Differentiated Love and Sex

Why One Partner Wants to Talk (and the Other Doesn’t)

39 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why One Partner Wants to Talk (and the Other Doesn’t)

Descripción

DESCRIPTION What happens when one partner wants deep, emotional conversations—and the other would rather not go there? In this episode of Differentiated Love and Sex, Jackie Aston and Catherine Roebuck explore the high desire vs low desire dynamic around emotional connection. Why does one person crave more sharing, while the other resists? And what’s really going on beneath the surface? We unpack: * Why “talking about the relationship” can sometimes create distance instead of closeness * How anxiety, control, and insecurity can drive the need for constant discussion * The difference between real intimacy and connection through conflict or critique * Why some partners avoid emotional conversations (and when they might have a point) * The role of gender, conditioning, and emotional expression * How to invite connection—without demanding or forcing it We also share practical ways to shift out of this pattern, including: * Self-reflection questions to understand your own motivations * How to create safer, more inviting conversations * Simple rituals to build connection without pressure If you’ve ever felt like you’re “pulling” for connection while your partner is “pulling away,” this episode will help you understand the dynamic—and what to do about it. ---------------------------------------- If you enjoyed this episode, like, subscribe, and share it with someone who might benefit. #relationships #emotionalintimacy #couplestherapy #communication #attachmentstyles

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14 episodios

episode The Person Who Gives Compliments Freely but Can't Take One artwork

The Person Who Gives Compliments Freely but Can't Take One

DESCRIPTION You compliment others easily. You notice when someone puts in effort. But when it's directed at you — the appreciation, the attention, the "you look beautiful" — something closes off. You deflect, minimize, or just quietly wait until the moment passes. This episode is about what's underneath that, and why learning to actually receive positive attention matters for intimacy, for sex, and for the relationship you have with yourself. This episode covers: * Why deflecting compliments isn't humility — and what it communicates to the person trying to offer them * A client case where the inability to receive positive attention was showing up directly in sex, and what shifted it * The difference between needing validation to feel okay and being able to take in genuine appreciation when it's offered * What it looks like when someone lets themselves be noticed — and why that energy is genuinely different in a relationship * How dismissing a compliment can quietly send the message that the other person's perception doesn't count This is the kind of work Jackie and Catherine do with clients — helping people move out of the reflex to shrink and into a more honest, grounded relationship with themselves and each other. If this episode landed for you, you're welcome to book a free 15-minute consultation. Free consultation: [link] | Substack: [link] | Podcast: [link] ---------------------------------------- CHAPTER MARKERS 00:00 - The wife comes down the stairs — and he says nothing 00:33 - Why people who give compliments freely can't always receive them 01:19 - Introduction: tolerating positive attention 02:00 - Even when you want it, letting it in can be hard 02:29 - The volunteer event: a missed connection 04:36 - Client case: emotional coldness, shutdown, and what changed in sex 07:39 - You have to appreciate yourself before you can let someone else do it 08:40 - Anxiously monitoring vs. actually being present during sex 09:07 - Receiving a compliment doesn't mean you were seeking one 10:07 - Honest validation in healthy relationships 11:22 - When needing constant validation becomes a problem 13:54 - What it looks like when someone receives appreciation well 15:34 - Letting yourself be noticed — the date night case 18:54 - Why it's actually sexy to expect to be seen 21:22 - "I already believe this about me — I want you to see it" 22:05 - Stepping out of parent mode and into date mode 24:16 - Letting your partner be the authority on what they find beautiful

Ayer26 min
episode The Reassurance Loop: Why Smoothing Everything Over Makes the Anxiety Worse artwork

The Reassurance Loop: Why Smoothing Everything Over Makes the Anxiety Worse

DESCRIPTION You made the decision. You asked for buy-in. And now you're not so sure — but admitting that feels like it would unravel everything. So instead you perform confidence you don't have, and somehow the anxiety only gets louder. This episode is about what's actually underneath the need for constant reassurance, and what it takes to build the kind of self-trust that doesn't depend on everything working out perfectly. This episode covers: * Why reassuring yourself by insisting everything is fine tends to backfire — and what your partner is actually tracking beneath the surface * The difference between trusting your outcomes and trusting your process — and why only one of them is actually possible * What happens when fear of making a mistake causes people to go passive and quietly offload all the risk onto their partner * How to identify what you're actually trying to reassure yourself about — and whether that's something a real person can hold * Where the rigidity around "not changing your mind" often comes from, and how to give yourself permission to incorporate new information and move differently This is the kind of work Jackie and Catherine do with clients — helping individuals and couples move out of the reassurance loop and into something more honest and more grounded. If this episode resonated, you're welcome to book a free 15-minute consultation to see what working together might look like. Free consultation: [link] | Substack: [link] | Podcast: [link] ---------------------------------------- CHAPTER MARKERS 00:00 - Introduction 00:31 - The case: a new job, a risk taken together, and the doubt that followed 02:36 - Why performing confidence made things worse, not better 04:03 - What his wife was actually tracking — and what honesty made possible 05:01 - Trust is about accurate tracking, not perfect decisions 06:20 - The anxiety of trying never to be wrong 08:28 - How to build self-trust through process, not outcomes 11:21 - What you're actually trying to reassure yourself about 13:06 - When fear of mistakes leads to passivity — and the partner absorbs all the risk 16:25 - Self-reassurance means tolerating change, not defending your original choice 18:24 - How family rigidity shapes your relationship to mistakes and changing your mind 21:28 - Self-acceptance as the foundation of self-trust

2 de jun de 202622 min
episode Why Does My Partner Pull Away When I Get Closer? artwork

Why Does My Partner Pull Away When I Get Closer?

TO LEARN MORE ABOUT JACKIE AND CATHERINE’S THERAPY AND COACHING SERVICES, AND THE WORK THEY DO WITH INDIVIDUALS AND COUPLES, BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THEIR WEBSITE. HTTPS://WWW.CANDGTHERAPY.COM/ [https://www.candgtherapy.com/] HTTPS://WWW.CATHERINEROEBUCK.COM/ [https://www.catherineroebuck.com/] DESCRIPTION You're in a relationship — maybe a good one — and still there's this nagging sense that you've lost track of yourself somewhere along the way. Or the opposite: you feel fine on your own, but the moment your partner gets close, something shuts down. Neither of these is a communication problem. They're both versions of the same thing. This episode is about what it actually takes to be a distinct person inside a committed relationship — and what goes wrong when that breaks down in either direction. This is the kind of territory Jackie and Catherine work through with clients — not as a framework to memorize, but as a live question to sit with in your own relationship. If something in this episode landed and you want to think it through with one of them, a free 15-minute consultation [https://www.differentiatedlove.com/contact] is a good place to start. ---------------------------------------- CHAPTER MARKERS 00:00 - When needing closeness and needing distance collide 01:05 - Introduction 01:37 - What "healthy separateness" actually means 02:24 - What happens when one partner doesn't know who they are alone 04:00 - Why early relationships feel electric — and why that fades 05:03 - Dropping your sense of self to stay connected (and why it backfires) 06:07 - The comfort of outsourcing your decisions to your partner 07:04 - The spectrum: too needy on one end, too distant on the other 08:22 - The compartmentalizer: being yourself only when your partner isn't around 09:11 - Where the avoidant pattern comes from 11:00 - What each extreme is actually afraid of 11:20 - Why opposites attract — and then trigger each other 12:15 - Hiring your partner to embody what you've disowned in yourself 13:11 - The restaurant example: a small moment that reveals a lot 16:35 - How the easygoing child becomes the adult who doesn't know what they want 18:44 - What it means to discover yourself on purpose as an adult 19:37 - Finding the center line — and why you have to be willing to cross it 21:23 - What a good balance of separateness and togetherness actually looks like 22:50 - Adaptive cruise control as a relationship metaphor 23:45 - Personal example: the first time alone after having a baby 25:06 - How a new baby reshapes the distance dynamic in a marriage 26:11 - What a Wednesday night painting class did for the relationship 27:10 - When loneliness in a relationship is actually disconnection from yourself 28:38 - The assessment: where do you fall on the scale? ---------------------------------------- Music: Echoes by Roa https://soundcloud.com/roa_music1031 [https://soundcloud.com/roa_music1031] License: Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0 Free Download / Stream: https://audiolibrary.com.co/roa-music/echoes [https://audiolibrary.com.co/roa-music/echoes] Music promoted by Audio Library: https://youtu.be/HCXJxHIkH8w [https://youtu.be/HCXJxHIkH8w]

28 de may de 202629 min
episode How do I know if my Partner is actually changing? artwork

How do I know if my Partner is actually changing?

To learn more about Jackie and Catherine’s therapy and coaching services, and the work they do with individuals and couples, be sure to check out their website. https://www.candgtherapy.com/ [https://www.candgtherapy.com/] https://www.catherineroebuck.com/ [https://www.catherineroebuck.com/] Description You already know your partner is struggling with something. You've watched it happen enough times that you could script it. The fight, the conversation, the promise, the same pattern again. What you might not know yet is what that struggle is actually about — and what your role in it might be. This episode is about the difference between performing change and genuinely fighting for it — and how to hold that distinction without losing your own grounding in the process. What this episode covers: * How to tell if your partner is actually struggling with a pattern versus managing your perception of them — specific behavioral markers, not gut feelings * Why showing your partner how hurt you are often doesn't produce change, even when they do care about you * The codependent dynamic that looks like support: when you're doing more work on your partner's pattern than they are * Why the behavior is not personal — even when the impact absolutely is — and what changes when you really understand that distinction * What it looks like when someone is genuinely holding their own feet to the fire, and why that's something you can actually learn to recognize and respect These are the kinds of patterns that don't resolve through more conversations about the behavior. They require a different kind of looking — at the emotional issue underneath, at what's actually changing versus what's being performed, and honestly, at your own part in how the dynamic plays out. This is the kind of work Jackie and Catherine do with the people they work with. If you've been circling these questions in your own relationship and want to think them through with someone who won't just validate both sides, they offer a free 15-minute consultation — no pressure, no pitch, just a real conversation. 0:00 - When Your Partner's Pattern Hits You Personally 2:00 - What This Episode Is Actually About 3:32 - How to Tell If Your Partner Is Really Struggling 6:48 - Why Wanting to Change Isn't the Same as Changing 9:10 - Start With Yourself Before You Judge Your Partner 10:47 - The Signs That Indicate a Genuine Struggle 13:20 - What It Looks Like When Someone Does the Work in Real Time 15:41 - Holding Your Own Feet to the Fire 17:26 - Stop Talking About the Behavior — Talk About What's Driving It 19:19 - The First Step Toward Real Brain Change 21:12 - If You're Starting All the Conversations, That's the Problem 23:32 - Why Taking It Personally Makes Everything Worse 25:46 - When Showing Your Hurt Doesn't Produce Change 27:31 - Making the Decision to Stay — and What That Requires 29:35 - What Watching Someone Struggle Can Do for Your Respect   Music: Echoes by Roa https://soundcloud.com/roa_music1031 [https://soundcloud.com/roa_music1031] License: Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0 Free Download / Stream: https://audiolibrary.com.co/roa-music/echoes [https://audiolibrary.com.co/roa-music/echoes] Music promoted by Audio Library: https://youtu.be/HCXJxHIkH8w [https://youtu.be/HCXJxHIkH8w]

19 de may de 202630 min
episode Why One Partner Wants to Talk (and the Other Doesn’t) artwork

Why One Partner Wants to Talk (and the Other Doesn’t)

DESCRIPTION What happens when one partner wants deep, emotional conversations—and the other would rather not go there? In this episode of Differentiated Love and Sex, Jackie Aston and Catherine Roebuck explore the high desire vs low desire dynamic around emotional connection. Why does one person crave more sharing, while the other resists? And what’s really going on beneath the surface? We unpack: * Why “talking about the relationship” can sometimes create distance instead of closeness * How anxiety, control, and insecurity can drive the need for constant discussion * The difference between real intimacy and connection through conflict or critique * Why some partners avoid emotional conversations (and when they might have a point) * The role of gender, conditioning, and emotional expression * How to invite connection—without demanding or forcing it We also share practical ways to shift out of this pattern, including: * Self-reflection questions to understand your own motivations * How to create safer, more inviting conversations * Simple rituals to build connection without pressure If you’ve ever felt like you’re “pulling” for connection while your partner is “pulling away,” this episode will help you understand the dynamic—and what to do about it. ---------------------------------------- If you enjoyed this episode, like, subscribe, and share it with someone who might benefit. #relationships #emotionalintimacy #couplestherapy #communication #attachmentstyles

12 de may de 202639 min