Reading about others’ experiences can help us navigate the complexities of love and care.
February 3, 2024, 8 AM ET
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“The reason my marriage fell apart seems absurd when I describe it: My wife left me because sometimes I leave dishes by the sink,” Matthew Fray wrote in 2022. “It makes her seem ridiculous and makes me seem like a victim of unfair expectations. But it wasn’t the dishes, not really—it was what they represented … It was about consideration. About the pervasive sense that she was married to someone who did not respect or appreciate her.”
“She knew that something was wrong,” Fray explained. “I insisted that everything was fine. This is how my marriage ended. It could be how yours ends too.” His essay is a heartbreaking but helpful example of the power of hindsight; reading others’ reflections of past relationships, romantic or otherwise, can help us navigate the complexities of love and care. Today’s newsletter rounds up some perspectives from our writers on what strengthens relationships and what threatens them.
On Love
The Marriage Lesson That I Learned Too Late
By Matthew Fray
The existence of love, trust, respect, and safety in a relationship is often dependent on moments you might write off as petty disagreements.
The Gender Researcher’s Guide to an Equal Marriage
By Joe Pinsker
In their personal lives, sociologists attempt to ward off the same inequalities that they study at work.
Masters of Love
By Emily Esfahani Smith
Science says that lasting relationships come down to—you guessed it—kindness and generosity.
Still Curious?
Other Diversions
P.S.
You still have time to incorporate some of our writers’ lessons before Valentine’s Day—even if you’re not in a romantic partnership. The holiday is now coming for all of your relationships, Joe Pinsker reported in 2020.
— Isabel