What Are the “Stages” of a Dying Relationship?
When we talk about the “stages” of a dying relationship, we are not describing a formal diagnosis. Instead, we are using a framework to understand a process of gradual disconnection. Relationships rarely collapse overnight. The foundation typically erodes slowly over months or even years, weakened by unresolved conflicts, unmet needs, and a breakdown in emotional safety.
Relationship science, particularly the work of researchers like Dr. John Gottman, has shown that there are predictable patterns that can signal trouble. These patterns often revolve around how a couple handles conflict and maintains emotional connection. When negative interactions begin to outnumber positive ones, the relationship enters a state of distress. Each stage represents a deeper level of entrenchment in these negative cycles.
The core issue is a loss of emotional safety—the feeling that you can be vulnerable with your partner without being attacked, dismissed, or ignored. As this safety disappears, partners build walls to protect themselves, and these walls eventually become a permanent barrier to intimacy. Recognizing which stage you are in is the first crucial step toward deciding whether—and how—to start dismantling those walls.