Most relationships don’t fall apart dramatically. Instead, they slowly drift over time. What was once intimate becomes distant. Partners haven’t stopped caring for each other, but they’ve lost the capacity for relational depth. As relationship expert John Gottman says, most relationships don’t die by fire; they die by ice.
One of the simplest ways to understand this shift is by looking at how couples communicate. In this article, I’ll discuss a framework of how to reconnect with your partner to recreate the intimacy you’ve lost. Or, how to improve your relationship communication skills to maintain intimacy.
Why Relationships Lose Intimacy Over Time
A common experience in relationships is that, over time, interactions and conversations migrate onto what we might call the logistical or informational track. Dialogue becomes dominated by updates and coordination: “How was your day?”, “What did you get done?”, “What’s the plan for the weekend?” There is nothing inherently wrong with this. Shared life requires shared information. But when this is the sole form of communication, intimacy in a relationship subtly erodes. You may know everything about your partner’s schedule, yet feel like you know them less and less.
When couples say, “we don’t talk like we used to,” or “I feel distant,” it is often not a lack of communication but a loss of depth. A common mistake couples make is trying to solve this disconnection with more time together, rather than different kinds of communication. But that just creates more of the same.
The 3 Levels of Intimacy in Relationships
We can view intimacy existing on three levels: informational, emotional or personal, and relational.
Informational Communication: What’s Happening
The informational level is the most familiar. It includes exchanging facts, logistics, and updates. It answers a simple question: what’s happening? This level keeps life running without any real closeness. Partners become effective collaborators, but something of their aliveness begins to fade. It feels emotionally thin. A common complaint of partners who live at the informational level is that they feel more like housemates than lovers.
Typical informational communication sounds like:
- “I had meetings all day.”
- “The kids need to be picked up at 4.”
- “We’re seeing friends on Saturday.”
- “I’m working late tomorrow.”
This level is necessary. But on its own, it tells us very little about the person speaking. It gives us the structure of a life, not the experience of it.
Emotional Communication: What It’s Like to Be Me
The emotional or personal level brings us into contact with who a person actually is. It moves beyond reporting events into revealing their experience and inner world. This level is where the connection deepens. Here, you begin to share how something felt, what it meant, and what stayed with you. It answers the question: what is this like for me?
The same interaction begins to shift:
- “I had meetings all day… and I felt completely drained.”
- “The kids need to be picked up at 4…and I’m feeling anxious about whether I’ll be able to get out of work on time.”
- “We’re seeing friends on Saturday…but I’m feeling like a bit of a hermit at the moment.”
- “I’m working late tomorrow… I’m so over this job!”
The emotional and personal level is where your partner starts to know you, not just your life. Without this level of knowing, partners fill in the blanks with assumptions. Over time, this creates distance because there’s no clear window into each other’s inner worlds. It also has the potential to create mistrust, because what we don’t know we assume, and what we assume is usually negatively biased.

Relational Communication: What’s Happening Between Us
The relational level is the least commonly used and often the most transformative. This level is where the relational magic takes place! At this level, intimacy is actively created as attention turns to the space between you. It answers: what is happening between us right now? or what is it like to be with you?
The relational level might sound like:
- “I feel really close to you right now.”
- “I noticed I pulled away a bit when we were talking earlier.”
- “It means a lot to me when you ask about my day.”
- “I look forward to our date nights.”
Here, the relationship itself becomes the subject. Rather than talking around the connection, you speak from within it, allowing for real-time repair, appreciation, and awareness. Potential disconnections can be named before they form patterns. Moments of closeness are made explicit, thus strengthening the connection because partners know where they stand with each other.
All three levels are necessary, and each plays a distinct role: the informational level keeps life organised and grounded, the emotional or personal level reveals the inner world of each partner. In contrast, the relational level tends to the connection itself.

How to Deepen Intimacy (Without Overhauling Your Relationship)
Most partners don’t lose intimacy because they stop communicating altogether; rather, their communication collapses into just one of these levels. However, when this framework is applied consciously, it opens different dimensions for connection.
Reintroducing depth does not require a complete overhaul. It begins with small shifts in how you listen and share. A logistical update can become an opening for genuine curiosity, rather than a closed statement. You can move one layer deeper with each other through the addition of a single sentence that reveals feeling or meaning. And you can bring gentle attention to the relational space itself and name what feels close, what feels tense, or what feels meaningful in the moment.
In practice, this might look like:
- Letting a “what happened today?” turn into “what stood out or stayed with you?”
- Adding one honest feeling to a story you’re already telling
- Occasionally naming what you notice in the space between you
For the listener, the simple question of “And how did you feel about that?” can be a game-changer.
These are small movements, but they accumulate into a very different quality of connection.
Intimacy is not built on the quantity or topic of conversation, but on what is revealed within it. When partners remain at the level of information alone, they may keep talking every day while slowly losing touch. When they begin to include their inner experience and speak to what is happening between them, something opens again. The relationship regains dimensions of depth. It goes from a shared life to managing a shared world to inhabit. Intimacy is something you practice.
If the spark or intimacy has gone out of your relationship, then enquire about couples therapy and how you might get it back.