TED Talks Daily

The 6 essential ingredients of loving relationships | Sara Nasserzadeh

11 min
Feb 10, 20262 months ago
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Summary

Social psychologist Sara Nasserzadeh presents a research-backed blueprint for thriving relationships, identifying six essential ingredients discovered through analysis of 450 couples. She introduces the concept of "emergent love" and challenges common misconceptions about attraction, respect, trust, compassion, shared vision, and loving behaviors.

Insights
  • Attraction in thriving relationships extends beyond sexual chemistry and functions as renewable energy that encourages continuous exploration and re-discovery of partners
  • Trust is built through consistency and reliability demonstrated via small promises kept over time, not grand gestures or expensive apologies
  • Compassion rather than empathy is the default emotional mode in thriving couples, allowing partners to support each other without losing their own emotional ground
  • Loving relationships require active, intentional loving behaviors rather than unconditional love; partners must continuously demonstrate care through deliberate actions
  • Shared vision and resource allocation (time, energy, attention, money) are critical to preventing resentment and ensuring couples move in aligned directions
Trends
Rising questions about AI intimacy and chatbot relationships prompting deeper examination of what constitutes authentic human connectionEvidence-based relationship frameworks gaining prominence as couples seek scientific validation for relationship practicesShift from unconditional love paradigm to intentional, behavioral love model in relationship psychologyEmphasis on reciprocal liking and daily micro-signals of affection as relationship maintenance practicesGrowing recognition that relationship skills transfer across all relationship types (romantic, professional, familial)
Topics
Relationship Psychology and Couple DynamicsAttraction and Sexual Chemistry in Long-term RelationshipsTrust Building and Consistency in PartnershipsCompassion vs. Empathy in RelationshipsShared Vision and Goal Alignment for CouplesLoving Behaviors and Intentional AffectionRespect and Boundary CommunicationAI and Human IntimacyRelationship Maintenance PracticesReciprocal Liking and Daily AffirmationConflict Resolution and Negotiation in CouplesLong-term Relationship SustainabilityPsychosexual Therapy ApproachesEvidence-based Relationship ModelsEmotional Regulation in Partnerships
People
Sara Nasserzadeh
Social psychologist and relational psychotherapist who conducted research on 450 couples and developed the six-ingred...
Elise Hu
Host of TED Talks Daily who introduced the episode and framed the discussion about AI intimacy and human connection
Quotes
"Everyone can and deserves to be in the loving relationships they desire."
Sara Nasserzadeh
"You don't fall out of love. You fall out of loving."
Sara Nasserzadeh
"The way we do one relationship is the way we do them all."
Sara Nasserzadeh
"Respect literally means to look again. So basically, it's the opposite of taking anyone, including yourself, for granted."
Sara Nasserzadeh
"If we are both bleeding, who gets the Band-Aid?"
Sara Nasserzadeh
Full Transcript
you're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas and conversations to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. It's in the news more and more these days, people getting into relationships with chatbots. I imagine we all have an opinion about AI intimacy, but regardless of what you think, it raises crucial questions about what love is and the very nature of human connection. In this talk, drawing on research done with thousands of couples, social psychologist Sarah Nasirzadeh offers a new blueprint for love. She shares the six ingredients she has found are needed for thriving human relationships. Let me tell you about Claire. Claire is 42, a sharp executive. On paper, her marriage is perfect. And in my office, she whispered, I feel nothing. And then she asked me, am I asking for too much? Max is 38, a founder who's lived happily with Ali for the past four years. And yet he found himself in my office asking me, do you think she's the one? We all carry stories about how love should be, feel and look like. I see this through the lens of my work as a relational psychotherapist, psychosexual therapist and a social psychologist. In the past 20 years, I've helped more than thousands of people across the world to help them make sense of their relationships from the most intimate spaces to the most public ones. Today I want you lovelies to look at me as your relationship architect, because I'm here to offer you a blueprint that is evidence-informed and is going to introduce you to a whole new model of love so that you can develop the loving relationships you desire without second-guessing yourself, the other person, or the relationship. I hope you're ready. So my colleague and I studied 450 couples, who've been together anywhere from one to 40 years. And these couples showed us six essential ingredients. And after we analyzed 180,000 data points about them, we came up with these six ingredients, but also surprisingly we found out about a whole new model of love that I call emergent love because it can only exist when the six ingredients that are essential for thriving relationships are present Imagine it as a warm and cozy fire that can only be alive when all the essential elements are there to keep it going. Now, when I walk you through these six ingredients, you might say, oh, they sound familiar, but there's a twist, because our thriving couples embody them and define them differently. Number one is attraction. For thriving couples, attraction is way beyond sexual chemistry. It's only one of the reasons that they come together. And in this way, attraction is a renewable energy because it wants you to be around the person and explore new ways of being with them and re-knowing them. On the other hand, sexual chemistry is a fleeting biological desire that can fizzle out when the initial infatuation phase is over. I'll tell you what, when the novelty part of the relationship is over, if you want to chase the chemistry, it's as if you are tickling yourself. It just doesn't work. And then we are convinced that we fell out of love with our loved one, or we chose wrong. There's also a daily practice that we observed in thriving couples that they didn't name it, but in social psychology we have a term for it. It's called reciprocal liking. What it is basically is, if I think that you like me, I like you back. It's more likely that I like you back. Now, these daily signals need to change as we change over time. Really think about it. Between diaper duty and deadlines, Where is that signal that says, I like you, I'm into this version of you now? Number two is respect. Respect literally means to look again. So basically, it's the opposite of taking anyone, including yourself, for granted. And obedience, walking on eggshells, is not respect. They are fear. Thriving couples have basic etiquette. They say hello in the mornings. They say goodnight before they call it a night. They don't interrupt. They don't walk away mid-conversation. And they don't cover up sarcasm as humor. I often hear I'm not respected by my partner, and I ask, are you respectable? And there's a pause. I say look do you live by your own principles or are you the first person walking all over them Do you communicate your boundaries as invitations so the other person knows how to be around you lovingly, firmly and on time, or as passive-aggressive ultimatums? And do you equally have regards for the other person's boundaries? Thriving couples are both respectable and respectful. Number three is trust. We found that trust has two main pillars. One of them is consistency, and one of them is reliability. So you have to really be able to have both. Now, thriving couples know that trust is built and rebuilt based on little promises kept over time, not grand and expensive and expensive apologies. Think of it this way. that you need to show up for one another, no matter how big or small the stakes are. You can't leave the other person hanging. Think about that unpaid bill. Think about the second drink you chocked down, and you don't even remember it. Think about the private story that was shared public. Think about the harmless DMs and likes. Number four is compassion, not empathy. If empathy is feeling with the other, compassion is feeling for the other without losing your own ground. Our couples told us that overempatizing and over-identifying can kill your relationship, can really drain your relationship. Yes, there are moments that you would like to commiserate with each other or feel those juicy sensations when you have erotic empathy with one another. But for daily lives, everyday life, compassion is the default for these couples. Picture this. I come home upset. You match my intensity to the level that you lose it with me. If we are both bleeding, who gets the Band-Aid? So thriving couples can be there for the other without making the scenario about themselves. Next one is shared vision. You need to know where you are going individually and as a couple. At least know where you don't want to end up. Otherwise, your resources will be scattered and resentment will be inevitable. Thriving couples have plans for their days, weeks, and years ahead. They name a destination, and then they prioritize their resources of time, energy, attention, and money, and they commit to them. So their daily choices are strategies not talk of war They also negotiate often what movies to watch tonight They compromise sometimes This holiday at my parents the other one at yours They sacrifice rarely. For example, let's have this relationship long distance for two years until your degree is over. They make it time-bound, specific, rewarded, not expected. Last but not least is the loving behaviors. Loving behaviors show us you don't fall out of love. You fall out of loving. So one thing that we learned is loving thriving relationships is not unconditional or a given. When was the last time that you went out of your way for your partner? Do you give each other the benefit of the doubt? Thriving couples are tender with their touch, with their word, with their presence, and they make them exclusive and specific to each other, even if other people are in the mix. So, for example, if they say, honey, their dog and partner and mom and neighbor, everybody, don't show up all at the same time. There you have it, lovelies. I offered you an evidence-informed blueprint to build thriving relationships, so love has a chance to emerge. You build what fits your life. And tonight we talked about coupledom. But trust me, I've seen it over and over again. If you master these six ingredients, you will rise in all of your relationships. Because the way we do one relationship is the way we do them all. And if you're going to take one thing out of our time together tonight, let it be this. Everyone can and deserves to be in the loving relationships they desire. Thank you. Thank you. That was Sarah Nasirzadeh at TED Next 2025. If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at ted.com slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research team and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonsika Sungmarnivong. This episode was mixed by Christopher Faze-Bogan. Additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balarezo. I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening.