Welcome to my Blog
This blog is for life partners who suspect their relationship problem is not just communication, compatibility, or stress.
It may be a repeating system. These essays explain the patterns. Effective clinical work interrupts them.
Most folks don’t arrive here because something dramatic has happened.
They arrive because something feels… different.
The relationship still works. Conversations still happen. Life continues.
But something important is no longer organizing it the way it used to.
This space is where I write about that shift.
Not just what breaks relationships—but what quietly changes them:
how desire adapts.
how attention moves.
how meaning erodes or deepens over time.
These patterns are not random.
They tend to unfold in a predictable sequence.
If you’re here, you’re likely in one of those moments:
trying to understand what changed.
trying to decide whether it matters.
trying to figure out what to do next.
Start anywhere.
But if something here feels familiar, don’t treat it as abstract.
It usually isn’t.
Where to Begin
If you’re not sure what you’re looking for, these are a few good entry points:
Marriage Is Still Chosen — Even by Those Who Once Stood Outside It.
Epistemic Safety: What It Is and Why It Matters in Relationships.
The Relationship Consequences of Living in a Permanent News Cycle.
The Two Types of People Narcissists Avoid (And Why You Might Be One of Them).
When Narcissists Grieve: Why Their Mourning Looks Cold, Delayed, or Self-Centered
The 3-6-9 Dating Rule: Why Most Relationships Change at Month 3, 6, and 9.
The First Listener Shift: A Precise Relationship Diagnostic Most Couples Miss.
Why Curiosity Is Sacred in Relationships (And What Happens When It Disappears).
If You’re Looking for More Than Insight
Understanding is useful.
But at a certain point, most couples realize they can explain their relationship clearly—and still not change it.
That’s where focused work becomes effective.
I offer structured, high-impact couples intensives designed to produce meaningful movement in a compressed period of time.
Before We Decide Anything
A brief consultation helps determine:
whether this is what you’re dealing with.
whether this format fits.
and whether we should move forward.
Get a Clear Read on Your Relationship
Take your time reading.
But if something here lands in a way that feels specific—pay attention to that.
That’s usually where this work begins.
Continue Exploring
If you prefer to browse more broadly, you can explore posts by topic below.
But most people don’t find what they need by browsing.
They find it when something they read feels uncomfortably accurate.
Be Well, Stay Kind, and Godspeed.
~ Daniel
- Attachment Issues
- Coronavirus
- Couples Therapy
- Extramarital Affairs
- Family Life and Parenting
- How to Fight Fair
- Inlaws and Extended Families
- Intercultural Relationships
- Marriage and Mental Health
- Married Life & Intimate Relationships
- Neurodiverse Couples
- Separation & Divorce
- Signs of Trouble
- Social Media and Relationships
- What Happy Couples Know
The Factory and the Feed: Why the Vatican Thinks AI Is the New Industrial Revolution
At 11:43 p.m., a husband and wife lie beside one another in bed staring into separate algorithmic realities.
He is watching videos that quietly intensify his grievances.
She is scrolling through therapeutic language teaching her how to reinterpret every disappointment diagnostically.
Neither person is technically alone.
Neither person is fully together.
An artificial intelligence somewhere is refining behavioral predictions about both of them in real time while the marriage itself competes with infinite novelty, frictionless distraction, personalized stimulation, and systems specifically engineered to hold attention longer than ordinary human conversation can.
And yet modern people still speak about technology as though it were merely a tool.
This is one reason the relationship between “Magnifica Humanitas” and “Rerum Novarum” matters so much.
The Catholic Church appears to believe we are living through another Industrial Revolution.
Not economically.
Anthropologically.
That distinction changes everything.
Admiration Inequality: The Hidden Imbalance Quietly Destabilizing Modern Relationships
They are sitting in the parking lot outside Home Depot arguing about mulch.
Which is how many long marriages eventually begin discussing mortality.
She is staring forward through the windshield. He is pretending to reorganize receipts in the center console because middle-aged men will perform almost any administrative task before admitting heartbreak directly.
The argument itself barely matters anymore.
It began with landscaping supplies and somehow migrated — as these things often do — into emotional territory involving appreciation, exhaustion, and the increasingly hostile psychological meaning of the phrase “fine, whatever.”
Finally he says quietly:
“I think you love me. I just don’t think you admire me anymore.”
And suddenly the entire atmosphere changes.
Because both of them know he has accidentally said the real thing.
Not sex.
Not communication.
Not conflict resolution.
Admiration.
Emotional Performance Culture: When Therapy Language Replaces Intimacy
A woman says, very calmly, “I don’t feel emotionally safe right now.”
Her husband freezes because he genuinely has no idea what offense he has committed in the last ninety seconds.
They are standing in the kitchen beside an open dishwasher.
One of them is holding a salad bowl with the emotional posture of a hostage negotiator.
Eventually it emerges that he looked at his phone while she was describing a conversation with her sister. He insists he heard every word. She insists that is not the point.
What follows is not technically an argument.
It is a symposium.
Relationship Background Radiation: The Ambient Noise Quietly Destroying Modern Love
Most couples assume relationships end through dramatic events.
An affair.
A betrayal.
A catastrophic fight involving tears, packed luggage, and someone saying, “I just need space,” which in modern America can mean anything from “I need to rethink my life” to “I’m sitting in the Target parking lot eating trail mix alone.”
But in my work with couples, I have increasingly seen relationships deteriorate in a quieter, stranger way.
Not through explosion.
Through atmospheric erosion.
A thousand tiny attentional withdrawals.
A slow migration of emotional focus away from the relationship and toward devices, feeds, work identities, parasocial attachments, algorithmic stimulation, and perpetual distraction. Many modern couples are not suffering from acute relational trauma so much as chronic attentional malnutrition.
The internet has entered the marriage like cigarette smoke.
The Strange Psychology of Manifesting: Why Believers Feel Successful Even When They’re Not
There are few things more modern than watching somebody explain quantum mechanics incorrectly while sitting inside a leased white SUV.
This, more or less, is the internet economy now.
A woman named Skylar—or possibly Ashlynn—speaks directly into the camera while burning ethically sourced sage and explaining that abundance entered her life immediately after she began “aligning with wealth frequency.”
Somewhere in the background sits a ring light glowing with the intensity of a minor religious apparition.
And because we are living through the great collapse of institutional trust, millions of people think:
“You know… she may be onto something.”
A fascinating new set of studies published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin attempted to examine the psychology of manifestation belief itself. Not whether manifestation “works,” exactly, but what kind of thinking tends to accompany it.
The results are extraordinary in the most American way imaginable.
Emotional Prestige: How Therapy Language Became a New Form of Social Status
There was a time when emotional dysfunction had the decency to remain mysterious.
A spouse disappeared emotionally for six months, and nobody announced, “He is displaying dismissive-avoidant deactivation strategies rooted in unmet attachment needs.” They simply said, “Frank has become impossible since buying that boat.”
Cleaner era. Fewer syllables.
Now everyone speaks fluent therapy dialect. Entire relationships unfold in the language of psychological interpretation.
Couples no longer merely fight. They “activate each other’s nervous systems.”
A disagreement about holiday plans becomes “an attachment rupture.”
Someone asks for fifteen minutes alone and suddenly there is discussion of boundaries, emotional labor, co-regulation, trauma responses, and whether the dishwasher represents patriarchal oppression.
The internet has accomplished something extraordinary:
it has turned therapy language into social currency.
And like all currencies, it now functions partly as status.
Padre Pio and the Collapse of Reverence: What Modern Relationships Keep Forgetting
Couples now fall apart while technically remaining in constant contact.
They text all day.
Share calendars.
Exchange Instagram reels from opposite ends of the same sectional sofa.
React to each other’s messages with tiny digital hieroglyphics while quietly losing access to one another’s interior worlds.
The modern relationship is exhausted.
Not always dramatic. Worse.
Administratively depleted.
Which is how Padre Pio suddenly becomes relevant again.
Not because he performed miracles. Not because of the stigmata.
Not because modern life secretly longs for supernatural spectacle, though it clearly does.
Every few years the culture becomes briefly obsessed with exorcisms, near-death experiences,
Marian apparitions, psychedelics, “energy work,” or billionaires explaining consciousness on podcasts while wearing sneakers that cost more than a dishwasher.
No. Padre Pio matters because he understood something modern culture keeps forgetting:
Human beings deteriorate when reverence collapses.
Not productivity.
Not communication.
Not optimization.
Reverence.
Don Dolindo Ruotolo and the Modern Crisis of Surrender
There is something deeply revealing about the sudden popularity of Don Dolindo Ruotolo in the age of algorithmic panic.
Not because modern people have become more spiritual. Let us not become hysterical.
But because modern people have become exhausted.
Exhausted by prediction.
Exhausted by optimization.
Exhausted by carrying twelve imaginary futures around in their nervous systems like overpacked grocery bags cutting off circulation to the fingers.
And into this trembling little civilization wanders an obscure priest from Naples saying:
“Jesus, I surrender myself to You, take care of everything.”
Which sounds comforting until you realize he actually meant it.
Not metaphorically.
Not aesthetically.
Not as a decorative quote floating over beige Instagram backgrounds featuring driftwood and cappuccinos.
He meant surrender in the terrifying sense.
The irreversible sense.
The kind that requires relinquishing the fantasy that anxiety itself is a form of control.
That is why Don Dolindo has become catnip for the spiritually overclocked.
Sister Agnes Sasagawa and the Problem of Belief
There are certain religious stories that modern educated people react to with immediate, involuntary facial expressions.
Not thoughts.
Not arguments.
Facial expressions.
A tightening around the mouth.
A tiny retreat of the eyes.
The expression people make when someone at dinner calmly explains that crystals cured their thyroid condition or that their golden retriever understands Swedish.
The Akita story produces this expression in otherwise civilized people.
Partly because it involves Marian apparitions.
Partly because it involves a statue allegedly weeping blood.
But mostly because the central figure in the story—Sister Agnes Katsuko Sasagawa—does not behave the way modern people expect someone connected to extraordinary religious claims to behave.
She was not charismatic.
Not theatrical.
Not evangelical.
Not interested in fame.
This is psychologically inconvenient.
Why Intelligent People Become Obsessed With True Crime Podcasts
There is something almost absurdly modern about listening to a podcast about homicide while standing in line for cold brew.
Not because violence is funny.
Because the setting is.
Human beings once gathered around fires to hear cautionary stories about betrayal, disappearance, dangerous strangers, and the hidden nature of evil.
Now we hear them through noise-canceling headphones while buying oat milk and pretending we are “mostly interested in the psychology.”
Which, to be fair, many people genuinely are.
A recent study published in Psychology of Popular Media found that most true crime podcast listeners are motivated less by gore or cruelty than by curiosity, information-seeking, and a desire to understand human behavior.
When Love Became a Nervous System: How Attachment Culture Changed Modern Relationships
A woman in yoga pants is whispering into her phone in the parking lot outside Target.
“I just think he’s emotionally avoidant.”
Twenty years ago she would have just said:
“He never talks.”
That is the shift.
The language of therapy escaped the therapist’s office and entered ordinary life.
Now everyone appears to possess a partial graduate education in Attachment Theory acquired through social media, heartbreak, podcasts, and twelve hours on Reddit at two in the morning.
“He’s avoidant.”
“She’s anxious.”
“That’s disorganized attachment.”
“My nervous system no longer feels safe.”
Attachment Theory is no longer functioning merely as developmental psychology.
It is now:
dating shorthand.
identity language.
moral language.
status language.
emotional explanation.
social sorting.
Couples increasingly understand love psychologically instead of morally.
Many life partners slowly become experts in each other’s attachment injuries, while losing the ability to make each other feel loved.
That is one of the quiet tragedies of modern intimacy.
Why Wellness Culture Is Becoming A Replacement Religion
Modern Americans increasingly use food the way earlier civilizations used liturgy.
Not entirely consciously, of course.
Nobody stands in Whole Foods holding artisanal bone broth whispering, “At last, a coherent metaphysical framework.” People still think they are discussing inflammation.
But underneath the endless conversations about seed oils, raw milk, gut health, fasting windows, sourdough fermentation, protein optimization, ancestral diets, carnivore protocols, liver capsules, glucose spikes, adaptogens, “toxins,” and biblical eating plans, something much larger is unfolding.
Folks are just trying to reconstruct meaning.
A recent piece in The New York Times explored the rise of “biblical eating,” an online movement centered around consuming foods mentioned in scripture — fish, minimally processed foods, raw dairy, homemade breads, locally sourced ingredients, fasting practices, and forms of dietary simplicity presented as spiritually aligned living.
At first glance, it looks like just another wellness trend.
It is not.
It is a significant cultural signal.