises still matter?
They are meaningful when built on everyday contact. Novelty keeps up excitement energy.


Reflections

Every interaction moves a relationship slightly towards closeness or distance. You can choose –

Notice the direction.

Choose it deliberately.


If you would value guidance in strengthening these moments together, you can learn more about our couples programs from our Imago Speciality Program Getting the Love You Want Weekend workshop.

For therapists considering referring individuals or couples they are seeing to couples therapy

Clinicians often tell me they want somewhere safe to send couples for structured relationship education, knowing those clients will be supported and then returned to ongoing care.

Our Imago Getting the Love workshop is designed to complement therapy, not replace it.

Couples gain practical skills in emotional responsiveness, communication, and repair. They return back to youwith shared language, clearer insight, and renewed motivation, which often accelerates progress in individual or couple sessions.

Many referring practitioners notice:

✔ improved stability between sessions
✔ reduced escalation
✔ greater accountability from both partners
✔ more productive therapeutic conversations

If you are supporting couples who need experiential learning in addition to insight, this couples intensive workshop can provide a valuable bridge.

You are always welcome to reach out to discuss whether a couple is suitable.


What makes or breaks love in a relationship?

Love is strengthened or weakened in everyday interactions. When partners respond to each other with attention, warmth, and interest, emotional safety grows. When bids for connection are repeatedly ignored or dismissed, distance develops. Over time, these small moments shape the future of the relationship.


Can small behaviours really change a relationship?

Yes. Consistent responsiveness influences how secure partners feel with one another. Even brief moments of eye contact, listening, or gentle acknowledgement can rebuild trust when practised regularly.


What is a bid for connection?

A bid for connection is any small attempt to gain a partner’s attention, support, or closeness. It might be sharing a thought, asking for help, making a joke, or reaching for touch. Turning towards these bids strengthens intimacy.


Why do couples drift apart?

Drift often occurs when partners stop responding to each other’s small emotional signals. The lack of acknowledgement accumulates, leading to feelings of loneliness, misunderstanding, and disconnection.


How can couples reconnect quickly?

Start by noticing moments when your partner reaches for you. Pause, turn towards them, and respond with curiosity or care. Repeating this pattern creates momentum towards closeness.

Practical steps to begin to be the change you want to see

Notice one bid for connection.
Respond warmly.
Repeat tomorrow and the next day.
Allow momentum to build. Smile more, share appreciation and kindness.

Small actions. Lasting difference. 💛

Thank you, beautiful people,

With love and Light Philipa and Chris

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Book an appointment
0434 559 011
Weekdays 9am - 5pm Australian Eastern Daylight Time (UTC +11)

Book an appointment
Getting the Love You Want in March 2026

Hi there, just a quick note that we are running this renowned Imago Couples Workshop on 7-8 March in Sydney, Australia.

More details click--> Getting the Love You Want

Next workshop

Sign up for the Marriage Works Monthly Newsletter - Love in the Real World

Discover the secrets the relationship professionals recommend with a free monthly email packed with insights and inspirations for you.

Subscribe Here!