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Should the "Right" Relationships Be Easy?
There’s a phrase we’ve all heard:
“When it’s the right person, the relationship should feel easy.”
It sounds comforting, doesn’t it?
A promise that love will feel like a warm bath, a soft landing, a peaceful escape from the chaos of dating.
But when you look closely at what creates a healthy, lasting relationship…
“Easy” becomes a misleading — and sometimes harmful — expectation.
It’s not that relationships should be hard, but the belief that the right relationship should be effortless keeps many people stuck, silent, or settling for something shallow.
Today, we’re unraveling the illusion of ease and exploring what should feel steady in a healthy connection — and what requires intentional effort from both partners.
The Myth of Effortless Love
The media has fed all of us a singular narrative for decades:
Find the one and everything falls into place.
No conflict.
No discomfort.
No friction.
Just soul-level compatibility and a lifetime of synchronized breathing.
But in reality:
Ease doesn’t equal emotional health.
And effort doesn’t equal incompatibility.
Many people secretly use “ease” as a barometer for whether someone is “The One.”
So they chase a sensation — a high — instead of a relationship built on mutuality and emotional safety.
Why We Crave Ease So Desperately
If you’ve endured the awkward dates, the ghosting, the boredom, the emotional whiplash, the walking-red-flag situationships… the idea of an easy relationship starts to feel like salvation.
You imagine reclining into something peaceful and effortless.
You imagine being done with the horrors of modern dating.
And when you finally meet someone promising, this expectation can make you:
avoid conflict
stay agreeable
keep the peace at all costs
bite your tongue
hide needs or boundaries
“go with the flow” even when something feels off
This isn’t ease.
It’s self-abandonment with a Disney filter.
The Illusion of Ease ≠ Real Compatibility
If you grew up with codependent tendencies, people-pleasing, or fear of conflict, “ease” often masquerades as:
conflict avoidance
emotional suppression
suppressing needs to appear low-maintenance
diminishing your voice to “not ruin things”
You might tell yourself:
“I don’t want to be dramatic.”
“I don’t want to start a fight.”
“If I bring this up, I’ll ruin the vibe.”
But this “vibe” is fragile — because it’s built on silence, not connection.
When you hide discomfort to maintain “ease,” you block the relationship from evolving past surface-level chemistry.
True intimacy requires vulnerability, and vulnerability isn’t effortless.
Healthy Love Requires Healthy Friction
Contrary to the fairy tales, two imperfect humans building a life together will experience conflict.
Not chaotic conflict — but constructive friction.
Think of two pieces of material being shaped into something beautiful.
A little pressure, attention, and refinement is necessary.
Similarly, a healthy partnership needs moments where you:
negotiate differences
communicate boundaries
express needs
work through misunderstandings
repair emotional ruptures
This is not dysfunction — this is relational maturity.
Growth happens when two people can stay connected through differences, not avoid them.
What Should Feel Steady - And Easy-ish
I don’t like to “should” all over people, but there are areas of a healthy relationship that should feel stable:
1. How you feel about yourself
A relationship shouldn’t diminish your self-worth or activate constant insecurity.
2. How you feel with them
You should feel generally calm, welcomed, and emotionally steady — not chronically anxious or confused.
3. How they feel about you
Their interest shouldn’t feel like a puzzle or a performance.
4. How the connection feels overall
Not free of conflict — but free of emotional chaos.
5. Emotional safety
You should feel safe expressing needs, concerns, and boundaries — even when it’s uncomfortable.
These are the parts of a relationship that should feel relatively easy to identify, even when circumstances are challenging.
What Isn't Easy - But Essential
Here’s the side of “healthy love” that rarely gets talked about:
Healthy relationships require skills and emotional capacity that most of us weren’t taught.
What ain’t easy:
facing your own blind spots
seeing how your partner triggers old wounds
learning when to advocate vs. compromise
receiving care when you’re used to over-giving
tolerating intimacy when closeness feels scary
accepting stability when your nervous system craves chaos
If you’ve never had a healthy relationship modeled to you, the experience will feel foreign — even uncomfortable.
You might question:
“Why is this bringing stuff up?”
“Why is this so hard for me?”
“Am I even capable of healthy love?”
The answer: Yes — but it’s a learning process.
In mind and body.
A Healthier Definition of Ease
Healthy ease isn’t the absence of conflict – it’s the presence of emotional safety.
The “ease” we want to experience looks like:
honesty without fear
direct communication
mutual respect
predictable behavior
emotional steadiness
a sense that you’re on the same team
Not effortless — but intentional.
Not smooth — but real.
Reflection Prompt
Is the ease in my relationship coming from emotional safety… or from avoiding showing my full self?
No shame, no judgment, just growth.
Be sure to tune in for Part 2 in this series of “Ease in Relationships” where we unpack the opposite myth, that ‘relationships should be hard work‘. See you there 🙂
Ready For the Next Step?
If you found this helpful, share it with a friend who might need it too.
And if you’re craving more insights and tools around enhancing your relationships and emotional intelligence, be sure to subscribe to my newsletters and YouTube channel for a little more love and clarity.
* A quick note: Coming from my own lived experiences & the clients I most often work with, you’ll often hear me use heteronormative pronouns. That said, my coaching & content are meant to be inclusive & supportive of people of all gender identities & orientations.
No matter how you identify, you are welcome here.
Jasmine Rodarte (she / her)
BS, ACC, RYT-200, CPSW
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