Welcome to my Blog

Thank you for stopping by. This space is where I share research, reflections, and practical tools drawn from my experience as a marriage and family therapist.

Are you a couple looking for clarity? A professional curious about the science of relationships? Or simply someone interested in how love and resilience work? I’m glad you’ve found your way here. I can help with that.

Each post is written with one goal in mind: to help you better understand yourself, your partner, and the hidden dynamics that shape human connection.

Grab a coffee (or a notebook), explore what speaks to you, and take what’s useful back into your life and relationships. And if a post sparks a question, or makes you realize you could use more support, I’d love to hear from you.

Be Well, Stay Kind, and Godspeed.
~Daniel

P.S.

Feel free to explore the categories below to find past blog posts on the topics that matter most to you. If you’re curious about attachment, navigating conflict, or strengthening intimacy, these archives are a great way to dive deeper into the research and insights that I’ve been sharing for years.

 

Social Media and Relationships Daniel Dashnaw Social Media and Relationships Daniel Dashnaw

Is Having a Boyfriend Embarrassing?


It is not embarrassing to have a boyfriend.

But it is embarrassing, right now, to be seen as having chosen.

That distinction explains almost everything.

This question did not emerge from therapy offices or kitchen tables.

It surfaced from media ecosystems where identity has become provisional and visibility carries reputational risk.

When a recent essay in Vogue gave the feeling a headline, it didn’t invent the anxiety.

It named something already circulating: the sense that visible, named heterosexual commitment now reads as earnest, basic, or aesthetically careless.

Not immoral.
Not oppressive.
Just uncool.

Which is how cultures speak when they are anxious.

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When War Enters the Body: How Fear and Isolation Reshape Intimacy

War does not just rearrange borders.
It rearranges interiors.
Including the private ones we pretend are untouched by politics.

A new study in Archives of Sexual Behavior tracked something we almost never observe in real time during armed conflict: what people do privately, anonymously, and without witnesses when fear becomes ambient.

Using population-level internet data, researchers found that as the Russian invasion of Ukraine intensified, Ukrainians’ pornography consumption rose in close correspondence with civilian deaths.

Not metaphorically.
Statistically.

This was not a postwar survey filtered through memory and shame. There were no questionnaires asking people to reconstruct what they did while sirens sounded.

Instead, researchers analyzed live data streams—Google search behavior, Pornhub traffic patterns, and United Nations casualty reports—moving week by week as the war unfolded.

The result is unsettling precisely because it is so profoundly ordinary.

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Brigitte Bardot and the Long Afterlife of Unmanaged Women

The unease that followed the death of Brigitte Bardot is not about nostalgia. It’s about unfinished business.

Bardot didn’t simply belong to a moment; she interrupted one.

She arrived when Western culture was still committed—publicly, at least—to the idea that women’s desire should be filtered, narrated, improved upon, or gently apologized for.

Bardot declined all of that.

She did not present desire as longing, or yearning, or seduction with a conscience. She presented it as presence. A body occupying space without explanation.

Here is the part we still struggle to say plainly: Bardot’s cultural meaning is not that she liberated women, but that she revealed how little culture actually tolerates women who stop managing themselves.

In And God Created Woman, what scandalized audiences was not nudity or sexuality per se. It was agency without irony.

Bardot did not perform desire in quotation marks.

She did not ask the viewer to forgive her for it, admire her discipline around it, or imagine a future version of herself that would be more reasonable. She simply was.

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The Lighthouse Partner: A Relationship Archetype Explained

If the black cat partner manages the inner world, and the Doberman partner guards the outer edge, the Lighthouse partner does something quieter—and often more powerful.

They provide orientation.

Not reassurance.
Not enforcement.
Not emotional performance.

Orientation.

The Lighthouse partner is the one who stays visible when things are hard. They don’t chase storms. They don’t patrol boundaries. They don’t withdraw into stillness.

They keep the light on.

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The Doberman Partner: A Relationship Archetype Explained

If the Black Cat Girlfriend represents composure, restraint, and quiet authority, the Doberman partner represents something closely related—but structurally different.

Not aloofness.
Not emotional distance.
Vigilance.

The Doberman partner is the one who watches the perimeter while the relationship lives inside it.

They don’t speak often. They don’t posture. But when they intervene, the emotional temperature of the room changes immediately.

This isn’t aggression.
It’s containment with consequences.

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The Black Cat Girlfriend: Why Quiet Intimacy Is Having a Cultural Moment

The internet has decided—once again—that it has discovered a new kind of woman.

She does not overshare.
She does not perform warmth on command.


She does not text quickly enough to soothe people who mistake immediacy for intimacy.

Naturally, she has been named.

The black cat girlfriend.

This is not a diagnosis. It is not an attachment category.

It is not a personality test disguised as a meme. It is a cultural signal—one that reveals how exhausted people have become by the expectation that love must be loud to be real.

The black cat girlfriend is not withholding.

She is contained.

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The 5-5-5 Rule for Couples: A Brief History of a Relationship Heuristic (And why there are actually three different versions)

The 5-5-5 rule is often treated as a single piece of relationship advice—simple, catchy, and vaguely wise.

In reality, it isn’t one rule at all.

It’s a family of related heuristics that emerged at different moments, for different purposes, and later collapsed into one name as relationship advice culture moved online.

That collapse created confusion.

This post, hopefully, stabilizes the concept.

What is the 5-5-5 Rule?


The 5-5-5 rule is a family of relationship heuristics that use time perspective to regulate emotional intensity, triage conflict, and maintain connection—depending on how the numbers are applied.

What follows is a clear history, a clean taxonomy, and a clinical explanation of when the 5-5-5 framework helps couples—and when it quietly makes things worse.

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Shrekking Dating Strategy Explained: Why “Lowering Standards” Backfires

“Shreking” as a dating strategy

On social media, “shreking” isn’t primarily about liking ogres.

It’s about dating “down” on purpose—choosing someone you perceive as lower in the dating hierarchy (looks, status, polish, social desirability) so you can feel safer, more in control, less at risk of being left. 

The strategy’s pitch (usually implied, sometimes stated) goes like this:

  • “If I’m the ‘more desirable’ one, I won’t have to compete.”

  • “If they’re lucky to have me, they’ll treat me better.”

  • “If I pick the ‘safe’ option, I can relax.”

And the punchline term—“getting shrekked”—is when you run that strategy…and still get hurt, rejected, or humbled by the person you assumed would be grateful. 

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Deconstructing Santa in 2025

Belief in Santa Claus used to be a childhood rite of passage.
Now it’s a cultural negotiation.

In 2025, no one simply believes in Santa anymore.
They manage Santa.

They contextualize him.
They annotate him.


They quietly debate him in group texts at 11:47 p.m. on December 23rd.

Santa hasn’t disappeared.


He’s been demoted—from metaphysical truth to symbolic operating system.

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The Attention Cliff: A Deep Dive Into the Quiet Way Modern Relationships Lose Bandwidth

Most relationships do not end anymore.
They stabilize.

They become polite, functional, emotionally solvent—and internally bankrupt.

What follows is a deep dive into the core concepts underneath what I’ve called the attention cliff.

Not metaphors for effect. Mechanisms. Patterns that repeat across couples, especially intelligent, self-aware, high-functioning ones.

What is the Attention Cliff?

The attention cliff is the point at which one partner reduces emotional investment—not because of indifference or cruelty, but because full engagement has become unsustainably expensive.

This is not leaving.
It is downshifting.

The relationship remains intact structurally, but the quality of attention—curiosity, responsiveness, initiative—drops sharply and then plateaus at a lower, safer level.

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New Study Maps the Psychology of Romance in Taylor Swift’s Songs

A team of psychologists has done something that feels less surprising than inevitable: they analyzed Taylor Swift’s entire musical catalog to examine what her lyrics quietly teach listeners about romantic relationships.

Not as art.
Not as autobiography.
But as psychology.

What emerged was not a single emotional worldview, but two distinct ones—depending almost entirely on where in the relationship timeline the song is set.

When Swift writes about relationships that are ongoing, her lyrics tend to model emotional security, realism, and mutual care.

When she writes about relationships that have ended, the emotional logic shifts sharply toward anxiety, anger, grievance, and hostility.

Same voice.
Same pen.
Two very different psychologies of love.

This is not inconsistency.
It is phase-dependence.

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New Psychology Research Identifies a Simple Trait That Powerfully Shapes Attraction

New psychology research shows that folks are not primarily attracted to physical strength—but to a partner’s willingness to step in and protect them when something goes wrong.

That distinction matters more than it sounds.

For most of human history, danger was interpersonal and immediate.

There were no institutions reliably coming to help. Protection came from alliances—friends, family, romantic partners—who decided, in real time, whether to step forward or step away.

Attraction evolved inside that reality.

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