A skill page — not a personality test.
You don't become a better partner by "being confident." You become better by practicing connection, repair, responsiveness, and shared load—especially when it's uncomfortable.
This page is educational support, not therapy or diagnosis. If you feel unsafe or coerced, use Safety Mode instead of conversation scripts.
Connection is built in tiny moments. Healthy couples respond to "bids" for connection (small requests for attention/support).
The Gottman Institute
Repair matters more than being right. Repeatedly failing repair attempts predicts worse outcomes; learning repair can interrupt spirals.
The Gottman Institute
Positive-to-negative balance matters during conflict. A commonly cited "magic ratio" is ~5 positive interactions for every negative one.
The Gottman Institute
Responsiveness predicts intimacy and satisfaction. Feeling understood/validated is strongly tied to relationship well-being.
PMC Research
Sex gets better when communication gets better. Sexual communication is linked with higher sexual and relationship satisfaction.
PMC Research
Community prevents relationship overload. Healthy romantic relationships exist within friend networks, not in isolation.
Dean Spade
by Dean Spade
"Treat our lovers more like friends, and our friends more like lovers."
Spade challenges "romance myth" thinking and pushes for relationship skills that support both intimacy and community resilience. One person is not enough for any of us.
Couples often say, "We just can't communicate." But usually, they are communicating perfectly clearly—they are communicating contempt, defensiveness, or indifference. The problem is not the transmission of the message; it is the content of the message. Better Partner focuses on changing the signal you send, not just polishing the words.
Research by the Gottman Institute shows that happy couples turn toward their partner's "bids" (small requests for attention) 86% of the time, while unhappy couples do so only 33% of the time.
"Look at that bird!" or "Ugh, my boss is annoying." It is not really about the bird or the boss; it is asking, "Do you see me? Do I matter?"
Putting down the phone and saying, "Wow, that is a cool bird," or "I'm sorry, tell me what happened." It is a micro-deposit of trust.
You cannot have a rational conversation when your heart rate is above 100bpm. When you are flooded, your prefrontal cortex (the logic center) goes offline. The most important skill in being a "better partner" is noticing when you are flooded and taking a 20-minute break to self-soothe before you try to resolve the conflict.
These prompts are for growth and clarity—not to shame, diagnose, or "win" conflicts. If you feel unsafe, coerced, or intimidated, skip partner scripts and use Safety Mode.
Adam Hall, DO is the founder of TruAlign, a structured relational diagnostic platform designed to help individuals and couples identify structural instability before making high-stakes decisions.
With a background in medicine and clinical decision-making, Dr. Hall applies principles of triage, pattern recognition, and structured assessment to relational systems. TruAlign translates diagnostic clarity — commonly used in medical settings — into the relationship domain.
TruAlign assessments are educational decision-support tools and do not replace professional medical, psychological, or therapeutic care.