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 with an international practice.
I write about what happens to desire, attachment, and meaning once the early myths stop working.
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. I’m accepting new clients, and this blog is for the benefit of all my gentle readers.
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. Let’s explore the scope of work you’d like to do together.
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
Quiet Quitting a Marriage: The Stage That Often Comes Before Infidelity
Not every marriage ends in a dramatic confrontation.
Many end the way modern workers leave their jobs.
Quietly.
No resignation letter. No grand speech. No slammed doors.
Just a gradual withdrawal of effort until one day the person is technically still present but no longer particularly invested.
The workplace gave us a name for this behavior: quiet quitting.
The Quiet Opposite of Narcissism: Admiration Starvation
Narcissism is a serious cultural problem, but it has also become the internet’s favorite relationship diagnosis.
Spend ten minutes online and you will discover that half the population is apparently dating one.
The word appears everywhere now—relationship advice columns, therapy TikTok, late-night kitchen debates between people who recently discovered psychology on Instagram.
If the internet were correct, romantic relationships would consist almost entirely of narcissists dating victims.
In my work with couples, however, I see something much more common, that is rarely clinically discussed on blogs.
The partner sitting across the room is not grandiose.
They are not manipulative.
They are not obsessed with themselves.
They have simply stopped admiring the person they married.
And that, it turns out, can hollow out a relationship just as effectively as any personality disorder.
If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Many thoughtful partners sense this shift long before they have language for it. The relationship still functions, yet something essential has quietly vanished.
I call this condition Admiration Starvation.
7 Signs Your Partner Has Quietly Stopped Being Curious About You
Many relationships do not end because partners argue too much.
They end because partners stop wondering about each other.
In my work with couples, the shift from curiosity to contempt is one of the most reliable early signals that a relationship has begun to harden.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Most couples notice the tone of their conversations changing long before they understand why.
It usually begins in a small moment.
One partner says something imperfect. The other responds with a quick correction, a sigh, or a faintly amused eye roll. No question follows.
Curiosity has quietly been replaced with judgment.
Interpretive Trespassing vs. Gaslighting: When Misinterpretation Becomes Manipulation
The first time a partner explains your feelings to you, it often sounds like concern.
The second time, it sounds like confidence.
The third time, something inside the relationship shifts.
You are no longer disagreeing about what happened.
You are negotiating who is allowed to know what you feel.
Many couples initially believe they are arguing about ordinary relationship problems:
chores
tone
scheduling
parenting
money
But gradually the fight changes.
The conflict stops being about behavior.
It becomes a dispute about interpretive authority.
Who gets to explain what a reaction means?
Attention Betrayal: The Relationship Injury of the Smartphone Era
There is a particular kind of relationship wound that rarely produces shouting.
No doors slam.No accusations ricochet across the kitchen.
Instead, something quieter happens.
A partner begins telling a story while the other glances down at a phone.Dinner conversation pauses because a notification arrives.Two people sit inches apart on the couch, their bodies close, their attention elsewhere.
No cruelty is intended.
Yet the experience lands like rejection.
This is what I call attention betrayal—a relational injury created not by hostility, but by chronic distraction.
For many modern couples, the deepest rupture in intimacy is no longer betrayal of the body.
It is betrayal of attention.
The Epstein Class: When Wealth, Power, and Prestige Begin Protecting One Another
Every era eventually produces a social class that lives slightly above gravity.
Not above morality, exactly. Above consequences.
In the medieval world it was the hereditary aristocracy. In the Gilded Age it was the railroad barons. In the twentieth century it was the clubby overlap of diplomats, intelligence officers, financiers, and old political families.
In the twenty-first century, we might as well call it the Epstein Class.
The name comes, inevitably, from Jeffrey Epstein.
Not because he invented the phenomenon, but because his life revealed it with unusual clarity.
Epstein was less an anomaly than a diagnostic instrument. For decades he moved comfortably among billionaires, politicians, royalty, scientists, and cultural institutions while engaging in behavior that would have ended an ordinary person’s career—or freedom—almost immediately.
The truly unsettling revelation was not simply Epstein himself.
It was how normal his presence appeared inside elite circles.
That is the defining feature of the Epstein Class: a social ecosystem in which wealth, reputation, and influence begin quietly protecting one another.
Do Narcissists Feel Regret? How Narcissists Experience Regret (And Why It Rarely Looks Like Remorse)
There is a moment many people reach after a difficult breakup. It usually happens late at night.
The relationship is over. The conversations are finished. The explanations have run out. Yet one question refuses to leave.
So they do what modern people do when a human answer is no longer available. They open a browser and type a question that sounds less like curiosity and more like a quiet plea:
Do narcissists ever feel regret?
The short answer is yes.
But if you expect regret to appear as tenderness, accountability, or a sincere apology, you may be disappointed in a very particular way.
Narcissistic regret often exists. It simply tends to organize itself around status, control, and consequence rather than around the emotional reality of another person.
Put simply:
The feeling may be real, but it is often directed at the self rather than toward the person who was hurt.
The Five Stages of Relationship Breakdown: How Couples Slowly Stop Understanding Each Other
There is a popular fantasy about how relationships end.
The fantasy is that something dramatic happens—an affair, a screaming match, a betrayal so theatrical it practically demands a soundtrack.
In reality, most relationships end the way old houses collapse: quietly, after years of structural stress no one thought to examine closely.
Most relationships do not end because of betrayal.
They end because two people gradually stop believing the other person’s mind makes sense.
Couples rarely implode because of one terrible moment.
They collapse because the interpretive infrastructure of the relationship slowly fails.
Two life partners who once understood each other begin encountering each other as if speaking slightly incompatible dialects of the same language.
The Five-Stage Model of Relationship Breakdown describes how rising life complexity gradually overwhelms the interpretive systems that allow two partners to understand each other.
The Collapse of Admiration in Modern Relationships
Relationships rarely collapse because of a single dramatic event.
They erode.
Not suddenly. Gradually.
A small shift in tone. A repeated disappointment. A moment when one partner looks at the other and feels something new and unsettling:
not anger,
not sadness,
but a quiet loss of admiration.
This moment is rarely discussed openly, yet it is one of the most decisive turning points in long relationships.
Love can survive frustration.
Love can survive disagreement.
What love struggles to survive is the sudden realization that the person one once admired now appears ordinary, careless, or contradictory.
Admiration, once lost, is difficult to reconstruct.
Interpretive Trespassing in Relationships: When Your Partner Tells You What Your Feelings “Really” Mean
Interpretive trespassing occurs when one partner crosses a largely invisible — but psychologically critical — boundary:
They begin reinterpreting the other person’s private emotional data without permission.
You will hear it immediately once you know how to listen for it:
“You’re not hurt — you’re embarrassed.”“You didn’t forget — you just don’t care.”
“You’re not overwhelmed — you’re avoiding me.”
“You’re not tired — you’re mad.”
The fight changes the first time your partner stops disagreeing with your position…
…and starts disagreeing with your explanation of your own mind.
At that point, the disagreement is no longer logistical.
It is epistemic.
Interpretive Drift: Why Apologies Stop Working in Relationships
Some couples reach a point where nothing they say seems to land the way they intended.
Apologies sound strategic.
Requests sound entitled.
Fatigue sounds like avoidance.
Even kindness can feel suspicious.
You may find yourself thinking:
“That’s not what I meant at all.”
While your partner replies:
“I know exactly what you meant.”
This is often not a failure of communication.
It is a change in interpretation.
Why You Feel Like a Burden in Your Own Relationship (And What It May Mean About Respect)
There is a particular shift that some people notice long before any talk of separation.
Your partner still shows up.
They still help with the kids.
They still ask about your day.
They still say “I love you” in roughly the same tone.
But something in the emotional climate has cooled.
You find yourself:
explaining decisions defensively.
anticipating criticism before you speak.
apologizing for things you haven’t done yet.
choosing silence over risk.
or editing your enthusiasm mid-sentence.
You are not being yelled at.
You are being quietly evaluated.
And increasingly, you suspect the verdict is not in your favor.