Let’s be honest – developing emotional intimacy in your relationships is hard work on the best of days. But throw in economic pressures, political divisiveness, and the relentless barrage of negative news? It’s like trying to share your feelings openly and honestly while standing in quicksand during an earthquake.
Here’s what neuroscience tells us: your brain doesn’t give a darn about your relationship goals. Its primary job is keeping you alive, not making sure you have meaningful conversations where you can express your thoughts and feelings with your spouse. Your nervous system is wired to prioritize safety over creating an emotional bond every single time. Period.
When you don’t feel safe – even during a minor argument with your partner – your brain immediately goes into self-preservation mode. That romantic evening spending time together you planned? Your brain says, “Forget that noise – we need to get safe NOW.”
The 7 Inconvenient Truths About Emotional Intimacy in Marriage
1. Your body language is screaming while your mouth is whispering
You might craft the perfect, therapist-approved sentence to express your feelings, but if your face looks like you’re smelling something rotten and your voice sounds like you’re auditioning for a horror film, guess which message your partner’s brain will receive?
Your partner’s nervous system is constantly scanning for safety signals, and it’s way more tuned in to your tone, facial expressions, and body language than whatever carefully chosen words you’re saying.¹ So you can recite poetry while rolling your eyes, and I promise you, the eye roll wins every time.
2. Fake attention is worse than no attention
“Uh-huh, yeah, that’s interesting…” you mumble while scrolling through your phone. We’ve all done it. And we’ve all felt the sting when someone does it to us.
Half-hearted attention is actually more damaging than no attention at all because it sends a clear message: “Something on this glowing rectangle is more important than your feelings.” Your brain doesn’t just want attention – it craves the feeling of being someone’s complete focus, even if just for a few minutes.²
Put the phone down. Look your partner in the eyes. Tell them if you’ve heard the story before and assume there’s more to it than the first telling.
I had a partner once who picked up his computer to do work every time I stepped away from our conversation for a pit stop or a drink. I got a message: “I have to listen to you, but my mind is really on work, which I’ll return to whenever you step away.” When I returned, he’d slam the computer shut like he was 14 years old and caught by his mother watching porn. Fake attention is worse than no attention. Trust me.
3. No safety = no intimacy (sorry, not sorry)
Here’s a harsh truth many couples miss: if your partner doesn’t feel safe with you emotionally, all your date nights and attempts at physical intimacy won’t create the emotional intimacy you’re craving.
Safety isn’t just about avoiding physical harm. It’s creating an environment where both partners feel safe to share their thoughts and feelings without being judged, express emotions without being dismissed, and make mistakes without being belittled.
Every major relationship approach from Gottman to EFT agrees on this point – when your partner feels safe, emotional intimacy follows.³ ⁴ If you want your partner to feel comfortable opening up, this foundation of safety is non-negotiable.
4. Netflix and chill isn’t actually building intimacy
Shocking news: sitting side by side staring at screens for hours isn’t creating a deeper bond, regardless of how many shows you’ve binge-watched together. But movies can be the appetizer for connection.
Real intimacy happens face-to-face, eye-to-eye, in conversations where you’re actually interested in what’s happening in your partner’s inner world. Talking directly with your partner requires more courage than most people realize.
Without regular, meaningful conversations, even the most stable relationships slowly drift into parallel lives that occasionally intersect for logistics, bills, and maybe sex if you’re not too tired.
5. You need to “go meta” (talk about how you talk)
One of the most powerful tools in couples therapy is teaching partners to observe their own communication patterns from above – like a drone watching the action.
“Presence” isn’t just new-age fluff; it’s a neurobiological state where your partner feels your complete attention, genuine curiosity, and emotional availability. It creates a sense of being “felt” by another human being.⁵
When you can both step back and discuss your communication patterns without blame – “I notice we get stuck when I bring up finances” instead of “You always get defensive about money!” – you create a shared perspective that’s transformative.
6. Sorry, but “just being yourself” isn’t always helpful
If “being yourself” means indulging every reactive impulse without considering its impact, that’s not authenticity – that’s just poor impulse control.
Creating intimacy sometimes means practicing new ways of talking, listening, and responding. It feels awkward at first – like writing with your non-dominant hand – but with practice, these new patterns become natural.
Card decks, structured conversations, or simply agreeing to try a different approach can break you out of destructive habits that your brains have memorized through repetition.
7. Your brain works way too fast and makes stuff up
In the milliseconds between your partner’s comment and your response, your brain has already generated a story, assigned intentions, recalled past hurts, and prepared a defense or attack. Your deeper brain senses the danger while your neocortical brain makes up the stories of why the danger is present.
All of this happens so quickly you’re not aware of it. You just feel the surge of emotion and react. By slowing down, breathing, and getting curious instead of furious, you create space to choose a response rather than being hijacked by your ancient survival circuitry.
The Bottom Line on Emotional Intimacy
From a neuroscience perspective, being emotionally intimate is evolutionarily new territory. Our brains developed to keep us alive in physically dangerous environments, not to navigate vulnerable conversations where we openly and honestly share our feelings about emotional needs.
These days, the danger often isn’t a predator – it’s the accumulated stress of modern life combined with the emotional weight of our relationship patterns. Doom-scrolling through an endless stream of crisis headlines won’t calm your nervous system, but spending time genuinely connecting with your partner might.
You don’t always need perfect communication to feel fulfilled in your relationship. You just need “good enough” moments of real connection where you can express your thoughts and feelings sprinkled throughout your week. Be kind, be curious, and be present a little more often. Your brain might resist at first, but the rewards of developing emotional intimacy are worth the effort.
Want to experience a dramatic transformation in your emotional bond? Consider one of our intensive couples therapy retreats, where you’ll learn practical tools to create lasting emotional intimacy in your relationships in just a few days, with guidance from experienced therapists who understand both the science and the art of connection. You and your partner will feel the deeply satisfying impact of focused attention and grow closer for it.
References
¹ Fishbane, M. (2013). A neurobiological-relational approach to couples therapy. In Creating connection: A relational-cultural approach with couples, p. 216-244.
² Gottman, J.M. (1999). The marriage clinic: A scientifically based marital therapy. New York, NY: W W Norton.
³ Johnson, S. (2008). Hold me tight: seven conversations for a lifetime of love. New York: Little Brown.
⁴ Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H. (1999). Imago Relationship Therapy: Creating a conscious marriage or relationship. In Preventative approaches in couples therapy, p. 169-160.
⁵ Huff, S. C. (2012). A Review of “Love and War in Intimate Relationships: Connection, Disconnection, and Mutual Regulation in Couple Therapy”, by Stan Tatkin. Journal of Couple & Relationship Therapy, 11:3, 271-272.