Most couples tend to progress through the stages of coming together in the same way.

You may have heard that there are certain phases of stages to relationships. Well, a lot of research has been put into what goes on in relationships, because we really want to know what is different about relationships that work well. If we can pinpoint what these “successful” couples do differently, we can put these habits into practice ourselves. This gives our own relationships a better chance at being fulfilling, loving and long-lasting.

One thing that the research has found is that the “lifespan” of most couple relationships can be divided into stages. Each stage, or phase, has its own characteristics and risks. Knowing something about the stages of relationships helps us to be prepared for them, and gives us some clues when we’re trying to navigate them.

Of course there is no such thing as a “normal” relationship or a “normal” couple – we’re all different. However at different stages of relationships we do find that often there are similarities in the experiences we have, and also the problems.

Regardless of the phase you’re in, sometimes it can be helpful to remember that:

A “couple” does not exist – two individuals do.

Each of you has your own traits, thought patterns, beliefs, values and behaviours. You are two individuals, and each of you is responsible for your own thoughts, feelings and behaviour. Having said that, read on to find out what stage or phase you might be in now, and what you can look for or focus on.

1. Stage of courtship (The “honeymoon phase”)

(0-2 years)

The honeymoon phase

The initial stage is the most memorable. It’s when you’re falling in love and these feelings are very strong — in fact, you can’t think of anything else! During this phase you spend lots of time with your partner, to the extent that you may isolate yourselves from friends and family a bit. You engage in many activities together, and there is high sexual activity within the relationship.

There is also the tendency to not really notice or pay attention to the differences between you. The emphasis is instead on the similarities — “We’ve got so much in common!” Conflict is generally avoided, and you try to only show “good” qualities to each other.

The courtship stage generally lasts between several months and two years. It has been known, however, to last up to eight years!

Something that is really interesting is that, most often, it is only relationships that have gone through this stage that are successful.

What does this mean? Well, take a relationship where the woman became pregnant early. These couples tend to have a much shorter marketing phase. This means that they don’t have as strong a foundation for when conflict does come into the picture, and they tend to be more unbalanced in later stages.

Another example of a shortened marketing stage is meeting each other’s family too early, before you have developed space, and your own “couple territory.”

So the take home message here is: Move slowly to get the most out of this phase. Market yourselves to each other. Focus on the points mentioned above. For example:

  • Put more emphasis on similarities.
  • Try to avoid conflict.
  • Spend time together, just the two of you.
  • Be curious about each other.

By enjoying the similarities you have and going through this stage fully, you can naturally progress to the next stage. You will have learned how to communicate with each other, how to enjoy each other, and how to support each other. This will set you up for the next stages in your relationship.

2. Marriage/Living together (without children)

(2-5 years)

Typically after you’ve been together a year or two, you’ll notice that things have fallen into a slightly different pattern. You’ll find you both have more attention for the world around you again, rather than solely for each other. You’ll start spending more time with friends again, and developing mutual friendships, or doing things like going out with other couples.

There will be a decrease in the strong feelings of lust, and perhaps also the feeling you think of as “love.” There will be more awareness of and knowledge about the differences between you, and probably more conflict, as well.

This is normal. The thing is, we learn from movies, books and magazines that “love” is supposed to be a non-stop courtship phase, with strong feelings of love, lust and happiness and little conflict… forever. This is not realistic, and the end result is that when those initial feelings begin to decrease, many people think that this means something is wrong – maybe this isn’t “the one” after all.

However if you follow this track, you will go through an endless cycle ending and beginning relationships. Because the fact is that those initial strong feelings are largely a chemical reaction in your brain – one that simply cannot last forever.

It is important to keep in mind that conflict is inevitable, and that love is not a feeling, but a behaviour. Truly loving someone can be seen simply as putting their needs before your own, regardless of how you feel at the time.

So this stage is the time to learn to express your differences respectfully and assertively.

Money is often the first safe issue of difference. We often learn how to handle money from our family of origin, which means that we all have different styles. This means you will need to explore what works for you both.

The choice whether or not to have children is often a focus of this stage, leading to one of the following:

3 (a). Couple with children

(5-10 years)

You’ve decided to have children. Congratulations, you now need to fit parenting as well as partnering into the same amount of time and space. As such it is normal to feel tired and even drained. This stage also involves a decrease in mutual activities and an increase in care and task divisions.

Often it is here that your individual differences become more evident and there is greater potential for conflict. This is understandable since this is the most fatiguing phase. Add to this a strong decrease of sexual activity and we’re officially in the danger zone.

Extreme high romantic expectations can be an issue. Again, keep in mind that love is a behaviour – feelings are transient but behaviour doesn’t have to be.

As with previous stages, everything begins with your families of origin, as this is where you learnt your parenting style, how tasks should be divided, how conflict is resolved, etc. There may be a clash of two styles from two families of origin coming together. This may come with communication issues – suddenly finding you can’t communicate any more.

Remember that you have (usually) come through two stages to get to this point, so you have already overcome a lot, made choices and solved problems. How did you do this then? This is the foundation you can fall back on now.

If you are more tired now, instead of thinking and utilising skills and strategies, you may find yourself falling back on stereotyped coping strategies (such as complaining and nagging). Make the time to problem solve. Nagging rarely works. Communicate with each other openly, nonjudgmentally and honestly to find out what will work – what do you need from each other? How can you support and encourage each other?

If you are really struggling, it may be helpful to ask yourselves how much of a marketing phase you had. If you didn’t have much of one, consciously try to engage in it now. Slow down. Be curious about each other, be fully engaged with each other, and build that strong foundation.

3 (b). Couple without children

Many of the above issues still come into play here, but not having children does change the game a bit. It can be easier in some ways, and more difficult in others.

You may be great at communicating, strategies, and problem solving. However you may not have much to communicate about, to work on together, or to change for.

Without new energy coming into the relationship it can stagnate. It becomes a closed system, with no outlet, that can then become vulnerable or unstable. Children automatically bring new energy into a relationship – without children you will need to do this in other ways.

One way to do this is to ensure you maintain a healthy balance between the individual and the relationship. Maintain your own identity, in addition to the relationship. You will find that, rather than being separate from the relationship, this will feed it – it brings in new energy. It gives you things to talk about and share, things to continue learning about each other.

In addition to this, it is important to have things you do, build and explore together. This will bring you together the way parenting children does. Have projects together. Work on something as a partnership that will challenge you to compromise, overcome and strengthen your ties.

4. Stabilising phase

(10-20 years)

As your children get older and become a bit more independent – spending more time away from home – you may find there are less demands on you as parents. You may have more time and space for activities outside the family, for new discoveries, for individual challenges.

It is often here that you and your partner become “companions” more than anything else. The patterns you have of relating to your partner have often crystallised by this stage, and become automatic.

What have you learned? How have you changed? There may be some exploration. New interests, hobbies, roles. If there is a clash, use your history from the past three successful phases of your relationship. You’ve learnt how to problem solve together by this point!

Remember that a relationship and its roles change over time. Flexibility and acceptance is what makes it work.

This can be the quietest stage, at least until, if you do have children, they become adolescents. Then there can be potential tensions as a result of emerging differences in boundaries – suddenly you find you have to be referees, police officers, drivers, etc. Engaging differently as parents often changes you as a couple.

Take some time to explore your changing roles, expectations of each other, how you interact. One helpful strategy is to go on a date together, and tell each other what you’re thinking that is different to when you first dated.

5. Later phase

(25+ years)

Later stages of relationships

This stage involves change and adaptation, whether you’ve had children or not, such as:

  • Waving goodbye to your children, and/or fitting in your children’s partners.
  • Taking care of or losing your parents.
  • Becoming a (sexual) couple once more, and dealing with outstanding maintenance.
  • Possible tension between empty nest vs freedom.
  • New starting point for mutual activities. Creating new goals or plans.

This can be a new start. What are your goals and plans? Be future oriented. You may find that there is more time now to be individuals again. What do you want to move towards now that you perhaps have a bit more time to spend?

In the even later stages, there are issues such as:

  • Coping individually and relationally with loss… of work, illusions, health, friends, sex, wealth, etc.
  • Grandparenting: How and when.
  • Dealing with old, painful issues.
  • Deciding where to live, how to retire.

Use each other as support, fall back on the strategies that you know now work. Try to be aware of unhelpful old patterns and use those problem solving skills you’ve developed together. Not many couples actually reach this stage, so you’re already ahead of the game!

And those are the stages of relationships. While not every couple will go through every stage, and some couples will come together at different times of life, this lifespan of a relationship model provides a kind of road map, charting a pretty likely path of any long-term relationship. Hopefully this roadmap can enable us to travel towards a fulfilling, long term, committed relationship.

Last modified on Mar 16, 2022 @ 2:40 pm.

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