Your partner may not reciprocate your curiosity at first, but try not to keep score (which is another good relationship resolution), Garcia says.
2. Make bids for connection
A bid for connection โ a term coined by marriage researchers Jon and Julie Gottman โ is basically anything a person does to try and engage with their partner, explains Elizabeth Earnshaw, a licensed marriage and family therapist who has trained in the Gottman method.
Bids tend to fall into a few different categories, she says: the obvious โplay with me, spend time with meโ-type bids (like when a partner asks to cuddle). There are also โinformation-sharing bidsโ (maybe your partner mentions an interesting article or warns you there is traffic before you commute to work). And then there are requests for help or comfort.
โCrying is even a bid if you do it in front of somebody,โ Earnshaw says.
In the healthiest relationships, partners make and acknowledge each otherโs bids often, Earnshaw explains.
Your goal for the new year? Reach out to your partner more often than you did in 2024 or respond to your partnerโs bids for connection more positively than you did last year, she recommends.
And what if your bids are constantly ignored or rejected? โYou take this information from your partner, and decide what to do with it,โ Earnshaw says.
3. Be selfish in the bedroom
Yes, really.
โWhatโs in it for you?โ Lori Brotto often asks clients with sex and intimacy issues at her counselling practice. Brotto, a psychologist and professor at the University of British Columbia, likes to dig in: what do you get out of being intimate, or what would you like to get? Do you want sex to feel fun? Relaxing? What emotions or physical sensations might you enjoy? she asks.
In Brottoโs experience, people can get too caught up in what they think they should (or should not) want in bed, based on societal messages or because they are overly focused on their partner. That makes it challenging to show up in an โauthentic wayโ during intimacy.
You canโt communicate your desires and needs if you havenโt spent any time understanding what they are, Brotto says. So go ahead: โBe a little bit more selfish.โ
Making time for moments of intimacy and connection is key, according to experts.Credit: iStock
4. Let go of the idea that there is a โrightโ or โwrongโ way to have sex
โThere is no โnormalโ sex,โ says Lexx Brown-James, president of the American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counsellors and Therapists. Brown-James likes to compare sex to pizza: you get to decide the toppings. You get to decide how many slices you want. For instance, โforeplay can be sex,โ she adds.
Candice Nicole Hargons, an associate professor in behavioral, social and health education sciences at Emory University, recommended an even more specific resolution: in 2025, โprioritise sex that isnโt penetrative,โ she says.
Why? For one, most women require some form of clitoral stimulation in order to orgasm, Hargons says. (She notes that non-penetrative sex is the norm in many queer relationships). Also, mixing things up brings a sense of novelty, she says.
โYou donโt say it as, โLetโs not have this type of sex,โโ she explains. โItโs: โLetโs add this.โโ
Of course, talking about sex can be difficult. Hargons recommends a good conversation starter: โIโd love to have more variety in our sex life.โ
5. Commit to joy
In long-term relationships, it is easy to lose sight of the importance of finding moments for connection and fun, says Howard Markman, co-director of the Centre for Marital and Family Studies at the University of Denver.
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Stumped about where to start? Once a month or so, sit down with your partner and jot down three things each of you would like to do together, he recommends. Attend a sporting event? Institute a movie night? Tackle a creative project? Then swap lists. Take one item from your partnerโs list (and vice versa) and commit to helping make it happen.
โYouโre taking coequal responsibility for planning this activity that is going to enhance the fun, the friendship, the sensuality โ all the positive connections,โ Markman says.
6. Donโt let resentments fester
One of the paradoxes of โvibrant relationshipsโ is that you have to be willing to rock the boat, says Terrence Real, a family therapist.
So, bringing up resentments or gripes, even if it starts a fight, can be healthy. Another way to put it, he says: โDare to take each other on.โ
When partners stop fighting for their deepest needs, โpassion is the first casualty,โ Real warns. โResentment grows. Sexuality and generosity decrease.โ
He acknowledges that this resolution requires strong communication skills. It is generally more effective to request a change, rather than to complain about what you donโt like, Real says.
If your bids for communication fail, he adds, donโt give up: โDrag your partner to therapy and find an active therapist who isnโt afraid to back you up.โ
The New York Times
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