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.
- 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 3-3-3 Rule: Why the Internet Invented a New Pace for Modern Dating
The 3-3-3 dating rule is one of those dating ideas that seems to materialize out of the cultural ether—your friend mentions it, TikTok repeats it, Reddit debates it, and suddenly everyone is acting as if it’s been a best cultural practice all along.
It hasn’t.
The rule came from ordinary daters trying to solve an extraordinary problem: the acceleration of intimacy in a world where no one has time to know each other.
The rule itself is simple—three days, three dates, three weeks—but simplicity is deceptive here.
Because the 3-3-3 rule isn’t really about numbers. It’s about tempo.
It’s about building a relationship at a pace where your nervous system can tell the difference between compatibility and projection.
If the 3-6-9 rule helps daters evaluate long-term viability, the 3-3-3 rule helps them survive the beginning—where most relationships don’t fail so much as misfire.
Soft Love: A Cultural Field Guide to the New Romance That Refuses to Bruise
Soft love is the newest export from a generation that looked at the emotional hangover of the past fifty years—hookup culture, hustle culture, self-optimization culture—and decided it simply did not pair well with their nervous systems.
It is, essentially, the romance equivalent of switching to oat milk: unnecessary, arguably a little precious, and yet somehow undeniably better for you.
Soft love is not fragile.
Soft love is not weak.
Soft love is not the emotional version of cashmere you keep sealed in a protective garment bag for fear of “pilling.”
Soft love is simply… gentle.
And gentleness, in an era where everyone’s cortisol is doing Pilates, feels radical.
Let’s define it culturally, before TikTok finishes doing it for us.
Starting Over in Love: Lennon, Nostalgia, Tears, and the Neuroscience of Repair
John Lennon was killed on December 8, 1980—shot outside the home he shared with the woman this song was written for.
He was forty. He has now been dead longer than he lived.
Most of us can accept tragedy, but not this kind of math: the idea that someone who shaped us never got the years he was singing toward.
So when we listen to “(Just Like) Starting Over,” we’re hearing a man imagining a future he believed he still had. It makes the song tender; it also makes it unbearable.
By this point, Lennon had stepped out of the spectacle and into the ordinariness he’d once mocked. He was raising a child, burning bread, trying to remember who he was when nobody asked him to be iconic.
It’s often in these quiet domestic stretches that we finally hear ourselves think—and don’t entirely like what we hear.
He was at the age when people begin taking stock of their lives, and their loves, and the distances they swore they’d never allow to grow.
He was not a rock star writing a love song.
He was a highly accomplished middle-aged man realizing repair might require more honesty than he had practiced.
Bird Theory & Marriage: The Science of Turning Toward
Bird theory arrived on social media like most modern revelations: half-joke, half-confession.
You mention a bird—“I saw the most incredible bird today”—and then watch your partner for proof of something you can’t quite articulate.
Do they look up? Do they join you? Or does your enthusiasm drift into the room like background static—barely noticed, vaguely inconvenient?
TikTok calls this a relationship test. Therapists call it a nervous system seeking evidence of companionship.
Bird theory resonates not because it’s clever, but because everyone knows the exquisite ache of turning toward someone who doesn’t turn back. It captures, in one feather-light moment, the existential question sitting beneath every marriage:
Does my inner life have a home here? Or am I alone, even when I’m loved?
The truth—rarely acknowledged in the shiny emotional economy of social media—is that relationships rise or fall on these tiny tests.
Not on the anniversaries or apologies or weekend getaways, but on the microscopic, near-invisible moments of emotional availability.
The internet gave it a name. Gottman gave it a science. Couples give it their whole future.
The 3-6-9 Dating Rule Explained: What Happens at 3, 6 & 9 Months
Modern dating is a high-speed emotional sport conducted by people who barely trust their own instincts and absolutely do not trust each other’s.
So naturally, the culture began inventing rules—small navigational systems to help people pace intimacy in a world where everything else moves too fast.
The 3-6-9 month rule is one of these rules.
It shouldn’t work.
It’s far too neat for human nature.
And yet—infuriatingly—it tracks with what decades of research reveal about attachment, neurobiology, emotional pacing, and the developmental arc of intimacy once the novelty fog burns off.
What follows is the definitive explanation of the 3-6-9 rule, written for adults who want to date with more clarity, less chaos, and far fewer 3 a.m. existential spirals.
What Is the 3-6-9 Month Rule? (The Honest Summary You Were Looking For)
When a Poem Walks Into the Therapy Room: The Proverbs 31 Woman and the Psychology of an Inherited Ideal
Every faith tradition produces at least one woman whose reputation eventually eclipses her biography.
Christianity, industrious as ever, has several.
But none has traveled farther—through pulpits, women’s conferences, Pinterest boards, private doubts, and tense marital conversations—than the Proverbs 31 woman.
She appears only once in Scripture.
Not in a narrative, not in a theological treatise, but in a poem—a Hebrew acrostic, the ancient equivalent of dedicating the alphabet to one person. A portrait of wisdom in full bloom: economic, moral, emotional, embodied.
And yet, by the time she arrives in couples therapy, she often looks nothing like the woman in the poem.
She arrives as a brand.
A mandate.
A lifestyle aspiration with a side of guilt.
A doctrinal mascot for exhausted women.
A nostalgic fantasy for certain men.
Which is impressive, given that she didn’t ask for any of it.
Fictosexuality: The Complete Guide to Attraction to Fictional Characters
Fictosexuality refers to enduring romantic or sexual attraction to fictional characters. Not a fleeting crush. Not a “well, he is pretty cute for a cartoon lion.”
Not a temporary fever brought on by binge-reading too many fantasy novels at 2 a.m.
Fictosexuality is:
• persistent.
• meaningful.
• experienced as a legitimate orientation.
• emotionally loaded.
• psychologically coherent.
• and—for many people—central to their sense of identity.
Researchers studying sexual identity formation have long noted that desire can occur toward persons, archetypes, symbols, and imagined others (Berlant & Edelman, 2014). Fictosexuality is simply the contemporary form of this ancient phenomenon.
It is not pathology.
It is not delusion.
It is not failure.
It’s just the human imaginative capacity doing its usual overachieving thing.
Berrisexual: The Definitive Guide to Attraction to Fictional Characters in the Digital Age
Every era invents new language for longing.
Victorians had swooning.
Millennials had situationships.
Gen Z has turned desire into a full-time classification project—half anthropology, half fandom studies, half committee meeting.
And now, from the unruly compost pile of digital culture, we meet the newest micro-label: berrisexual.
A word so charmingly absurd it feels pre-approved for a tote bag.
But as always, behind the joke is something earnest: a very old human ache dressed in new pixels.
To understand berrisexuality, we must understand its lineage: fictosexuality, nijikon, parasocial attachment, and the centuries-long tradition of falling in love with beings who do not strictly exist.
As scholars of sexual identity construction note, desire often expands faster than language, which is why new terms emerge at cultural flashpoints, as explored in Barker’s analysis of sexual identity labels (Barker, 2016) and in Fahs’s work on naming practices and desire (Fahs, 2019).
So let’s begin—with affectionate bemusement for the human heart and its unfettered enthusiasms.
Your Argument Isn’t Failing—Your Sequence Is: The Hidden Science of Persuasion
In corporate America, persuasion is treated as a kind of moral arithmetic: if you collect enough strong evidence, arrange it neatly, and speak clearly, the audience should—by some unwritten code of professional decency—agree with you.
This belief persists despite decades of meetings proving the opposite.
If persuasion were determined by argument strength, quarterly planning sessions would be triumphs of logic rather than long-form testimonials to human impatience.
A 2022 study in Frontiers in Psychology—from Roman Linne, Jannis Hildebrandt, Gerd Bohner, and Hans-Peter Erb—offers an explanation so unflattering it feels like a diagnosis: people don’t respond to your argument; they respond to the sequence in which you slip it past their nervous system.
Professionals polish arguments with jeweler-like fussiness.
They should instead be rearranging them with jeweler-like cunning.
Para-social Intimacy and the Nervous System: Why Digital Attention Feels Like Attachment
There are quiet moments in modern life when you realize the technology has outrun the species.
Not by a little.
By miles.
It’s the moment you see someone talking lovingly to a phone screen.
Or when you realize your smartwatch understands your stress better than your spouse.
Or when you catch yourself feeling grateful for a notification.
But the real turning point arrived when people began forming attachments to folks they do not actually know — and their nervous systems failed to object.
The body, ever eager, simply said:
“Oh, attention! Oh, possibility! Oh, someone who might care!”
And from there, it was off to the races.
Welcome to the new sexual attachment system: parasocial intimacy — the kind that feels mutual, behaves reciprocal, and isn’t either.
This is not a glitch in human evolution.
It’s the predictable outcome of a world that monetizes attention and calls it connection.
The OnlyFans Problem Is a Family Problem: How Digital Intimacy Disrupts Marriage, Attachment, and Childhood
There is a phrase that belongs in the Museum of Things Therapists No Longer Believe: Relax. It’s just porn.
That line worked when porn was a static product—when erotic content was one-directional, not designed to talk back, and incapable of forming a simulation of intimacy.
But OnlyFans is not porn.
OnlyFans is a relational technology—a system that simulates attachment, personal attention, erotic attunement, and emotional responsiveness. It is designed to feel like connection because connection is the product.
The research—still emerging, but powerful—confirms this.
Studies now argue that OnlyFans is not simply “NSFW content delivered via subscription” but a new ecosystem of digital intimacy, parasocial attachment, sexual learning, identity experimentation, and emotional labor (Hamilton et al., 2023; Lippmann et al., 2023; Tynan & Linehan, 2024).
And because it is relational, not merely sexual, its blast radius is relational as well: marriages, partners, children, and the emotional architecture of the household.
This is not moral panic.
This is a public health conversation, twenty minutes before the smoke alarm goes off.
Why Reddit Reveals Your Attachment Style More Than You Think
There is a woman awake at 2:11 a.m., sitting on the edge of her bed, scrolling through r/relationship_advice.
Her partner hasn’t texted back.
Her body feels electric with dread.
She turns to strangers—strangers she will never meet—because she cannot bear the weight of her own fear in silence.
This is not weakness.
This is honesty.
Every night, millions of people open Reddit not because they enjoy chaos but because they need a place where their emotional truth is allowed to exist.
That alone makes Reddit one of the most remarkable emotional archives of our time.