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Why We Stop Wanting the People We Love

Why We Stop Wanting the People We Love

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What if desire doesn't fade because something broke — but because something worked?

This episode sits with one of the quietest, most disorienting turns in a long relationship: loving someone completely, and slowly stopping wanting them. Not from neglect — from success. From finally building the closeness we're told to want.

Drawing on Esther Perel's Mating in Captivity, the Coolidge effect, the neuroscience of dopamine and novelty, and Arthur Aron's research on couples, Heathcliff traces one simple, unsettling idea: love and desire run on opposite fuel. Love wants closeness, certainty, knowing. Desire wants distance, mystery, the unknown. Build all of one, and you can quietly starve the other.

Calm, considered, and a little dark — but it ends in the light, with a way back that isn't more closeness, but a little restored distance.

🎬 The full visual essay is on YouTube — search Life with Heathcliff. 🔔 Follow the show so the next episode finds you.

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