Avoid passive responses
Don’t let understated or distracted reactions quietly starve the moment of connection.
Why it works
Passive responses — understated ("nice, good for you") or distracted (changing the subject, staying on your phone) — fail to engage, so the partner’s positive experience isn’t amplified and they feel unseen. Because there’s no overt conflict, this erosion is easy to miss while it steadily withdraws from the relationship’s emotional account.
How to do it
- Put down the phone and turn toward your partner when they share something good.
- Replace a flat acknowledgment with at least one curious, engaged question.
- Don’t redirect the conversation back to yourself.
Evidence
Capitalization research consistently finds passive responses, despite seeming harmless, fail to deliver the relationship benefits of active-constructive responding. (observational)
The null-to-negative effect of passive responses is supported; it is the absence of a benefit as much as active harm.
Common mistake
Believing a mild, polite acknowledgment is "supportive enough," when the lack of engagement quietly signals indifference.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach nudges you to fully turn toward your partner’s good news rather than offering the half-present reply that feels harmless but isn’t.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).