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Relationships

Why Every Marriage Is Really 3 Relationships

... and why being lovers isn't the steadiest of the three.

Key points

  • In every committed relationship, you are actually maintaining three distinct relationships.
  • There's a sexual, erotic relationship that demands intimacy, adventure, and focus.
  • There's a stable, predictable partnership that enables running a household and raising kids.
  • Not least is a loving, intimate relationship where both partners can lean on and enjoy each other.
Manascimento/Canva
Source: Manascimento/Canva

In every marriage (read long-term, committed, intimate relationship) there are actually three distinct, unique, and interdependent relationships: lovers, partners and friends. Each one of the relationships has a distinctive dynamic, nature, and purpose. Each can strengthen or weaken the others, due to the reciprocal and synergistic nature of the relationship braid.

By understanding the health of the erotic, the partnership, and the friendship relationships, couples can cope easily and effectively with challenges, focusing on the particular relationship in question, resulting in a deeper and stronger bond.

Lovers: Intimacy

Sexuality is the relationship saved especially for intimate partners. This is the relationship where sensuality, touch, sex, eroticism, and intimacy reign. Eroticism requires time, concentration, and focus. As couples therapist Ester Perel emphasizes, eroticism thrives on the playful, mysterious, flirty, unexpected, powerful, passionate, aggressive, as well submissive, energy.

Sexuality is usually the metric by which couples measure the success and health of their bond. Sex is the first to take a blow when the other relationships are strained, and it is often the slowest to heal.

Partners: Responsibility

Once a pair lives together and has children, the duo (consciously or not) start developing a partnership in order to run the business of the family. Included are paying bills, raising children, balancing a budget, managing bank accounts, paying a mortgage, attending to house chores, cooking, and cleaning. Partnership requires constant, complex, seemingly endless logistics, which can slowly take over the day-to-day conversations. Partnerships require trust, commitment, predictability, and transparency. Some couples negotiate this relationship as they go, since the business of family becomes more complicated as it grows.

Partnership is the relationship that usually is the steadiest, due to the need to keep the house and the children afloat. Problems in the partnership will immediately impact sexuality and then the friendship.

Friends: Love

Friendship thrives on the fun, intimate, and playful. Friendship is where couples laugh, gossip, tickle, philosophize, go out to dinner, share their private thoughts, dreams, fears, and feelings. Friendship is where you lean on each other. In many ways, friendship is what gives enduring energy and zest to the other two relationships.

Friendship may be the least visible, as it is subtle and less overt than sex and partnership. In fact, many couples don’t even notice that their friendship has deteriorated or even evaporated. Conversations typically get overrun by the partnership logistics, and the marriage gets measured by how much sex the couple is (or isn’t) having.

Since sex is easier to observe and measure than playful conversations, couples are often less aware of the vitality of their friendship. They usually awaken to the friendship only once things are really bad and they no longer enjoy each other’s company.

How to improve the three relationships

So how are you doing in each of these relationships? Here are a couple of questions (and initial suggestions) that will help you assess and engage with each of the relationships in your marriage.

Begin with giving an overall score on how well you think you are doing as lovers, partners, and friends. Score on a scale between 1 (we are not doing well) and 10 (we are totally rocking it).

Lovers

  • Are you dissatisfied with your sex life? If so, it’s time to talk about it. An honest conversation is the first step toward improving the sexual relationship. You can also read books, attend seminars, or go for counseling to improve the sex. Begin by practicing some good old mediocre sex, which will at least keep the sexual relationship alive while you work on improving it. Another approach is to explore masturbation separately and then together, in order to help each other learn what feels good.
  • Do you feeling a waning of attraction? If so, no need to feel ashamed, because it is natural and normal in every long-term relationship. Your partner may already feel it, so better own it rather than deny it. Now it’s time to talk openly and explore why. The discussions, albeit tough, can often bring the dyad to new levels of openness, intimacy, and even sex.

Partners

  • Do you feel alone in the parental partnership? If so, you can start by balancing the parental dynamic through increased collaboration.
  • Do you feel like the financial situation is out of hand or not managed well? If so, now is the time to meet with a financial advisor and make a business plan.
  • Do you feel alone in the burden of housework? If so, then make a list of all the different chores and household duties that need to be done. Discuss the list with your partner and renegotiate who does what.

Friends

  • Do you enjoy talking and spending time together? If not, then it’s time to talk about it and explore why you aren’t enjoying time together. A good initial step in the right direction is to start having purposeless conversations, in which you talk about associative, random topics that can help you widen your relational reservoir.
  • Are you somewhat bored with your partner? If so, then it’s time to practice joy. Yes, joy is a verb, and the more you express it, the more you will feel it.
  • Do you share more honestly and enthusiastically with your friends, family, or therapist than with your partner? If so, then it’s time to see whether you have outsourced too much of your libido to different parties. You may have to renegotiate and find a better way to utilize the power of the third in your relationship.

Once you’re done answering the questions, share this article with your partner and have them answer the questions.

Playfully and openly compare the scores and answers with your partner.

Brainstorm together which relationship you want to focus on next. If you get stuck or entrenched in the process, you can turn to a couples therapist to help you work on the issues.

Remember, since all three relationships are interconnected, improvement in one will exponentially improve the others.

Facebook image: Falcona/Shutterstock

References

Perel, E. (2007). Mating in captivity: Unlocking erotic intelligence. New York, NY: Harper.

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