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What EXPECTATIONS are you ALLOWED to have in a Relationship?What EXPECTATIONS are you ALLOWED to have in a Relationship?">

What EXPECTATIONS are you ALLOWED to have in a Relationship?

Irina Zhuravleva
por 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
7 minutos de lectura
Blog
noviembre 05, 2025

Do you realize one of the biggest reasons our relationship suffered was that we never set a shared baseline? It may sound trivial now, but having no mutual agreement about how a relationship should function turned out to be crucial. We never spelled out what each of us finds acceptable or unacceptable. We never discussed expectations, and I suspect many of you haven’t either. You never clarified what crosses the line during an argument — is it criticism, shouting, name-calling, aggression, dismissiveness, or invalidation? You never asked what each partner expects when the other feels hurt or overlooked. Can I safely bring it up, or would you rather I swallow my pain to avoid a confrontation? Those standards and expectations for the relationship were never established — did you? I didn’t either, and perhaps that’s why resentment and passive-aggressive behavior crept in: he’s not doing what you assume he should, right? “He should know better — it’s common sense.” And on the flip side, maybe you’re defensive and minimizing her concerns — “she’s making a fuss over nothing.” Instead of getting stuck in that cycle, we can choose to have the difficult conversations earlier. We waited until our marriage was breaking to ask these questions; you don’t have to repeat that error. Let’s be honest: we all come into relationships with expectations about how things should unfold. You have ideas about his contributions when he’s home from work or on weekends — does he wash the dishes, bathe the children, shoulder some of the mental and emotional labor without being prompted? Who is responsible for which chores? How often do we need to be intimate before one of us feels neglected? Stop pretending these standards and assumptions don’t exist. This isn’t about forcing agreement on every detail; it’s about understanding ourselves and each other — a vital part of intimacy. It’s about caring enough to ask about your partner’s personal needs. How many arguments could have been avoided if both of us had been candid about those needs regarding the relationship? So let’s bring up the hard topics. I’m not saying they’re simple — they can be extremely challenging — but avoiding them sets us up to fail. Approach these talks with curiosity, safety, and a willingness to see the other person’s perspective. Don’t turn every conversation into a fight. Be vulnerable and ask, “What does neglect feel like to you?” Love wants to know that answer. This isn’t a contest to prove someone’s standards unreasonable; it’s about acknowledging that if I decide their expectations are unfair and then refuse — intentionally or not — to meet them, we’ll keep carrying a heavy tension between us. If we truly love each other and value the partnership we’ve built, we choose humility. We look for ways to meet in the middle without feeling like we’ve lost ourselves. We refuse to let conflict tear us apart. Notice the passive-aggressiveness, the dismissal, the criticism, the defensiveness. You won’t agree on everything — nobody does — but can we find enough common ground so both of us still feel respected and loved?

Practical guidance: what expectations are reasonable

Reasonable expectations are specific, mutual, and tied to actions rather than assumptions about intent. Examples include:

How to set a shared baseline — step by step

Conversation tools and scripts

Conversation tools and scripts

Small scripts make conversations safer and clearer. Use these as starting points:

Rules for fair fighting

Disagreements are normal; how you handle them matters. Consider agreeing to these ground rules:

When expectations feel unfair or impossible

Not all expectations are equally reasonable. Signs an expectation may be unfair:

If an expectation is unrealistic, explain why it matters to you, and work toward a compromise or an alternative that preserves both partners’ dignity and needs.

What to do when expectations aren’t met

Sample short agreement (fill in the blanks)

We, [Partner A] and [Partner B], agree to the following as a baseline for our relationship for the next [time period]:

Final notes

Expectations evolve as people grow. Cultural backgrounds, family norms, and past relationships shape what feels “reasonable,” so remain curious rather than judgmental. Setting expectations isn’t about controlling your partner — it’s about creating mutual safety, reducing guesswork, and protecting the care you both want to preserve. If both of you bring humility, curiosity, and follow-through, those conversations will strengthen the relationship rather than weaken it.

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