Welcome to my Blog
Most people 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
Existential Memes and Relationships: The Hidden Shift Couples Don’t See
At some point—and no one announces it—relationships stop breaking.
They start fading.
No fight. No betrayal. No moment you can point to later and say, that’s when it went wrong.
Just a gradual shift where the relationship becomes less central, less alive, less… necessary.
De-vitalized.
In conducting science-based couples therapy, this is the subtle state that risked getting missed most often.
Not because it’s rare.
Because it’s easy to live inside.
If you’re reading this out of curiosity, keep going.
If you’re reading this because something in your relationship feels flatter than it used to—quieter, easier, but also less alive—don’t skim this part.
This is the phase where most couples decide, without realizing it, whether they are going to recover… or slowly disengage.
Digital Jealousy Architecture: Why Suspicion in Modern Relationships Now Runs on Software
Jealousy used to require a story.
You needed rumors, overheard conversations, lipstick on a collar, or the unmistakable silence of a phone that stopped ringing when you entered the room.
Suspicion involved imagination and legwork. It had texture.
Today jealousy often arrives as data.
Someone liked a photo at 11:47 PM.
A follower appears who was not there yesterday.
A location pin briefly disappears.
A message reads seen but remains unanswered.
A familiar name appears repeatedly in story views.
Nothing explicitly happens.
And yet the mind begins to assemble a narrative.
Nowadays, I increasingly encounter partners reacting not to events but to digital signals—tiny behavioral fragments produced by platforms that were never designed to regulate trust between human beings.
These signals accumulate until they form a kind of emotional scaffolding around the relationship.
Let’s call this phenomenon Digital Jealousy Architecture.
If you have ever felt that modern jealousy grows less from what partners do and more from what their apps quietly reveal, you are not imagining it.
Something structural has changed.
Audience Intimacy: When Relationships Start Talking to the Internet Instead of Each Other
There was a time—not that long ago—when a couple having an argument had a limited number of options.
They could argue loudly, argue quietly, avoid each other for three days, or complain to a friend who would listen patiently and then say something devastatingly reasonable like, “Well… what did you say to them?”
The audience was small. The memories faded. The entire episode usually disappeared into the private archives of human embarrassment.
The internet has altered this arrangement.
Now when people experience relationship tension, many of them do something rather unusual: they announce it to the internet before speaking to the person involved.
I have started calling this phenomenon Audience Intimacy.
The Surveillance Relationship: Why Smartphones Are Quietly Replacing Trust in Modern Couples
Once upon a time jealousy left fingerprints.
A lipstick stain.
A mysterious phone call.
A receipt someone forgot to throw away.
Today jealousy leaves metadata.
In my work with couples, I increasingly meet partners who know each other’s battery levels, location histories, and message timestamps better than they know each other’s emotional lives.
They can tell you when their partner left the grocery store, when their phone stopped moving, and when a message was read but not answered.
Ask them how their partner has been feeling lately, however, and the room sometimes fills with a silence so complete it could pass for architecture.
If this sounds familiar, you are not alone.
Many modern couples are quietly entering something new.
Something I have begun to call the surveillance relationship.
The surveillance relationship is an emerging dynamic with some modern couples where smartphones quietly transform love into monitoring.
The Hidden Psychology of Sugar Relationships: What Research Reveals About Transactional Dating
The loudest conversations about sugar relationships are usually the least illuminating.
One camp treats the arrangement as empowerment with a payment schedule.
Another treats it as a moral collapse, as though romance and economics had only just discovered each other in the modern world.
Both sides miss the more interesting question.
Not whether sugar relationships are empowering or exploitative.
But why some people find them psychologically appealing in the first place.
Psychology, inconveniently, has begun to offer an answer.
A recent study published in Archives of Sexual Behavior examined openness to sugar relationships among young women and found a pattern worth paying attention to.
Women who reported greater openness to transactional intimacy also showed greater impairments in personality functioning, stronger early maladaptive schemas, and heavier reliance on maladaptive emotional coping strategies.
In other words, the appeal of sugar relationships may not primarily be about money.
It may be about how someone learned to manage intimacy.
Algorithmic Attraction: How Dating App Algorithms Quietly Reshape Modern Love
Most people believe they choose their romantic partners.
Increasingly, software chooses the pool from which those choices are made.
For most of human history, attraction was a messy, inefficient process governed by geography and chance. People met through friends, neighborhoods, workplaces, churches, and the occasional bold acquaintance willing to say, “You two should meet.”
Romance depended on proximity.
Now it depends on ranking systems.
In my work with couples, I increasingly see relationships that began not through shared communities but through recommendation engines—software designed to predict who might interest us, who might respond, and who might keep us swiping.
If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Millions of thoughtful people are beginning to notice that modern dating feels strangely different from the way relationships once formed.
Understanding why can change how we approach intimacy in a digital age.
Tattoos, Confidence, and the Psychology of the Witnessed Body
The modern body is curated with extraordinary care.
We decorate it.
We sculpt it.
We photograph it.
We modify it.
Tattoos, cosmetic procedures, fitness culture, skincare rituals, carefully chosen clothing—these have become ordinary tools in the project of shaping how we appear to the world.
And in many cases, these efforts genuinely improve how people feel about themselves.
But intimacy has a strange habit of ignoring all that work.
Because the body that appears in public is not the same body that appears in the bedroom.
A recent study published in Critical Public Health illustrates this paradox beautifully.
What a Massive Global Study Found About Forgiveness and Well-Being
Researchers analyzing data from 207,919 participants across 23 countries examined whether people who generally forgive others experience better well-being over time.
The findings were published in npj Mental Health Research as part of the Global Flourishing Study.
The researchers measured dispositional forgivingness, meaning a person’s general tendency to forgive across situations.
Participants were surveyed twice, roughly one year apart. Researchers then examined 56 indicators of human flourishing, including:
• psychological well-being
• psychological distress
• social relationships
• social participation
• character and prosocial behavior
• physical health
• socioeconomic stability
The results showed a consistent pattern.
Weaponized Attachment: What My True-Crime Addiction Finally Taught Me About Abusive Relationships
Here is a confession I suspect many otherwise respectable adults share.
I watch a great deal of true-crime television.
Not because I enjoy violence.
Not because I admire criminals.
But because those stories circle around a question that therapists hear every week.
A terrible thing has happened.
Detectives reconstruct the relationship.
Neighbors shake their heads and say the line we now recognize as the national chorus of hindsight:
“They seemed like such a normal couple.”
Friends say:
“We never thought it would go that far.”
And the viewer—safe on the couch with a bowl of popcorn and a vague sense of moral superiority—asks the question that arrives sooner or later in nearly every episode.
Why didn’t the victim leave sooner?
Only Later Does Someone Mount a Plaque: Sitting in Hoagy Carmichael’s Stardust Booth
It was 1980 — the era of avocado appliances and durable optimism.
I was twenty-eight, a district manager for Magic Chef, traveling the Midwest with brochures that promised domestic transcendence at 350 degrees.
I was a New Englander by accent and temperament, dropped into Indiana like a saltine into gravy. I came from granite and sarcasm. The Midwest offered limestone and civility.
Bloomington that October was rain-soaked and earnest. A college town that believed in ideas the way other towns believed in weather.
That afternoon I had met with dealers who displayed our ovens in obedient rows, chrome handles gleaming like dental work.
We discussed margins as if the Republic depended on convection cooking.
What Really Happens at 3, 6, and 9 Months (Most Couples Miss This)
The 3-6-9 dating rule is one of the internet’s favorite relationship timelines.
Three months is the honeymoon.
Six months is evaluation.
Nine months is seriousness.
It’s clean. It’s memorable. It’s incomplete.
Because what actually happens at three, six, and nine months isn’t about time.
It’s about exposure.
Exposure of projection.
Exposure of pattern.
Exposure of structure.
And most couples don’t realize what’s being revealed until they’re already emotionally invested.
If you want the structured breakdown of the 3-6-9 rule itself, start with the original timeline guide here. What follows is what that timeline doesn’t explain.
Healed Scars Are Credentials: Why Strategic Oversharing Builds Trust and Status
Let’s begin by correcting the premise.
Most people are not afraid of oversharing.
They are afraid of losing position.
And in a world governed by Limbic Capitalism — where attention is currency and perception is leverage — self-disclosure feels like lowering the shield.
But here is the inversion:
Strategic disclosure does not lower status.
It reorganizes the hierarchy around you.
When done correctly, it increases both admiration and trust — the two currencies that govern pair bonding and leadership alike.
And here is the crucial distinction:
Vulnerability is not exposure.
Vulnerability is regulated transparency under voluntary control.
If it is not regulated, it is not vulnerability.
It is leakage.