Couples stopped making such an effort to appear like a couple at some point between the pandemic and the present. You become aware of it in subtle ways. A friend shared a blurry picture of two coffee cups on a kitchen counter on their anniversary. A wedding without the drone footage. For once, a couple on the metro isn’t filming one another. The shift may have started earlier, but lately it seems louder, in part because the surrounding noise has finally subsided.
Presentation was the foundation of the relationship economy for many years. The video proposal. the coordinated attire. The meticulously planned journey to Santorini is displayed in a 9-cell grid. It had a subtle competitiveness that everyone sensed, but no one acknowledged. Then something began to give. Travel agents were the first to notice, followed by therapists and the jewelry industry, which has been subtly retooling around smaller, less photographable purchases. People still wish to celebrate. Simply put, they don’t seem to want a crowd.

It’s intriguing that research, which frequently lags behind culture, is starting to point in the same direction. According to a 2021 daily diary study conducted by a team led by Susan Chesterman, partners’ assessments of one another were significantly influenced by the subtleties of everyday occurrences, both positive and negative. Translation: Valentine’s Day is not important; Tuesday is. Even if they haven’t read the paper, couples seem to be picking this up intuitively.
The most obvious manifestation of this change is now travel. The messiness of being on the road, lost luggage, missed trains, and dietary mishaps tend to reveal more about a relationship than any candlelit dinner, according to a recent study published in Tourism Review that examined how shared travel environments affect how partners handle disagreement. Traveling couples appear to be aware of this. They stay an extra day and reserve the less expensive hotel. They quarrel in airports and then joke about it. When they do exist, the majority of the photos are of food.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that the coaching and wellness industries have also taken off. Terms such as “relationship over task” have become commonplace outside of therapists’ offices. The straightforward but unyielding notion is that a couple’s relationship with one another is more important than the holidays they plan, the milestones they reach, or the apartment they remodel. It’s unclear if younger couples truly speak this language, but they appear to be fluent in it.
Additionally, there is a noteworthy economic undertow. Housing in most major cities is a slow disaster, weddings have become exorbitantly expensive, and the calculation of establishing a public relationship has changed. The performance begins to seem absurd when the cost of the props increases. Cooking together on a Sunday doesn’t cost anything. It costs nothing to watch a partner read on the couch. These items were constantly accessible. It simply took some time for others to take notice of them once more.
It’s really unclear if this will continue. The algorithm has the ability to draw people back toward spectacle when cultural tides shift. However, something has changed for the time being in living rooms, on peaceful streets, and in airport lines. Couples continue to show up for one another. They simply don’t have the cameras on.
