ask, and you shall receive

our relationship project

Amidst all my excitement about this summer and all the potential it carries, I have one nagging worry. I’m worried that my copious amounts of free time, most of which will probably be spent by myself, will put a strain on my relationship, that when she’s home I’ll be wanting to hang out while she may often have other things to do. Maybe this isn’t so much a worry as it is something to look out for and be mindful of this summer.

As it is right now, I do sometimes feel as though we don’t have enough together time. I work a lot of hours, take burlesque classes, volunteer on the crisis hotline, have family obligations once in a while and statistics homework to do, and have various appointments that sometimes inevitably take up evenings and weekends. She, meanwhile, has band practice generally one evening every week and one full day into the night every weekend, plus the occasional late evening at work or evening/weekend appointment. All this PLUS spending time with friends at least weekly means that … we really don’t have that much plain old hangout time. We spend a lot of time together, but it’s often just in that hour before bed when we pop in the latest disc from our Netflix queues, watch for a bit, and then have a quickie before going to sleep. It’s been even tougher lately with her new work schedule, which has her (and thus, often, me) getting up at 6:15am, rather than 7:35 as it used to be — a change which necessitates an earlier bedtime, obviously. But since my work schedule hasn’t changed (yet! ha!), and I’m still getting out of work at 6 or 6:30 on a good day, our evenings have been shortened.

And, to me, it doesn’t feel like enough. To me, it feels like our sex has stopped progressing — we do the tried and true, rather than the new and unknown. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, I realize — hell, we’re still having sex at least 3 times a week, usually 4-5, and it can’t always be new and unknown (nor would I want it to be! familiar is often exactly what I most desire). But it’s at a point now where I do feel like we don’t have the time to spend with each other working on our relationship. The time we spend together gets filled up with having our relationship — watching movies, fucking, cuddling, cooking/eating, giving each other footrubs, talking about our schedules, decompressing after our respective days, sleeping — because those are usually the most pressing wants. We want to relax after work, we really want to hear about each other’s days and all the things going on that are bothering us or exciting us. We want to zone out and watch movies and curl up together just feeling each other’s bodies. And we want to have sex, to connect physically, erotically.

But I think a lot of that stuff is very short-term gratification. It’s what we think we want to do right NOW because NOW I’m tired and want to relax and chat about regular stuff. It’s comfortable, and cozy. But to me, always indulging that immediate sense of relationship laziness starts to take a toll. Sexually, I start to feel like many of my more elaborate or scarier desires are slipping into the realm of “fantasy,” rather than the realm of “to do this weekend.” Other than sexually, I start to feel like the more we do the same things with our time together, the less able we are to do other things. So maybe this is about spontaneity — making sure we keep infusing the Regular with the New and Exciting. And this spontaneity has to be something that we work on together.

I’m not sure how to start bringing more of an Our Relationship Is a Project that We Work on Together mentality into our routine, especially because (1) we’re both so busy doing our own personal projects that we really love and that really fulfill us, and (2) I think the Project Relationship mentality is more of something I want than something she wants. She, I think, is perfectly happy to just go along the way we’ve been going along. She likes comfort and routine, and doesn’t like feeling like she has to work on yet another thing in her life. I, on the other hand, really like to have relationship check-ins, and to discuss what’s working and what isn’t, figure out how to fix what isn’t and congratulate each other for what is, and to set little goals, and to be intentional about things that we do. In fact I start to feel anxious and unsettled if we don’t do those things. And I know that because that’s not a high priority for her there will always be some give and take on that front. But it’s starting to feel more pressing for me lately.

To bring that back around to my worry about this summer, the worry I have, I guess, is mostly that I’ll have a whole lot more time to devote myself to our Relationship Project than she will (I mean, I’m hoping to write here every day, and oftentimes, even this is, in a way, part of our Relationship Project), and that that will start to build up in me as this tension that isn’t getting resolved because there just isn’t time.

(What’s a good balance, anyway? How can you find the spot between co-dependent and over-committed to other things? Is it better to spend a lot of time on our own things so that we’re whole complete individuals without needing the other to complete us? Or is it better to spend a lot of time on each other, so that we feel unity and affinity? So that these anxieties don’t surface? Clearly I think a balance is necessary, but what is that balance? And at what point do we have to start sacrificing one thing or the other in order to strike it?)

So, I think it’s good that I’ve identified this issue as something that might come up for me this summer. I still have enough time to work on coming up with ways to avoid that surfacing, and strategies for combatting it if it does. Like if I set goals for myself every day, enough to keep my on my toes and sufficiently busy, then that should help. Spending time actively out and about with other people will help, too. And I think I’d like to bring up with her the idea of committing to eat dinner together whenever possible, shutting off all our other projects at least an hour before we go to bed whenever possible, and identifying and scheduling Together time as separate from time we’re together but working on separate things, so that we can make sure we’re staying attentive to each other and our relationship. And I just need to remember, too, that it’s much more of a relationship Want, for me, to be intentionally thinking about this stuff than it is for her, and that that doesn’t mean she doesn’t care about the relationship as much as I do.

Last night, we climbed into bed much later than we’d planned, both tired and already bracing ourselves against the Monday morning alarm clock. We settled into what we call our Sleep Position: big spoon (her) and little spoon (me), her arm wrapped around me. It’s become so much of a habit that I hardly think of it anymore. But last night, after a few moments, she pipes up: “Do you like sleeping like this?” “Yes, baby, I do.” “Why?” “It makes me feel safe, and snug, and warm.” “Okay. Just checking.”

Snug as two bugs in a rug.

7 comments to our relationship project

  • Good for you! Being so ahead of the game and really knowing yourself and your lady is a big step towards avoiding any possible future issues. Keep on checking in and stay on top of it – you’ll be just fine.

  • With Jess we try to dedicated specific times just for us. We understand if we’re together 24/7 we’ll drive each other nuts. I mean since we live together so we see each other when we’re both home together. Between work, school, internship and volunteer work I’m gone until 6pm most days. Jess has more free time then me during the week but works Friday nights and all day Saturday. Saturday night is our night to have fun and Sunday is the day we try and relax and catch up on things.
    As for sex, we still have A LOT of it. Though I attribute much of that to Jess sharing her kinky side with me when we just met. I love just having regular intimate sex. Though the sex we have when Jess handcuffs me to the bed and blindfolds me is so intense it makes me want it more. I think by mixing new things in to your sex life it keeps it fresh and makes you enjoy it more.
    I’m sure even with all your free time this summer things are going to work out great for you to.
    Kara XOXOXOXO

  • You seem to be really thinking about your relationship which is great and you’re right that you need to make special time for each other. Sounds to me like you’ll do just fine this summer.

  • My partner and I have 9+ years together and I think that, naturally, as you settle in together you don’t have as much to check-in about. I’m more like you in that I like to process as much as possible. But maybe you 2 could agree to have “Team Meetings” on a regular schedule– like every week or 2– so that *you* can rest with the knowledge it’s not going to be completely neglected and *she* can plan to give you the check-ins that you need. And then you both know exactly what to expect! :)

    • That is such a good idea! Yeah, that would be great (for me anyway), because then I can always rest assured that there is time and space for me to talk about things that I feel need to be talked about withOUT it being 11:30pm when we’re trying to fall asleep. Ha! I’m glad to hear, too, that your experience with settling in together was that there was less to check in about — I have a feeling that will be the case with us, too, because a lot of what stresses both of us out right now (in life, and not just in our relationship) is our respective roommate situations.

  • G

    So about this – “I think the Project Relationship mentality is more of something I want than something she wants” and this – “the worry I have, I guess, is mostly that I’ll have a whole lot more time to devote myself to our Relationship Project than she will” -
    are you okay with that?

    I think it’s unrealistic to expect that couples will always be on the same page with all of the ebb & flow of relationships, but I think it’s important to know how the other likes to handle things like this. Are you okay with putting more work into the Relationship Project because it feels pressing to you? I think that speaks to more than just the Project in general, especially since conversely, there will be things that may feel more pressing to her than they will to you. How do you compromise or solve this?

    • G, I’ve been meaning to reply to this comment for *days*!

      (You leave the greatest comments.)

      After she read this post, we actually had a really good conversation about this notion of the relationship project, and I came away from it feeling very good about the way we can communicate about it. I think one of the main things I realized in that conversation is that she just doesn’t feel the need to process the same way I do — and that doesn’t mean she’s being a lazy participant in the relationship. And on her side, she could realize about me that my analyzing and processing doesn’t mean that I think something’s *wrong* (which she has been known to think). So the BAD way this has played out in the past is me going to her to say I wanted to talk about something, and her getting nervous and upset and defensive because she feels like I’m being hypercritical about something she has no idea about, and then I get frustrated because I don’t feel heard. So, when we talked about it, we both realized that we just had different approaches to what it means to work on a relationship project. For me, it tends to mean processing things together as a team. For her, it tends to mean *doing* things together as a team and knowing that there will be snafus sometimes but that’s just a small part of the picture. So she has interpreted my desire to process together as a sign from me that there’s something really wrong.

      And, really, I think the solution to this is just in recognizing where each person is coming from. And how do we compromise? Well, that sort of remains to be seen, but lately I’ve been a LOT better about not going to her constantly to analyze this or that, and just trusting our chemistry and dynamic enough to do the work itself. And conversely she’s been a lot better about not being defensive when I do, and about allowing space for approaching conversations about our relationship in an open and curious way.

      So, yeah. There will definitely still be conflict around this, I imagine, but I think we’re both pretty attuned to our dynamic and it’s really exciting to me how much better we are at communicating with each other now than we were 8 months ago!

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