What’s the Difference?
A study by Gottman's Institute states approximately 69% of conflicts in relationships are perpetual, meaning they revolve around deep-seated differences in personality, values, or lifestyle that simply don't get fully resolved over time. Basically saying there is no right answer.
Relationships without differences aren’t relationships. They’re projections. They’re shadows of ourselves that never push back. We think sameness is harmony, but sameness is comfort, not connection. Real relationships are forged in friction.
Love isn’t found in the moments where everything fits. It’s revealed when nothing fits and we still stay.
The mistake is thinking that differences ruin relationships. They don’t. Suppressing them does. Avoiding them. Silencing them. That’s what rots the foundation from underneath.
Successful relationships happen when you can bring those differences to surface. Not to win or convince, but to understand. Providing space for another way of seeing....without feeling obligated for it to become your own.
That being said, cultivating this dynamic does take both people,
and you don’t always get both. So start with your side.
It is true, you can only control half the dance. If you keep stepping on their toes, it’s still your responsibility to learn rhythm. On the other hand, you’re not responsible for how they show up, but you are responsible for how you do.
The more you grow in self-awareness, the more you start to notice the micro-differences that quietly shape your relationships. Not just the obvious disagreements, but the subtle ones....the internal choices that shift the entire dynamic.
These differences are smaller in size but heavier in impact. They show up in how you speak. How you retreat. How you interpret silence. How you give....or withhold..grace.
Taking this deeper, here are a few of the most common points of tension that quietly define the health of a relationship. Most of the time, it’s not the big blowups that break the bond. It’s the little choices made every day… the ones that seem small but pick up momentum over time.
The difference between need and want is codependency and love.
Need says, “I don’t know who I am without you.”
Want says, “I know who I am, and I still choose you.”
Need is survival.
Want is freedom.
Codependency asks someone else to hold your identity. Love asks them to walk beside it. Need grasps. Want invites.
It’s easy to confuse the two, especially when you’re afraid to be alone, but love doesn’t trap. It doesn’t tangle. Love breathes. It knows when to give space.
The difference between a deep or casual relationship is time under tension.
Anyone can laugh with you.
Not everyone will sit with you in silence when things are hard.
Not everyone will stay when the conversation gets uncomfortable, or when the version of you they liked changes.
Casual connections avoid the tension.
Deep ones go through it.
Depth isn’t about time spent. It’s about time survived.
How many fights did we not walk away from?
How many misunderstandings did we wrestle through instead of brushing past?
Time under tension builds muscle.
Same goes for love.
Your expectations are building...or breaking...everything.
Every argument has a prequel. Most of the time, it’s an unspoken expectation. You expected them to know. To care. To answer. To read your mind. When they didn’t, it felt like betrayal.
In truth, what we don’t say will always become what we resent.
Expectations unspoken are disappointments guaranteed.
Say it out loud.
Tell them how you want to be loved.
Tell them what hurts you.
Tell them where you’ve been.
Give them a chance to meet the real you, not the version you assume they want.
We think great relationships are found. They’re not. They’re built. Building means breaking comfort, asking yourself the hard questions, and it means going first.
It means knowing what’s yours to carry, and what isn’t.
It means choosing to respond when you want to rage.
Choosing to love without needing to control.
Choosing to stay when it’s easier to run.
Choosing to speak what you expect instead of punishing people for not knowing.
Because that’s the difference.
And it’s everything.
Today’s Forced Challenge: I want you to FORCE yourself to attack at least one of these challenges:
1. Invite a different perspective: Ask someone you care about: What’s something you think I consistently misunderstand about you? Then just listen.
2. Reflect on who you are without them: If the person you love vanished tomorrow...who would you be? Can you strengthen that version of you now?
3. Communicate a boundary without apology: Boundaries aren’t walls....they’re clarity. Pick one boundary and express it without over explaining or softening it.
4. Revisit a tension you’ve avoided: What conversation have you been postponing out of fear? Set a time to have it. Tension avoided is trust delayed.
5. Love them without trying to change them: For one day, love someone exactly as they are. Don’t critique, suggest, or coach. Just witness...and appreciate.
There is a life of rich relationships on the other side of these differences. Quality relationships take work, intentionality, and investment. You can get through life one shallow relationship at a time until life really hits. It's in these moments that you'll realize the work is worth it.
“You can’t build intimacy without truth. And you can’t build truth without conflict.”— Brené Brown
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