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  • It can feel very weird, and a bit threatening, to talk about taking the pressure off a relationship.

  • Our collective, inherited Romantic culture likes to imagine functioning couples doing more or less everything together

  • and being the centre of each other's lives.

  • The good couple is, we are told, one in which two people mean more or less everything to one another.

  • In a sound relationship, we are supposed to meet each other's needs in every area of existence

  • from sex to intellectual stimulation, cooking styles to bedroom habits.

  • We're supposed to lead our social life in tandem, be the primary sounding board for one another's

  • problems and complete each other in spirit and in matter.

  • If they're involved in a sport, we should at once join in or at least come and support them every weekend; if we

  • want to visit a particular country, they are supposed to trot along enthusiastically with us;

  • our friends are meant to be their friendsIt sounds sweet but it isover the long

  • term – a recipe for disaster. No two people can ever match each other across all areas

  • of existence; and the attempt to do so inevitably ushers in bitterness and rage. We have, at

  • the collective level, given ourselves a hugely unhelpful picture of how love should go. Any

  • independent move is read like a sign that we can't actually love one another: it is

  • taken to be a sign of imminent danger if we visit other countries on our own or sleep

  • apart. So we end up badgering each other to do things that we don't really like (we

  • force each other to endure tedious hobbies or see each other's peculiar old friends),

  • not even because we inherently want to do so but because any other arrangement has come

  • to seem like evidence of betrayal. A more realistic and in the proper sense Romantic

  • view of couples would suggest that there have to be a few strong areas where we can meet

  • each others needs, but that there should also be plenty of others where we are clearly better

  • off pursuing our goals on our own. Consider the following list of independent activities

  • and give them stars (from one to five) if they strike you as relevant: I'd like to

  • … – Travel without my partnerHave dinner one to one with a friendBe able

  • to go to a party without my partner, and not have them feel left outVisit my parents

  • aloneHave my own financial adviserGo for long walks on my ownHave a separate

  • bathroomGo shopping with a friend rather than with my partner Look at each other's

  • stars and list. Is there anything that you feel you could accommodate? We should recognise

  • that a degree of independence isn't an attack on a partner: it's a guarantee of the solidity

  • of the underlying commitment one has made. Truly stable couples aren't those that do

  • everything together, it's those that have managed to interpret their differences in

  • non-dramatic, non-disloyal terms. Ultimately, a reduction of dependence doesn't mean a

  • relationship is unraveling: it means that we have learnt to focus more clearly and intently

  • on what the other person can actually bring us and have stopped blaming them for not being

  • someone they never were. We no longer need to be upset that their ideal holiday destination

  • strikes us as unappealing, or that their friends seem boring. We have learnt, instead, to value

  • them for the areas where we truly see eye to eye. To enjoy a harmonious union with someone,

  • we should ensure that we have plenty of sources of excitement, reassurance and stimulation

  • outside of them. When we hit problems, we should be able to lean on other support.

  • The demand that another person compensate us for all that's alarming, wearing or deficient

  • in our lives is a mechanism for systematically destroying any relationship. Our conflicts

  • and disappointments will at once feel more manageable when we stop asking our partner

  • to function as our long lost other half. The more we can survive without a relationship,

  • the greater will be its chances of survival and fulfillment. We will truly give love a

  • chance when we stop believing it can single-handedly save us.

It can feel very weird, and a bit threatening, to talk about taking the pressure off a relationship.

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