Update your love map after major life changes

When life shifts, assume your map is outdated and ask new questions.

Why it works

Major transitions -- a new job, a loss, a health change, parenthood -- alter the landscape of a person's inner world faster than a partner naturally tracks it. Assuming continuity when the terrain has changed produces mismatched support: offering the wrong comfort, missing the real worry, or responding to who your partner was rather than who they are now under pressure.

How to do it

  1. When a major life event happens, note to yourself: my map may be out of date here.
  2. Ask questions specifically about the new situation: what is hardest about this shift for you?
  3. Resist filling in the answers from past experience; let them tell you.
  4. Check in more frequently during the transition period, not less.

Evidence

Research on stress and couples -- including Gottman's work on life events and relationship stress -- finds that major transitions are common points of increased conflict and decreased satisfaction, which the love map framework attributes partly to couples losing touch with each other's changed needs. (observational)

Life events as stress points for couples is well documented; the specific love map mechanism is Gottman's clinical interpretation of the observational pattern.

Common mistake

Assuming your partner feels the same way about a major life change that you do, and providing support for your experience rather than theirs.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach notices when you mention a major life event and prompts a fresh round of map-building questions tailored to that transition, rather than relying on old data.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).