Alia20Ranbir.jpg

5 of 2025’s most-googled relationship questions, answered

Someone once told me that you can tell a person is in a good relationship because they rarely mention it. I mean, to be fair, people do say some shit to me. There’s a guy I get the train with in the morning who is constantly warning us the world will end tomorrow and yet, there he is, bright and early the next day, world intact enough to allow at least one more train ride where commuters politely try not to catch his eye.

I think there’s probably something in that though, in the idea that a healthy relationship attracts less introspection, and certainly less texting of the group chat—or indeed, emails to agony aunts. But increasingly, I have come to believe that questions around a relationship are as integral to it as sex or laughter. As long as people have been falling in love, they’ve been questioning that fall (how do you know it’s love, is this guy right for me, how many cattle must my father offer for their hand, etc), but some questions arise more often than others.

With a little help from Google Trends, we compiled five of the relationship questions being asked most frequently right now, both as a way of pinpointing the precise love anxieties of our day, but also, to see if we could, sort of, help?

What is a monogamous relationship?

Sorry, but this is the kind of question my kids ask to avoid going to sleep. How do you make BUTTER? What colour is SATURDAY? Can you count to INFINITY? A monogamous relationship is when people promise emotional and sexual exclusivity to each other. The history of the thing is interesting but vague—a general shift towards monogamy started about three and a half million years ago, but most human societies (around 85 per cent of them) have permitted polygamy too. And even taking in evolutionary advantages, researchers can’t quite quantify why we, as a species, have come to largely favour monogamy over the centuries. Still, many continue to choose it, despite increasing headlines saying it’s “doomed” or “unrealistic” or “dead”. What is a monogamous relationship? It’s less “natural” than you were brought up to believe, it requires compromise and, just like its alternatives, it involves jealousy, love, desire and trust. (You make butter by whipping cream, Saturday is yellow, no and good night.)

How long does the honeymoon phase last in a relationship?

God, I met a couple recently who were in their eighties who still seemed to be in the honeymoon phase, touching each other’s arms, giggling—they’d been together for over 50 years. So I guess there’s no correct answer to this one (18 months, four days, three hours?), that the length of a honeymoon phase (meaning the period of time in which you feel entirely infatuated with your new partner, almost delirious with lust and vaguely euphoric) varies entirely depending on the people, and the relationship. But one thing I would say, is that it’s easy to reach the end of this phase, and see the dull and sometimes sticky reality of a relationship beyond its initial fireworks, and not recognise it as love. To be so caught up in the romance and excitement that the next phase, of compromise, routine and diminishing drama, looks like the end, when in fact it could very easily be the beginning. Something to think about!

What is an open relationship?

I was listening to Lily Allen’s album recently, as, I believe, was every woman between the ages of 30 and 50, and thinking about biscuits. You may have read, as I did, that recent legislation means that certain chocolate bars have so little cocoa in they can no longer be labelled as such and must now be called “chocolate flavoured biscuits“. And, listening to Lily sing about an open marriage (or, as its most commonly called today, “ethical non-monogamy”, meaning a couple consent to their partner having sex with other people), but one where the husband broke all the rules they had carefully put in place, it occurred to me that, in the same way a Club bar can not be called chocolate, just by labelling something ethical does not make it so. And that, as an increasing number of people enter into open relationships without, perhaps, the trust or honesty or open communication required, it is perhaps necessary for us to call it ethical-flavoured non-monogamy?

What qualifies as cheating in a relationship?

Ok, I love this question. This is something I could chat about for hours, because, rather than the relatively cut and dried “bonking my best friend” sort of situation, cheating can exist on a vast, shimmering spectrum. And people often don’t know where they stand on it until the cheating occurs! Your partner says they had a sex dream about a celebrity? Is that cheating? Maybe for someone! Your partner ended a text to a coworker with kisses? Is that cheating? They got off with a stranger when horribly drunk? They slept with an ex when you were away? They have a whole other family living in Plymouth? The sex writer Dan Savage is very good on this topic. His advice is that couples should define sex as broadly as possible (so their sex life becomes richer and more interesting as more things than simple penetration count as sex), and that they should define cheating as narrowly as possible. The fewer things a couple counts as cheating “the less likely they are to cheat on each other and, consequently, the less likely they are to break up over an infidelity”. Define sex broadly, he summarises, you get “more and better sex. Define cheating narrowly: more resilient relationships.”

Am I in a toxic relationship?

Oh love, if you have to ask….

This article first appeared on Vogue.co.uk

Also read:

300+ relationship questions that will strengthen your bond

200 questions to ask your girlfriend: the cute, the serious and the romantic

101 deep questions to ask anyone, from friends to partners


Source link

Tags: No tags

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *