15 Questions to Ask Each Other Before Setting Relationship Goals
The experiences shared in this article are based on real emotional journeys, but all personal details are anonymized and used with the explicit written permission of the clients. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. We are committed to treating all client stories with the utmost confidentiality and respect.
Youāre curled up on the couch with a mug of peppermint tea, scrolling through TikTok reels of couples hiking Machu Picchu or slow-dancing in their Brooklyn loft.
Meanwhile, your own relationship feels like itās stuck in a loop of āWhat are we?ā texts and half-hearted date nights.
ound familiar?
As a relationship coach whoās spent years sitting across from clients in cozy coffee shops (and occasionally dodging awkward first-date encounters at Whole Foods), Iāve learned one truth: goals without clarity are just wishful thinking.
Before you two start vision-boarding your future golden retriever and beachside wedding, letās pause.
Here are 15 questions to help you dig deeperāno judgment, no pressure, just honest conversation starters.
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1. āWhat Does āLoveā Mean to You?ā
Hint: Itās Not Always Hallmark Movie Material
I once worked with a coupleāletās call them Maya and Jakeāwho argued every Valentineās Day.
Maya wanted grand gestures; Jake equated love with fixing her car without being asked.
Their disconnect? Theyād never defined their ālove languagesā beyond surface assumptions.
Try this: Share specific memories that made you feel loved. Was it when your partner stayed up until 2 AM listening to your work stress? Or when they surprised you with tickets to that indie concert? Details matter.
2. āHow Do You Handle ConflictāSilent Treatment or Spicy Debates?ā
Spoiler: Neither Is āWrong,ā But Alignment Matters
My college roommateās parents had a āno dishes in the sinkā rule after fights.
My best friendās husband needs 24 hours of solo hiking to reset.
Thereās no universal script, but mismatched conflict styles can erode trust.
Pro tip: Role-play a hypothetical disagreement (e.g., āWhat if I forgot our anniversary?ā). Notice: Do they shut down, deflect, or problem-solve?
3. āWhatās Your Relationship with Independence?ā
Codependency Isnāt a Bad WordāUntil It Is
Sarah, a client in her 30s, once told me, āI feel guilty wanting girlsā trips because heās my ābest friend.āā Meanwhile, her partner secretly resented always being her emotional anchor.
Ask: āWould you be okay if I took a solo trip for a week?ā Watch for defensiveness vs. curiosity.
4. āHow Do You Define āFaithfulnessā in the Digital Age?ā
Swipe Culture Complicates Things
A study found that 34% of couples argue about āappropriateā interactions on social media.
One client nearly ended her marriage after her husband liked his exās Instagram postāinnocent to him, betrayal to her.
Discuss: Boundaries around exes, flirty DMs, or even TikTok crushes. Clarity beats assumptions.
5. āWhatās Your Money MindsetāSaver, Splurger, or āLetās Not Talk About Itā?ā
Hint: Debt Talks Are Sexier Than You Think
Iāll never forget the couple who postponed their engagement because one secretly had $20k in student loans.
Money isnāt just numbersāitās about security, values, and trust.
Try this: Share your most embarrassing money mistake (mine? Buying a $300 juicer I used twice). Then ask: āHow would we handle a financial crisis together?ā
6. āWhere Do You See Yourself in 5 YearsāGeographically and Emotionally?ā
Spoiler: āI Donāt Knowā Is a Valid Answer
A client once tearfully confessed she wanted to move to Colorado for grad school, but her partner refused to leave New York.
Theyād never discussed location preferences beyond āsomeday.ā
Soft launch: āIf you could live anywhere, where would it be?ā Bonus points for mentioning climate change or proximity to Trader Joeās.
7. āHow Do You RechargeāAlone Time or Constant Togetherness?ā
Introverts, This Is Your Moment
Emily’s ex-boyfriend thought her āme timeā (reading memoirs in bed) meant she was bored with him.
Meanwhile, she worried his love for crowded parties signaled a deeper incompatibility.
Ask: āWhat does your ideal Saturday look likeāwith and without me?ā
8. āWhatās Your Take on Physical Intimacy Outside the Bedroom?ā
Spoiler: Itās Not Just About Sex
A clientās husband stopped holding her hand in public after two years, assuming it was āuncool.ā
She felt invisible; he thought he was respecting her space.
Discuss: Little gesturesāhand-holding, forehead kisses, couch cuddlesāand what they mean to you.
9. āHow Do You Define āTrustāāIs It Earned or Given Freely?ā
Hint: Past Baggage Isnāt a Dealbreaker⦠Unless Itās Unpacked
After being cheated on in a previous relationship, a client admitted sheād compulsively check her partnerās phone.
They worked through it by creating mutual ātrust check-insā every Sunday.
Try this: Share a time someone broke your trust. How did it shape your expectations?
10. āWhatās Your Relationship with Choresā50/50 or āIāll Do It Laterā?ā
Dishwashers Have Destroyed More Relationships Than Youād Think
A couple I coached nearly divorced over laundry.
She saw his procrastination as disrespect; he felt micromanaged.
Their fix? A chore chart with humor (āKing of Trash Tuesdaysā).
Pro tip: Assign tasks based on strengths. Hate cooking but love organizing? Trade duties.
11. āWhat Are Your Non-NegotiablesāReligion, Politics, or Pineapple on Pizza?ā
Spoiler: Core Values Arenāt Quirks
A client dated someone for eight months before learning he opposed her reproductive rights stance.
Awkward? Absolutely. Necessary? 100%.
Ask: āWhatās something you could never compromise on?ā
12. āWhatās Your Relationship with FamilyāAnd How Much Should I Care?ā
Thanksgiving Dinner Isnāt Just About Turkey
Iāll never forget the couple who broke up after realizing one wanted weekly family dinners; the other hadnāt spoken to their parents in years.
Family dynamics shape expectationsāespecially around holidays, finances, or future caregiving.
Soft launch: āHow do you imagine spending holidays once weāre serious?ā
13. āDo You Want KidsāAnd What Does āParentingā Look Like to You?ā
Hint: āMaybeā Isnāt a Plan
A client in her late 20s assumed her partner would ācome aroundā to wanting kids.
Five years later, he hadnātāand resentment had built like a dam.
Discuss: Fears, timelines, and even hypotheticals (āWould we prioritize careers or stay home?ā).
14. āHow Do You Handle ChangeāCareer Shifts, Loss, or Cross-Country Moves?ā
Lifeās Plot Twists Donāt Care About Your Relationship
When I lost my job during the pandemic, my partnerās response (āWeāll figure it outā) became my lifeline.
But Iāve seen couples crumble under smaller stressors, like adopting a puppy.
Ask: āHow did you handle the last big change in your life?ā
15. āWhatās Your āWhyā for This Relationship?ā
Spoiler: āBecause Iām Lonelyā Isnāt Enough
A client once stayed in a relationship because she feared being single at 35.
It took her years to admit she wanted a partner who challenged her, not just filled space.
Try this: Write down your āwhyā separately, then compare notes. Brutal honesty required.
Final Words from The Darling Code
If youāve read this far, youāre already brave.
Maybe youāre scribbling notes in a journal or texting your partner, āWe need to talk š ā.
Start small: Pick one question to discuss over pancakes this weekend. Relationships arenāt built in grand gestures but in these quiet, intentional moments.
You deserve a love that feels like your favorite sweaterāwarm, familiar, but still lets you breathe.
With heart,
The Darling Code
PS: Save this to your Pinterest āRelationship Goalsā board. Todayās action step? Text your partner: āHey, I read something interesting. Can we chat about it over coffee?ā No pressureājust curiosity.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vivienne, Relationship Coach & Self Love Coach
Vivienne is a Relationship Coach and Self-Love Coach who believes the key to great relationships starts with YOU. She helps individuals and couples build confidence, set healthy boundaries, and create connections that truly honor who they are.