The Skill Most Relationships Are Missing
Why connection depends on more than compatibility.
“Healthy relationships will become more common because people are letting go of their hurt instead of projecting it onto everything they see.”
💜A Note from Me
Hi, I’m Jessica.
I write NP Fellow Become The CEO of Your Health— a weekly mental health and functional medicine newsletter focused on emotional steadiness, stronger relationships, and understanding how the nervous system shapes our lives.
This week, we’re continuing the conversation about relationships.
Not why we need them.
Most people already know that.
What interests me is something else:
Why two people can genuinely care about each other...and still end up feeling disconnected because that happens more often than most people realize.
🚨🔊My New Annual Spring Vibes playlist - 2026 edition is now out on Spotify along with my podcast called NP Fellow Collective!
The Skill Most Relationships Are Missing
Two people can love each other deeply and still spend an entire conversation feeling misunderstood.
One person is trying to explain.
The other is trying to defend.
Nobody feels heard.
Nobody feels understood.
And by the end of the conversation, both people walk away thinking:
“Why is this so hard?”
Not because they don’t care, but because connection gets tested when things stop feeling easy.
Relationships Aren’t Tested In Calm Moments
Connection feels natural when everything is going well.
When communication flows.
When expectations are aligned.
When everyone feels emotionally steady.
However, relationships aren’t built in those moments.
They’re built in the moments when something goes wrong.
A comment lands differently than intended.
A need goes unnoticed.
A text message gets misread.
Someone feels hurt.
Someone feels criticized.
Someone feels unseen.
This isn’t evidence that the relationship is failing.
It’s evidence that two human beings are having a human experience.
The question isn’t whether these moments happen.
They will.
The question is what happens next.
What Happens When Stress Takes Over
Most of us assume relationship problems start with conflict.
Often, they start with protection.
The moment something feels emotionally threatening, the nervous system shifts.
One person becomes reactive.
Another becomes quiet.
One pushes for resolution.
The other pulls away.
One starts explaining.
The other starts defending.
Suddenly the conversation is no longer about understanding.
It’s about protection.
Not because either person is trying to create distance, but because the nervous system is trying to reduce discomfort.
And when protection becomes the priority, connection becomes harder.
Listening decreases.
Assumptions increase.
Tone changes.
Misunderstandings multiply.
Even between people who genuinely care about each other.
Why Good People Hurt Each Other
This is one of the hardest truths about relationships.
You can care deeply about someone and still hurt them.
You can have good intentions and still miss what they need.
You can love someone and still struggle to stay present when emotions run high.
Not because you’re selfish and not because you’re a bad partner, friend, parent, or sibling, but because being emotionally available becomes harder when you’re overwhelmed.
Most of us aren’t reacting to the person standing in front of us.
We’re reacting to what our nervous system thinks is happening and sometimes those are two very different things.
The Skill Most Relationships Are Missing
Most people believe relationships succeed because of compatibility.
Compatibility matters, but it’s not enough.
What matters just as much is capacity.
The capacity to stay present when discomfort shows up.
The capacity to tolerate difficult emotions without immediately reacting.
The capacity to listen without rushing to defend yourself.
The capacity to stay curious when it would be easier to withdraw.
The capacity to hear someone’s pain without immediately trying to solve it.
Because connection isn’t maintained by avoiding difficult moments.
It’s maintained by staying connected inside them.
The Rupture Isn’t The Problem
Every relationship experiences rupture.
Every single one.
Someone misses a moment.
A misunderstanding happens.
Timing is off.
Feelings get hurt.
Expectations collide.
The rupture itself isn’t the problem.
The absence of return is.
When conversations never happen.
When assumptions replace curiosity.
When distance quietly becomes normal.
That’s when disconnection starts to grow.
Not from one difficult moment, but from all the moments nobody comes back to repair.
What Actually Keeps Relationships Intact
It’s not perfection, it’s not constant agreement, and it’s not always saying the right thing.
It’s the ability to return.
To say:
“I don’t think that came out the way I meant it.”
“Help me understand what happened.”
“I can see why that hurt.”
“This relationship matters enough to come back to.”
Repair is what restores connection.
Not because it erases the rupture, but because it teaches both nervous systems that the relationship can survive it.
Relationships Shape Us
We experience relationships through our nervous systems.
Every interaction teaches us something.
Every time someone listens instead of dismissing us, we learn something.
Every time someone stays present instead of withdrawing, we learn something.
Every time we are honest and remain connected, we learn something.
Over time, those experiences shape how we see ourselves.
They shape what we expect from others and they shape what feels safe.
“Relationships don’t just shape our lives. They shape us.”
A Different Question
Instead of asking:
“Why isn’t this relationship working?”
Try asking:
“What happens to us when things get hard?”
And:
“Do we know how to find our way back?”
Those questions often reveal far more than blame ever will.
Final Thoughts
Relationships aren’t sustained by staying smooth.
They’re sustained by staying connected.
Not perfectly and not effortlessly, but intentionally because the strongest relationships aren’t the ones that never experience conflict.
They’re the ones where people learn how to return.
Again and again.
And sometimes that’s what connection really is:
Not avoiding the rupture.
Finding your way back after it.
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“Healing is based on compassionately communicating with yourself; this skill transforms the way you approach your connections. —Yung Pueblo
🪩 A Gentle Invitation
If this article resonated with you, you may appreciate my new product called Weekly Skill, a paid NP Fellow series focused on one real, grounded internal skill each week regarding attention, impulse control, emotional regulation, presence, and learning how to work with your nervous system instead of against it.
No pressure. Just an invitation.🤝
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MEDICAL DISCLAIMER
This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of such advice or treatment from a personal physician. All readers/viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program.








