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Intimacy Today

Podkast av Sheena Glover

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

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Welcome to 'Intimacy in Progress,' the podcast where we talk about close relationships and how they change us. We share stories, talk with experts, and hear from you about the joys and challenges of getting close to others. This podcast is a place to learn about making our relationships better and feeling more connected to the people around us. Join us as we find out how being open and connected can make our lives better. 'Intimacy in Progress' is all about growing closer, one story at a time.

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11 Episoder

episode Why Every Fight Feels Exactly the Same cover

Why Every Fight Feels Exactly the Same

One of the most frustrating parts of conflict in relationships isn’t just the argument itself, it’s the feeling that you’ve had this exact fight before. The topic might change, but the tone, the reactions, and the ending all feel familiar. One partner gets sharper or more intense, the other pulls back or shuts down. One pushes to resolve it immediately, the other needs space. Both people leave the conversation feeling unheard, misunderstood, or exhausted and over time, conflict stops feeling productive and starts feeling predictable. In this episode of Intimacy Today, we break down why conflict styles form, how couples get stuck in repeating patterns, and why most arguments aren’t random – they’re structured cycles shaped by nervous system responses, attachment patterns, and learned behavior. What We Explore: * Why conflict styles become predictable over time * The pursue–withdraw dynamic and how it escalates tension * What emotional flooding does to listening, empathy, and communication * Why some reactions are about protection, not aggression * How defensiveness often masks shame or fear * Why repair attempts matter more than “winning” an argument * How family-of-origin patterns show up in adult conflict * Why the content of the fight changes, but the pattern stays the same Reframing Conflict: The goal isn’t to stop fighting, it’s to stop fighting in a way that makes connection impossible. Most couples aren’t dealing with a communication problem, they’re dealing with a pattern problem; and until the pattern is understood, the same fight will keep repeating with different headlines. Practical Repair Conversations & Tools: Instead of: “Why do we always fight like this?” “You never listen.” “You always shut down.” Try shifting toward awareness and structure: “Can we map what just happened between us?” “I think I came in strong and that made it harder to hear me.” “I’m starting to feel overwhelmed – can we pause and come back to this?” “I don’t want this to turn into the same cycle again.” “That came out harsher than I meant – let me try again.” Key Tools to Interrupt the Cycle: Map the pattern: Who raises the issue? Who escalates? Who withdraws? Who tries to repair? Seeing the sequence helps you stop treating each fight like a new problem. Use complaints, not character attacks: “I felt dismissed when you interrupted me” lands very differently than “You never listen.” Normalize flooding: If someone is overwhelmed, communication quality drops fast. Breaks aren’t avoidance if there’s a plan to return. Build a shared repair language: Simple phrases can interrupt escalation when both people trust them. Regulate before resolving: You cannot solve the problem if both nervous systems are still in fight-or-flight. If you’ve ever: * Felt like every argument turns into the same fight * Felt unheard, even when you’re trying to communicate clearly * Shut down or escalated without meaning to * Wondered why conflict feels so intense or draining This episode is for you. Listen now and learn how to shift from reactive conflict patterns to intentional, repair-focused communication. Intimacy starts with you. #IntimacyInProgress #ConflictResolution #AttachmentTheory #CommunicationSkills #RelationshipPsychology Additional Resources: Managing Conflict: Solvable vs. Perpetual Problems [https://www.gottman.com/blog/managing-conflict-solvable-vs-perpetual-problems] – The Gottman Institute Manage Conflict: Repair and De-Escalate [https://www.gottman.com/blog/manage-conflict-repair-and-de-escalate] – The Gottman Institute

20. mai 2026 - 13 min
episode What Happens When You Change But Your Relationship Doesn’t cover

What Happens When You Change But Your Relationship Doesn’t

One of the most disorienting experiences inside a relationship isn’t conflict – it’s change. You start thinking differently, communicating differently, needing different things and suddenly, the relationship that once felt natural starts to feel unfamiliar. One partner may feel like they’re evolving, healing, or stepping into a new version of themselves; while the other feels confused, left behind, or like they’re losing the version of the relationship they understood. Both people feel unsettled, and slowly, the tension isn’t about one specific issue – it’s about no longer feeling fully known or fully met. In this episode of Intimacy Today, we unpack what actually happens when identity shifts inside a relationship, why growth can create distance instead of connection, and how couples can either drift apart or learn how to meet each other again in the present. What We Explore: * Why couples don’t automatically grow together * How identity shifts happen through therapy, parenthood, career changes, and healing * What it feels like when a partner is relating to who you were, not who you are * The grief of outgrowing old dynamics and familiar versions of each other * Why growth can trigger insecurity, comparison, or fear in a partner * The difference between healthy differentiation and emotional disconnection * How subtle hierarchy (“I’ve grown more than you”) damages connection * Why relationships need to be updated as people evolve Reframing Relationship Growth: Growth doesn’t automatically strengthen a relationship: it changes it. When that change isn’t acknowledged, couples often start operating from outdated versions of each other; which creates confusion, misinterpretation, and emotional distance. The real question isn’t, “Why can’t we go back to how things were?” It’s: “Can we learn who we are now?” Practical Repair Conversations: Instead of: “Why are you so different now?” “Why can’t things just go back to normal?” Try questions like… “I don’t think I’m the same person I was a few years ago, do you feel that too?” “Do you feel like we’re still relating to older versions of each other?” “What feels different for you in this relationship right now?” “What would it look like for us to learn from each other again from here?” Naming the shift creates clarity, and clarity creates the possibility for reconnection. If you’ve ever: * Felt like you’ve outgrown parts of your relationship * Felt misunderstood by a partner who knew an older version of you * Felt afraid that growth might create distance instead of closeness * Wondered whether change means incompatibility This episode is for you. Listen now and explore how to move from confusion and disconnection to clarity and intentional reconnection. Intimacy starts with you. #IntimacyInProgress #RelationshipGrowth #AttachmentTheory #EmotionalIntimacy #RelationshipPsychology Additional Resources: Romantic Relationships and Mental Health [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12668558] – PMC Thriving Through Relationships [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4356946] – PMC

13. mai 2026 - 20 min
episode Why Some Arguments Never Go Away cover

Why Some Arguments Never Go Away

If you’ve ever thought, “Why are we fighting about this again? You are not alone. Some arguments don’t disappear; and not because your relationship is broken, but because two people are different – and difference doesn’t need elimination, it needs understanding. In this episode of Intimacy Today, we explore why certain conflicts repeat, how the brain and nervous system fuel escalation, and why the goal of conflict isn’t resolution every time but learning how to navigate differences without destroying connection. The healthiest couples don’t avoid conflict, they get better at having it. What We Explore: * Why personality differences create ongoing conflict patterns * The concept of “different operating systems” in relationships * The pursue–withdraw escalation cycle * What happens in the brain during arguments (and why logic disappears) * Emotional flooding and how it blocks productive communication * Why repeated arguments often signal meaning, not malfunction * How to shift from eliminating conflict to managing it The Core Reframe: Repeated conflict means that you’re bumping into a permanent difference; and research often shows that many long-term conflicts aren’t solvable problems – they’re ongoing negotiations between two valid perspectives. It’s less like solving a math equation, and more like learning how to dance with someone who moves differently than you do. Understanding the Brain in Conflict: When arguments escalate, the brain shifts into threat mode – think of it like a smoke alarm going off while you’re trying to cook dinner. Even if nothing is actually on fire, the noise makes it nearly impossible to think clearly. During this state: * you talk louder * you listen less * you react faster The conversation stops being productive because your nervous system is trying to protect you, not connect with your partner. Practical Shift: Instead of asking: “How do we fix this argument?” Ask:  “How do we handle this difference without hurting each other?” Not all conflict is meant to be solved, some of it is meant to be understood. If you’ve ever: * Had the same argument on repeat * Felt like nothing ever truly gets resolved * Wondered if compatibility means never fighting This episode is for you. Listen now and explore how to move from repetitive conflict to relational resilience. Intimacy starts with you. https://intimacyinprogress.com/ [https://intimacyinprogress.com/] #IntimacyInProgress #ConflictResolution #RelationshipPsychology #AttachmentTheory #CouplesTherapy Additional Resources: Your Brain During Arguments [https://kristajordan.com/your-brain-during-arguments-article-by-stan-tatkin-psyd/] Why You Keep Having the Same Argument [https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/fixing-families/202011/5-reasons-why-you-keep-having-the-same-argument]

22. april 2026 - 6 min
episode Why Couples Fight About Money cover

Why Couples Fight About Money

Many couples assume financial conflict only happens when money is tight, but money fights show up in wealthy relationships too.  No one is exempt from these types of challenges because money arguments are rarely about money. They’re about what money represents. * Security * Freedom * Control * Safety In this episode of Intimacy Today, we unpack why financial conflict is one of the most emotionally charged dynamics in relationships; and why couples often argue about spending when they’re actually arguing about fear – because when money gets emotional, logic quietly leaves the room. What We Explore: * Why money activates core fears around survival and control * How financial arguments often mask deeper emotional concerns * The role of hidden financial narratives in relationship conflict * Why savers and spenders misinterpret each other’s behavior * How financial avoidance creates long-term relational damage * The impact of power dynamics and income differences * Why financial secrecy erodes trust faster than overspending The Core Truth: You’re not arguing about the purchase, you’re arguing about what the purchase means. To one partner, spending may feel like freedom and too the other, it may feel like danger – and without context, both people assume the worst. Practical Repair Conversations: Instead of: “You’re irresponsible with money.” Try: *  “What did money feel like growing up for you?” *  “What helps you feel financially safe?” *  “What are we trying to build together long-term?” Shared meaning reduces conflict, and criticism amplifies it. If you’ve ever: * Had the same argument about spending over and over * Felt anxious or controlled in financial conversations * Avoided money talks altogether just to keep the peace This episode is for you. Listen now and explore how to shift from financial tension to financial teamwork. Intimacy starts with you.  https://intimacyinprogress.com/ [https://intimacyinprogress.com/] #IntimacyInProgress #MoneyAndRelationships #FinancialIntimacy #RelationshipPsychology #CouplesTherapy Additional Resources: Liberty University – The Impact of Economic Stress on Marital Satisfaction [https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/doctoral/6524/] American Psychological Association – Money and Relationship Conflict [https://www.apa.org/topics/money/conflict] The Gottman Institute – Financial Infidelity Can Put Your Relationship At Risk [https://www.gottman.com/blog/financial-infidelity-can-put-your-relationship-at-risk/]

15. april 2026 - 8 min
episode Why Couples Stop Having Sex (And What It Actually Means) cover

Why Couples Stop Having Sex (And What It Actually Means)

One of the most emotionally painful conflicts couples face is sexual disconnection, but the story most people tell themselves about that disconnection is often wrong. One partner believes: “They’re not attracted to me anymore.” The other believes: “Something must be wrong with me because I can’t want sex the way they do.” Both people feel rejected, both people feel pressure, and slowly, sex stops being a place of connection and starts becoming a scoreboard of hurt feelings. In this episode of Intimacy Today, we unpack why loss of desire rarely means loss of love; and how most couples are actually caught in a stress cycle, not a compatibility issue – because the problem usually isn’t attraction but the environment in which attraction is trying to exist.  What We Explore: * Why sexual disconnection feels deeply personal (even when it isn’t) * The Pursuer–Withdrawer cycle and how it quietly escalates pressure * Why emotional disconnection often shows up as sexual disconnection * The difference between spontaneous desire and responsive desire * How stress, resentment, and nervous system overload suppress attraction * Why avoidance is often protective, not rejecting * How couples accidentally argue about the symptom instead of the root Reframing Sexual Disconnection: Sexual conflict is rarely about sex. It’s about emotional safety, stress levels, unspoken resentment, and feeling valued vs feeling pressured. When the relationship environment feels tense, the body doesn’t lean toward desire, it leans toward protection. Practical Repair Conversations: Instead of:  “Why don’t you want me anymore?” try questions like… * “What helps you feel relaxed and safe with me?” * “Do you feel pressure when this comes up?” * “What kind of closeness helps your desire come online?” Curiosity creates connection, and pressure shuts it down. If you’ve ever: * Felt rejected when your partner’s desire changed * Felt pressure to want sex you didn’t feel ready for * Wondered if your relationship was broken because your sex life changed This episode is for you. Listen now and explore how to move from pressure and misinterpretation to understanding and reconnection. Intimacy starts with you. https://intimacyinprogress.com/ [https://intimacyinprogress.com/] #IntimacyInProgress #DesireMismatch #RelationshipPsychology #AttachmentTheory #EmotionalIntimacy Additional Resources: The Gottman Institute – Desire in Longterm Relationships [https://www.gottman.com/blog/desire-in-a-long-term-relationship-part-iii/] Adult Attachment, Stress, and Romantic Relationships [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4845754/]

8. april 2026 - 7 min
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