
Today weâre going to explore the difference between healthy needs and unhealthy needs in intimate relationships. Underneath most arguments lie unmet wants and fears that we either havenât named for ourselves or donât feel safe sharing. The fight isnât really about the dishes â itâs about wanting to feel valued. It isnât just about sex â itâs about wanting to be desired and accepted. It isnât only about work â itâs about needing appreciation. Itâs vital to remember that having needs is normal; in fact, itâs unavoidable. Admitting to yourself and your partner what you require to feel connectedââI need these things to feel close to youââisnât being needy, itâs being human. A relationship that nourishes both people demands that each partner care about, attend to, and prioritize the otherâs legitimate needs for safety, love, and worth. One foundational healthy need is respect. Even people who think they have no needs still want to be treated with respect. Respect means being treated as an equal, having your opinions and perspective considered, and being held in high regard. It shows up in words that express appreciation and esteem even when you disagree. Without respect, closeness and connection will wither. Effective communication delivered with kindness and respect is another essential need. How couples speak to each other, especially during conflict, can make or break the relationship. Research by John and Julie Gottman suggests that how the opening minutes of a conflict are handled predicts long-term outcomes. So ask: are you bringing up difficult topics with respectful vulnerability rather than criticism, blame, shouting, or passive aggression? And if your partner is trying to share a concern, can you offer them space and attention instead of reacting defensively or dismissively? Those defensive habits only hurt the chance to repair things. Feeling valued and appreciated is universal. People also need to feel both physically and emotionally safe: safe to say no, safe that boundaries will be honored, safe to raise issues and be heard. These conditions arenât optional if you want trust, intimacy, and passion â they are the blueprint for them. If youâre with your partner now, pause and ask each other: what does respect look like to you? How important is the way we communicate during conflict? In what ways do you feel most appreciated? Needing a consistent partner who keeps their promises is not unreasonable. Trust erodes when someone often says theyâll do one thing and does another. Mutual accountability matters. Neither of you is perfect, but when mistakes happen, real repair involves more than saying âIâm sorry.â It means taking responsibility, trying to understand how your words and actions affected the other person, and making intentional changes. That kind of accountability rebuilds trust. Put aside ego and shame and ask questions that explore the otherâs experience: how did that make you feel, what meaning did you assign to my behavior, and what were you needing at that moment? Beneath many quarrels lie needs for respect, appreciation, closeness, and equality. Validating those emotions â saying things like âThat makes sense,â âI can see why youâd feel that way,â or âI donât want you to feel dismissed, and Iâm glad you told meâ â brings people closer. By contrast, invalidation â âYouâre too sensitive,â or âYouâre making a big deal out of nothingâ â shuts down vulnerability. Likewise, cheap apologies such as âIâm sorry you feel that wayâ or âIt was just a joke, get over itâ do not repair harm. A genuine apology sounds like: âI care about how my words and actions affected you. I didnât intend to hurt you, but I can see that you felt [this way], and I played a role in that. Iâm sorry. I should have handled it differently, and hereâs what I will do instead. Is there more you want to tell me so I can understand you better?â If youâre sincere about validating and apologizing but your partner still brings past mistakes up repeatedly, there may be a deeper issue â perhaps a block around forgiveness, a sense that the hurt was never truly acknowledged, or a choice to hold resentment because it feels easier than moving forward. That requires professional help. Forgiveness is an important healthy need: we must keep accounts short and avoid weaponizing past lapses during new conflicts. Holding onto resentment without working toward healing damages the relationship. If the hurt remains raw, pursue therapy together so old wounds can be empathized with and trust can be rebuilt. That said, choosing never to forgive someone no matter what they do to repair the damage is also unhealthy; trying to hurt them back will not bring you relief. Seek help for that pattern as well. Physical affection and feeling desired are legitimate needs too. Various factors affect desire: itâs difficult to be affectionate with someone who regularly invalidates you, and desire struggles to flourish when emotional safety is absent. Thatâs why defensiveness, invalidation, constant criticism, or contempt are so destructive. We all bear responsibility for the ways weâve hurt one another; taking ownership for our part is how healing begins. A responsible response might sound like: âI see why you were afraid to be vulnerable with me. I treated what you said like an attack and dismissed you. Iâm sorry. I imagine that left you feeling alone. I want to understand how my actions impacted you and learn to be a safe place again.â Or, if you were the one who used blaming language: âYouâre right to have felt defensive. I wasnât genuinely vulnerable; I blamed you and assumed your intent. Iâm sorry for making you feel unappreciated. You deserve to feel valued here.â Ask yourselves: why is it hard to say these things to each other? Sometimes we simply donât know the words, but now you have examples â use them. This work doesnât succeed if only one partner tries; both people must want to move closer. Itâs normal to feel afraid, but fear shouldnât stop you from trying to heal if you want the relationship you deserve. Accepting each otherâs influence is also critical. Gottmanâs research shows that when a man, in particular, refuses to share power or accept his partnerâs influence, the relationship has a high likelihood of failing. This isnât about singling out men â everyone should be willing to accept constructive input from someone they trust and consider on their team. If a trusted partner offers respectful feedback, the healthy response is to listen, not to dismiss or attack. That said, feedback should be given kindly; relentless criticism and harshness are destructive. Both extremes â refusing to receive influence and attacking with contempt â have serious consequences. Equity around household work, chores, and parenting matters too. Regardless of your individual views, a relationship where one partner feels unequal in domestic responsibilities rarely feels mutually fulfilling. With respect, kindness, and vulnerability, couples can usually find collaborative solutions that suit both people. Time and attention are significant needs: many people require shared time to feel close. You might disagree about how much time is appropriate, and that could mean youâre simply not compatible â thatâs okay â but if time together is important to your partner, ask if they matter enough to you to make adjustments. If you fear losing yourself by compromising, or worry about being controlled, those are important topics to explore together, perhaps with guidance. Need for independence is valid too; a healthy partnership can often honor both closeness and autonomy when partners feel prioritized and respected in multiple ways. If you want to stop the recurring fights, begin with direct questions: do you feel appreciated, valued, and respected â not perfectly, but consistently? Do you trust me? Do you feel safe being honest with me? Do you feel you can rely on me? If the answer is no to these, thatâs likely the source of tension. Sometimes trust issues stem from past trauma, and in that case, counseling is advisable. Imagine the reverse: would a relationship thrive if one partner never took accountability or never cared how their words and actions affected you? Would intimacy survive if you didnât feel respected, valued, or safe? Probably not. Admit the needs you have so you can get the relationship that you deserve. This is maturity, not weakness. That said, a partner is not a one-person need-fulfillment machine. Needs should be met in several domains â family, friends, hobbies, as well as your partner. Still, there are needs only your partner can realistically meet. If enough of your needs are being satisfied, you can grieve the ones that arenât; that sentiment captures an important choice. As therapist Terry Real puts it: are enough of my needs being met that I can mourn the ones that arenât? If yes, you can accept the relationshipâs limits with gratitude. If no, you wonât feel closer unless things change. Whether you stay or leave is a personal decision, but intimacy requires effort from both sides. If your partner is unwilling to meet these basic needs you discussed, disconnection will persist. Some people remain and find needs elsewhere; others leave. The key point is to align actions with words: donât say âI love youâ if you wonât hold difficult conversations with kindness and respect, wonât practice mutual sacrifice and service, or wonât ask each other what makes you feel valued. Donât claim love but refuse to try new approaches during conflict, such as respectful vulnerability: âWhen this happened, I felt [name a feeling],â â name an emotion, not a judgment. Learn to listen, validate, and respond with curious compassion. These are not optional â they determine whether a relationship endures or collapses. Those are many of the most common healthy needs â there are likely more, so share any I missed. Now a few unhealthy or inappropriate needs to recognize: first, the need for control. Trying to dominate or dictate a partnerâs behavior is damaging. Often control masks attempts to manage your own fear or anxiety by using the other person as an outlet, which leaves them feeling used and dominated rather than valued. To be clear, boundaries are not control. A healthy boundary looks like: âI wonât tolerate being called names or yelled at during an argument. If that happens, I will step away for 30 minutes and return when weâre calm.â That sets a limit on your own behavior; it doesnât compel the other person to act a certain way. However, if someone keeps violating your boundary and you remove yourself, and the other person pursues, escalates, and yells, that harms the relationship badly. Another unhealthy pattern is constant reassurance-seeking. There is a healthy need for reassurance at times, but when reassurance becomes a relentless test of your partnerâs love â born of fear and distrust even when things are going well â it produces the very distance you fear. No one wants to be tested constantly; that pushes people away. Avoidance and extreme independence are also problematic when they prevent genuine closeness. If you pull away whenever intimacy deepens, reject labels, or habitually avoid conflict, your partner will eventually disconnect because they canât feel heard. Similarly, needing a relationship to work when youâre the only one doing the labor is unhealthy. You can bend over backwards, stop expressing needs, and still feel disconnected if the other person wonât reciprocate. You cannot force someone to care or do the inner work required for intimacy. You can have compassion for their past wounds while still holding them accountable for behaviors that harm you. If fear of losing the relationship prevents you from setting healthy boundaries, youâre abandoning yourself and reinforcing disconnection. Withholding truth because you fear your partnerâs reaction is another destructive choice. Secrets usually surface eventually, and the resulting breach of trust is often worse than if you had been honest upfront. If you hide things because you expect your partner to overreact or accuse you unfairly, that points to deeper trust issues that are better addressed with counseling. Relationships require honesty and transparency; withholding important information out of fear of a reaction is a maturity and compatibility problem more than just right or wrong. Finally, expecting your partner to read your mind is unrealistic. Long-term familiarity can make it tempting to assume someone should âjust know,â but itâs still your responsibility to communicate your feelings and needs clearly. If youâve done that and they refuse to listen, the same conclusions apply: change is needed or youâll remain disconnected. Thatâs a wrap. If this was helpful, mention in the comments which needs I missed. If youâre watching together, use these ideas as conversation prompts. If you enjoy this kind of content, like and subscribe so others can find it. Use these questions to learn more about each other or to reflect on your own needs if youâre single. Thank you for watching â try these practices and check back for more guidance in the next session.




