Psychology Diary

The First Step Toward Change Is Awareness

  • Home
  • Relationships
  • Mental Health
  • Expert Tips
  • Life
  • Family
  • Marriage

5 Main Important Stages of a Relationship Every Couple Goes Through

February 4, 2021 · Relationships
relationship
@ Shutterstock

Relationships are a complicated, multifaceted affair but this doesn’t mean that the journey of finding and living true love is always easy. People who have been in long-term relationships can tell you that things are not always sunshine and rainbows.

Relationships take time to develop and build. As it happens, there are several stages of a relationship couples usually go through as they switch from being single to dating to being a couple and making future plans together. Sometimes, you may feel overwhelmed with emotions, but the good kind, and want to spend all your time with that person. Other times, you reminisce about single life and what it was like to have some peace and quiet.

According to psychologist Dr. Linda Papadopoulos, every relationship has five stages: infatuation, comfort, questioning, vulnerability, and stability, not necessarily in this order. As explained by Papadopoulos in her study, some couples relive the same stages many times throughout their relationships. Some couples lose themselves along the way while others succeed in reaching the much-coveted final stage.  Which stage are you in?

@Shutterstock

Stage 1: Infatuation

The infatuation stage, also known as the butterflies in the stomach stage, is the part at the beginning of a relationship which, according to psychologists, lasts between approximately 18 months and three years. Love is blind in this stage. Your only focus is to re-prioritize your life to make room for your love interest, see them as much as possible and spend as much time together as possible.

It’s the stage when you can’t think, can’t concentrate and your heart skips a beat every time you think and see your potential partner. According to the study, 56 percent of individuals in the butterflies stage also reported a higher libido and sexual arousal.

But, like many other seemingly good things in life, too much infatuation can actually be bad. According to Relationship coach Larry Michel, “the most powerful and most common source of infatuation is chemistry, a concoction of brain chemicals and hormones that literally spike our senses and have us falling head-over-heels for someone”.

Unfortunately, dopamine, serotonin and testosterone, to name a few of the chemicals involved, are not that reliable when it comes to indicating a long-lasting relationship.

How to keep it real in the infatuation stage: Stay grounded and acknowledge that perfection doesn’t exist, not even when it comes to your new love interest. The moment you accept that everyone has flaws, you will be able to distinguish between who you think they are versus the person they really are, and fall in love with their real persona, recommends relationship coach Marilyn Sutherland.

Stage 2: Comfort

The comfort stage comes with a little bit more awareness and less adoration and blind devotion for your partner. According to researchers, it is the stage when neurochemicals increase your heart rate and reach your pleasure centers. You’re over the honeymoon phase but you still can’t sleep properly and feel anxious, in a happy and giddy way.

It’s like a mix of being on drugs but still lucid somehow. This allows you to build your relationship but still experience some of the butterflies in the infatuation stage.

How to keep it real in the comfort stage: Being the intermediate stage, you still feel slightly infatuated but also able to analyze the prospect of a serious relationship with your love interest. Take this as your opportunity to get to know the other person more and also allow them to discover who you are. Talk about your values, goals, and dreams to see if you have something in common and can actually build a future together.

“Focus on the things that work and explore together how you can bridge any significant differences,” Sutherland suggests.

@Shutterstock

Stage 3: Questioning

After infatuation and comfort, there will come a time when you start questioning your new relationship, not necessarily in a bad way. You just start second-guessing things and give more thought to where your relationship might be heading, if somewhere.

You start wondering if this is what you want if you can see yourself with them in the long term if you are compatible enough to last. According to Michel, you need to prove to yourself that the person you’re dating is in fact who you want to spend the rest of your life with (ideally) or you are simply not on the same page when it comes to needs, desires, goals, and principles.

How to keep it real in the questioning stage: This stage is not about doubting your relationship, but analyzing it to the point it becomes clear that you can have a future together. The best way to make sure you see things, in the same way, is to talk about what each of you wants, if your values are in sync and how you can deal with problems that may arise between you two.

“Know that no two people are 100 percent in sync, and commit to working out the differences with loving kindness. Be kind to yourself and them as you navigate any uncertainty,” advises Sutherland.

And remember, it is always good to keep questioning, even if it means getting more information from some books!

Stage 4: Vulnerability

“This stage deals with the concept behind how we all put on our best faces; through social media, we edit our lives as well as our pictures to make it appear as though everything is fine,” according to the authors of the study. More than that, it seems that 15 percent of people feel vulnerable and have doubts about being completely open and honest about who they really are, their strange habits, and their quirks.

But, according to psychologists, vulnerability and honesty are essential in a healthy and stable relationship. It might make you feel more anxious and stressed, but it is also an indicator that you’ve reached an important relationship milestone and managed to successfully move forward with your relationship.

How to keep it real in the vulnerability stage: Talking about your best and worst parts is anything but easy. However, it’s one of the most important things in building a true relationship. Opening up and exposing your vulnerabilities will confirm that you trust each other on a deeper level. “Learn to communicate authentically with love, and accept differences,” says Sutherland.

@Shutterstock

Stage 5: Stability

After overcoming all the second-guessing, doubts, and fears, every couple reaches the stability stage, where you feel safe and satisfied with your choices. Your body is overflown with vasopressin, a hormone that’s also released during orgasm, and you start experiencing feelings of attachment and bonding. The passion might not be the way it was in the infatuation stage, but the feeling of happiness is at its highest in the stability stage.

Some believe the stability stage is the best of all relationship stages. And just because you’re in a stable relationship, doesn’t mean you can’t still feel the butterflies. It’s the stage when major life decisions are taken, like living together, getting married, planning to have children, etc. You clearly see your future together and look forward to making your dreams as a couple comes true.

How to keep it real in the stability stage: One of the downsides of the stability stage is that sometimes feelings of boredom might creep in. To prevent this from happening, don’t turn your partner into the Sun of your relationship around which all you can do is revolve. There’s life outside your relationship, you just have to go out there and try some things on your own, as well.

You can still go out with your friends, without feeling like you’re doing something wrong. It’s actually healthy not to obsess over your partner and become heavily dependent on them. Try new activities together, share your feelings and love every day but stay independent and live outside of your relationship, as well.

And if you’re feeling isolated and lonely, you should definitely be checking out these brilliant ways to cope and combat such feelings!

Share this article

Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Latest Posts

  • A mixed-media collage of a fragmented silhouette head with an anchor being cut, symbolizing the loss of one's grip on reality. 10 Signs Someone Is Trying to Distort Your Reality
  • A mixed media collage of a beautiful white flower with hidden barbed wire roots and thorny stems on a textured vintage paper background. 8 Behaviors That Reveal Hidden Toxicity
  • A candid photo of a couple in a dim living room, showing a sense of emotional distance and unspoken tension. 10 Traits That May Reveal Covert Narcissism
  • A couple sits on a sofa in a dimly lit room, one person looking at a phone while the other looks away, capturing a moment of secrecy. 8 Signs Someone May Be Hiding More Than They Admit
  • An ink and watercolor illustration of a human head cracking like stone, with golden light leaking through the fissures. 11 Small Clues That Can Expose a Lie
  • An abstract editorial illustration of a silhouette with a tangled nest of lines inside its head, symbolizing mental confusion. 8 Warning Signs Someone May Be Playing Mind Games
  • A mixed media collage of a silhouette filled with torn paper and translucent layers, symbolizing the invisible nature of emotional neglect. 10 Traits of People Emotionally Neglected as Kids
  • A mixed-media collage showing a rigid, golden silhouette with cracks revealing a soft, watercolor interior, representing performative armor. 7 Behaviors People Mistake For Confidence But Aren’t
  • A woman sits alone at a kitchen table in dim evening light while her partner stands in the background, illustrating emotional distance. 9 Psychological Reasons Why People Stay in Unhappy Relationships
  • An illustration of a person using a prism to turn a chaotic blue wave into a clear spectrum of distinct colors. 10 Signs You Have Exceptionally High Emotional Intelligence

Newsletter

Get the latest posts delivered to your inbox.

Related Articles

Illustration of a person looking into a mirror, oblivious to the people around them who are fading into the background.

8 Keys to Recognizing the Faces of Egocentric Behavior

Learn to identify the eight faces of egocentric behavior, understand the psychological difference from narcissism,…

Read More →
Narcissist

How to Handle a Narcissist: 10 Practical Tips for Everyday Interactions

Can Your Well-Being and Mental Health Be Affected If You Spend Time With Someone Who…

Read More →
mother-in-law

8 Signs a Mother-in-Law Is Secretly Jealous

How healthy is the relationship between you and your mother-in-law? Believe it or not, from…

Read More →
trust, marriage ready life, adult children mistakes

How to Trust Your Partner Again After Betrayal

You can’t have a healthy, long-lasting relationship if you don’t have trust. Trust doesn’t come…

Read More →
narcissist

10 Signs You’re Dating A Narcissist

We all know that a toxic relationship is where your partner makes you feel like…

Read More →

8 Biggest Turn-Offs for Women Over 50s

Have you ever wondered what women dislike in relationships?  We all know that we can’t…

Read More →
Neurotic Personality Trait

6 Causes of Neurotic Personality Traits and Why You Might Have Them

Check this list to see if you have any of these neurotic personality traits! We’ve…

Read More →
set healthy boundaries. things you should stop after 60,

7 Ways to Set Healthy Boundaries With Your Family

Do you know how to set healthy boundaries with your family? When you think about…

Read More →
love

6 Of Hollywood’s Most Famous Love Triangles

We all know this already: dating is hard. We’ve been through it, we have experienced…

Read More →

Psychology Diary

The First Step Toward Change Is Awareness

Inedit Agency S.R.L.
Bucharest, Romania

contact@psychologydiary.com

Explore

  • About Us
  • Advertiser Disclosure
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Do not sell my personal information
  • Editorial Policy
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Subscribe
  • Unsubscribe

Categories

  • Expert Tips
  • Family
  • Life
  • Marriage
  • Mental Health

© 2026 Psychology Diary. All rights reserved.