About three years in, we realised we'd stopped asking each other how we actually were.
We were checking in constantly — coordinating schedules, making plans, managing logistics. Every day, multiple times. But the actual question — what are you thinking about, what are you scared of, what did you want that you didn't get this week — had quietly dropped out of the rotation.
We were fine. Nothing was wrong. That was the whole problem.
Quick Answer
"We're fine" describes the absence of an active crisis, not the presence of a healthy relationship. The drift that ends many relationships doesn't start with a fight or a betrayal — it starts during the fine period, when nothing is urgent enough to pay attention to. Closeness is not a resting state; it's something you have to keep generating.
Key Facts
- Relationship satisfaction naturally tends to decline over time without intentional investment — not because something has gone wrong, but because the habits of early relationship (curiosity, attentiveness, novelty) tend to reduce as familiarity increases.
- Gottman research identifies "turning toward" — responding to a partner's bids for connection, however small — as one of the strongest predictors of long-term relationship satisfaction. Couples who drift usually have a high rate of "turning away" (ignoring or missing bids) during what seemed like neutral periods.
- The U.S. Surgeon General's report on loneliness identified a paradox: many people feel most isolated not in the absence of relationships but in relationships that have become superficial — co-existing rather than connecting.
- Emotional distance typically increases gradually and goes unnoticed until it's significant — which is why the fine period is exactly when it takes root.
- The research on relationship satisfaction over decades finds the defining variable to be active investment: couples who stay happy report consistently doing things to nurture connection, not just avoiding things that damage it.
What "fine" actually means
Fine means:
- No active conflict
- Logistics are functioning
- Nobody is leaving
- There is no emergency that requires attention
Fine does not mean:
- We know each other well right now
- We're curious about each other
- We feel genuinely close
- We're investing in the relationship
These are completely separable things. A couple can have the first list entirely intact and the second list entirely neglected, for years, without either person having a clear word for what's happening.
The word is drift. And it moves too slowly to feel like movement.
How drift works
Drift is not an event. It's an accumulation.
It's the conversation about feelings that gets postponed once because you're both tired, and then it just stops happening because it was always going to happen later. It's the curiosity about your partner's inner life that gets replaced by the familiarity of already knowing them (or believing you do). It's the bid for connection that gets half-noticed and half-responded to — not coldly, just absently, because you're busy, because you assumed there would be another chance.
None of these are dramatic. None of them feel like a moment you'll look back at. Together, they're how two people who loved each other a great deal end up feeling like strangers in the same house.
The break-ups that surprise people — the ones where the announcement seems to come from nowhere — almost always start here. Not in a crisis, not in an affair, not in a single defining fight. In the fine period.
Try it: Think about the last time you asked your partner a question and were genuinely surprised by the answer. If you have to think for a while, that's useful information about where you are on the drift scale.
What closeness actually requires
Closeness is not a state you arrive at. It's something you keep producing.
The mechanism is specific and well-studied: Gottman calls it "turning toward." Partners constantly make small bids for connection — a comment, a question, a gesture, a moment of wanting to share something. The partner either turns toward (responds with some engagement), turns away (ignores it), or turns against (responds negatively).
In couples who stay close over decades, the rate of turning toward is high — not 100%, but consistently above the threshold where the other person feels seen. In couples who drift, the rate gradually declines, usually without either person realising it.
The turning toward doesn't have to be large. It just has to be genuine. "Hm, interesting" while actually looking up from your phone is different from "mm" while scrolling. The bid was made; whether it was received is the whole thing.
Try it: For one day, notice every small bid your partner makes — every "look at this," every comment that isn't strictly functional, every moment of wanting to share something. Notice how many you turn toward versus half-attend. Don't judge; just notice. The pattern is almost always more visible from the outside of the moment than inside it.
The fine period is the time to invest
This is the counterintuitive point: the absence of crisis is not a reason to coast. It's the window where investment is easiest and most effective.
Habits built during fine periods are the ones you'll draw on during hard ones. Curiosity practised when nothing is wrong is available when something is. A repair habit developed before you urgently need it is faster and better than one you're inventing under pressure.
The couples who seem to handle hard things well are usually the ones who've been maintaining something. The resilience wasn't summoned in the crisis — it was already there, built during the years when things were fine.
Try it: This week, have one conversation that has no logistical content. Not about plans, the week, work, finances. Something you're actually curious about: what has been on your mind that you haven't said? What's something you want that you haven't asked for? It doesn't have to be heavy. It just has to be real.
The thing we changed
When we realised we'd stopped asking each other how we actually were, we did something embarrassingly simple: we started asking again. Not formally. Not in a scheduled check-in (though we've tried that too). Just the question, regularly enough that it didn't feel like an event.
The answer was always something. There was always something the other person was thinking about that we hadn't known.
That's not because we'd become bad at communicating. It's because close relationships require effort to stay close, and we'd assumed proximity would handle it. Proximity keeps you in the same room. It doesn't keep you in each other's lives.
FAQ
We're genuinely fine — isn't it okay to just enjoy that?
Yes — enjoy it. The point isn't that fine is bad; it's that fine requires maintenance to stay fine. Enjoying a good period is exactly right. Assuming the enjoyment is automatic and permanent is the trap.
How do I know if we've drifted or if this is just what long-term relationships feel like?
Ask yourself: do you feel genuinely known by your partner right now? Not historically known — right now, this week. Do they know what's on your mind, what you're hoping for, what was hard lately? If you have to think about it, some drift has probably happened.
My partner seems content. Should I say something if I feel the drift?
Yes — gently, without framing it as a problem with them. "I've been noticing we mostly talk about logistics and I miss actually talking" is different from "you're not paying attention to me." The first is a bid for connection; the second is an accusation. The first is more likely to be received.
We tried regular check-ins and they felt forced. What else works?
The format matters less than the intention. Some couples do well with a specific structure; others find a loose question works better ("one thing on your mind this week"). The constraint isn't the schedule — it's genuine curiosity. Whatever format produces genuine curiosity is the right one for you.
We were fine. Fine was the problem.
Not because fine is bad — fine is good. But fine, left unattended, becomes the precondition for drift. The closeness you want in year ten is built during the fine periods in years three and five, in small, consistent moments of actually choosing to pay attention.
Nothing is wrong. That's exactly when to start.
The Growing Us coach is built for the fine period — the check-in, the conversation you didn't know you needed, the habit that keeps drift from starting. See where you are with the free Vibe Check.