
At some point in a long-term relationship—especially after you’re living together—there comes a time when all pretense is laid to the wayside. When regular closeness and new levels of comfortability allow both partners to really let out their fun, playful, messy, immature, and perhaps even a bit feral side that would otherwise stay dormant or hidden.
If you’re currently in a long term relationship and wonder if other couples are as weird with one another behind closed doors as you are, read on. Recently someone asked partners:
“What’s something you do in private that’s completely normal for you, but would probably shock your friends?”
Judging by these super cute, sweet, interesting, and ultimately very relatable answers, we can probably all assume that being weirdos is actually a sign of a very healthy relationship…even if we wouldn’t dare let anyone else see us that way.
Tons of couples shared about having their own language of sorts, especially those that involve animal sounds, apparently…
“My wife and I HONK like geese. I use it for echo location but she uses it more as a summoning function.”Photo credit: Canva
“We have full conversations in ridiculous accents and once spent a whole day arguing in pirate voice without breaking character.”
“Sometimes we’ll be in different parts of the house and she’ll bark, and I’ll bark back and we’ll bark at each other for about 10 seconds before it goes back to silence, with no discussion involved.If we’re in the same room sometimes she’ll make a bark noise and I’ll look at her like HEY, no, shake finger this is a safe space.”
“My wife and I HONK like geese. I use it for echo location but she uses it more as a summoning function.”
“My ex and I would meow at each other. We’d have full non verbal conversations with each other by meowing.”
“My partner and I hiss at each other. A lot.I had a good laugh at my partner’s expense last week, when he told me that he accidentally hissed at a coworker and had to explain why. He hissed at me in response, of course. As is the custom.”
“We have a hand signal for when we want to leave a social situation. Sometimes we’ll give it to each other from across the room or if it’s too obvious, the person who wants to leave will hold the other persons hand and do the signal inside their palm.Also, we regularly will pick food from a menu while out to dinner based on the knowledge that We will be swapping plates half way through lol”
And of course, many couples reported seeing the occasional jab as a way of saying “I love you…dummy.”
“Our love language is roasting and insulting each other.”Photo credit: Canva
“We get mean but try to be silly about it, but we KNOW we’re joking. It would actually upset our oldest who has autism. He couldn’t tell we were joking and we’d need to stop and reassure him. Eventually he got in on the joke and he’d start saying things like ‘guys! Not in front of my beef stew!’ Or whatever he had or was eating/doing.”
“Our love language is roasting and insulting each other. We have our own boundaries we don’t ever cross, but the very few times we’ve let it slip in front of others they’re always pretty shocked at how we speak.”
Others noted how physical intimacy now involved play, laughter, and a certain comfort with what might be considered a tad gross elsewhere. We’re not talking about sex here, but about the familiarity that comes from being in proximity over a long period of time.
“It just makes sense if one of us walks near the other to lightly touch them.”Photo credit: Canva
“Fake wrestling before sleeping. We know for a fact I can’t overpower him but it’s a question of whether my flexibility can beat his strength. I always try to poke his butt with my big toe to defeat him.”
“We shower together, and afterwards she rubs lotion on me. It actually started because her sister said men don’t know how to lotion, so I told her to show me. It’s not sexual really, just quality time together.”
“A friend of ours pointed out that I had taken a slightly long route through the living room so I could lightly rub my fingertips across my GF’s back as I walked by, the friend thought it was odd. I said I just wanted to let my GF know I was there…I have no real answer for it. It just makes sense if one of us walks near the other to lightly touch them.”
“She’ll spend up to an hour combing my entire body for white heads, black heads, and anything poppable on my skin, popping them. She enjoys it so much that I’ve had to remind her to slow down as she’ll accidentally cut me with her nails.”
“We race to slap the other on the ass after sex and declare ‘good game.’”
The really sweet stuff came from couples who found little bonding rituals even within the mundane, and those who could actually claim their SO as their BFF. Sure, we might not want a romantic partner to be our end-all, be-all person. But at the same time, time and time again we see that the most successful couples are those who truly are friends.
“Hubs and I do everything together as a team.”Photo credit: Canva
“We cook a big artichoke for each of us in a pressure cooker and we add butter and lemon and we sit in bed and binge watch TV shows while eating our artichokes in silence. This is kind of our decompression routine that we do after stressful work days or busy weeks. It’s really nice.”
“We read out loud to each other at night- short stories, magazine articles but usually longer books – historical fiction or even non fiction.”
“We have an imaginary roommate whom we blame for all the bad stuff (dishes left in sink, laundry on floor etc) instead of arguing about it with each other.”
“I was teased recently because hubs and I do everything together as a team. We grocery shop together, if a pipe breaks we work to fix it together, we do housework together. Not as a dependency, we just generally like being around each other and adulting is way more fun together than solo.”
“I like to grocery shop with my wife. We get chicken nuggets from the hot bar afterwards. 😀”
But by and large, the most common “shocking” thing that couples did was sleeping in separate beds. Which is kind of wild, given all the research we have indicating that it really does offer plenty of health benefits. If you’re still having reservations, take a peek at some of this anecdotal evidence below.
“Having separate bedrooms is such a marriage/partner hack.”Photo credit: Canva
“We do this. Everyone is happier. We sleep better which equates to less crankiness. We will have a ‘sleep over’ on weekends when we don’t have to be up for work. We’ll also snuggle in the morning if we both are up in time. It’s a great set up.”
“Having separate bedrooms is such a marriage/partner hack. It also gives you independent space to retreat to, and you get to decorate your own space. We found it does not at all reduce intimacy. In fact it can increase it. But let me tell you. The judgement for this. Damn.”
Bottom line: everyone is weird. And maybe part of finding love is finding someone who lets you be your weirdest, most authentic self. If you have found that person, congrats, and take comfort in know that when no one is watching, other couples are out there being just as silly and carefree. What a beautiful thing.