[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":197},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-relationships-long-distance-relationship-tips":3},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"datePublished":10,"canonical":11,"readTime":12,"category":5,"faq":13,"relatedPosts":26,"relatedTerms":36,"body":46,"_type":190,"_id":191,"_source":192,"_file":193,"_stem":194,"_extension":195,"sitemap":196},"\u002Fblog\u002Frelationships\u002Flong-distance-relationship-tips","relationships",false,"","Long Distance Relationship Tips That Actually Work","Long distance relationships are hard in specific, predictable ways. Here's what actually makes them work — and what tends to make them fail.","2026-04-01","https:\u002F\u002Fhilainie.com\u002Fblog\u002Frelationships\u002Flong-distance-relationship-tips\u002F",6,[14,17,20,23],{"q":15,"a":16},"Do long distance relationships work?","Yes — but they work when both people treat the distance as a temporary logistical problem rather than a permanent state. The key predictors are: a clear timeline to eventually be in the same place, consistent communication structure, and both people actively building their own lives rather than just waiting.",{"q":18,"a":19},"How often should you talk in a long distance relationship?","Regularly but not constantly. Daily contact helps maintain closeness, but hourly check-ins trying to replicate physical presence often create anxiety rather than connection. The goal is reliable touchpoints — a nightly call, a weekly video date — that both people count on, rather than filling every moment of the day.",{"q":21,"a":22},"How do you survive a long distance relationship?","Build a real life where you are, not just where you're waiting to be. Maintain your own social life and friendships. Don't make your partner responsible for filling everything. Communicate problems when they come up rather than letting them compound. And have an honest shared plan for when the distance ends.",{"q":24,"a":25},"What kills long distance relationships?","Most commonly: no clear plan to close the distance (indefinite distance is much harder than temporary distance), one or both people pausing their lives while waiting to be together, unaddressed resentments that compound between calls, and visits that carry so much pressure they stop feeling normal.",[27,30,33],{"title":28,"href":29},"How to Fix Communication in a Relationship","\u002Fblog\u002Frelationships\u002Fhow-to-fix-communication-in-a-relationship\u002F",{"title":31,"href":32},"Signs Your Partner Is Pulling Away","\u002Fblog\u002Frelationships\u002Fsigns-your-partner-is-pulling-away\u002F",{"title":34,"href":35},"How to Stop Overthinking in a Relationship","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fhow-to-stop-overthinking-in-a-relationship\u002F",[37,40,43],{"label":38,"href":39},"Anxious Attachment","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fanxious-attachment\u002F",{"label":41,"href":42},"Emotional Intimacy","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Femotional-intimacy\u002F",{"label":44,"href":45},"Conflict Avoidance","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fconflict-avoidance\u002F",{"type":47,"children":48,"toc":183},"root",[49,57,64,69,115,121,131,141,151,161,167,172,178],{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":52,"children":53},"element","p",{},[54],{"type":55,"value":56},"text","Long distance relationships fail in predictable patterns — usually not from lack of love, but from lack of structure. The couples who make them work tend to treat the distance as a logistical problem with real solutions, not just something to endure.",{"type":50,"tag":58,"props":59,"children":61},"h2",{"id":60},"what-makes-them-actually-hard",[62],{"type":55,"value":63},"What Makes Them Actually Hard",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":65,"children":66},{},[67],{"type":55,"value":68},"It's not just missing each other. The specific difficulties of LDRs include:",{"type":50,"tag":70,"props":71,"children":72},"ul",{},[73,85,95,105],{"type":50,"tag":74,"props":75,"children":76},"li",{},[77,83],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":79,"children":80},"strong",{},[81],{"type":55,"value":82},"Absence of the small things.",{"type":55,"value":84}," LDRs force you to communicate deliberately about things that would normally be incidental — being in the same room, a shared meal, an unplanned conversation. These low-key moments are what builds closeness in day-to-day relationships.",{"type":50,"tag":74,"props":86,"children":87},{},[88,93],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":89,"children":90},{},[91],{"type":55,"value":92},"Parallel lives diverging.",{"type":55,"value":94}," Both people keep living their lives, having experiences, building relationships in their own cities. If this goes unacknowledged, you can grow apart without noticing.",{"type":50,"tag":74,"props":96,"children":97},{},[98,103],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":99,"children":100},{},[101],{"type":55,"value":102},"Lack of an end point.",{"type":55,"value":104}," An LDR with no plan to eventually be in the same place is a different thing from one with a defined timeline. Indefinite distance is much harder to sustain than temporary distance.",{"type":50,"tag":74,"props":106,"children":107},{},[108,113],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":109,"children":110},{},[111],{"type":55,"value":112},"Visits as pressure.",{"type":55,"value":114}," When you only see each other every few weeks or months, visits carry a lot of weight. The pressure to make them perfect can create its own problems.",{"type":50,"tag":58,"props":116,"children":118},{"id":117},"what-works",[119],{"type":55,"value":120},"What Works",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":122,"children":123},{},[124,129],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":125,"children":126},{},[127],{"type":55,"value":128},"Communicate regularly, but not constantly.",{"type":55,"value":130}," Hourly check-ins that try to replicate physical presence often create anxiety rather than connection. Better: consistent touchpoints (a nightly call, a weekly video date) that both people can rely on, with less pressure to fill every moment of the day with contact.",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":132,"children":133},{},[134,139],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":135,"children":136},{},[137],{"type":55,"value":138},"Have a plan.",{"type":55,"value":140}," The most important structural element of a successful LDR is a clear shared understanding of when and how the distance ends. It doesn't have to be immediate — but it has to exist. \"At some point\" is not a plan.",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":142,"children":143},{},[144,149],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":145,"children":146},{},[147],{"type":55,"value":148},"Don't outsource your life to the relationship.",{"type":55,"value":150}," People who pause their social life while waiting to be together often end up with resentment on top of loneliness. Build a real life where you are. It actually helps the relationship — you have more to bring to it, and you're not depending on it to fill everything.",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":152,"children":153},{},[154,159],{"type":50,"tag":78,"props":155,"children":156},{},[157],{"type":55,"value":158},"Address problems in real time.",{"type":55,"value":160}," Small resentments that go unaddressed compound faster at distance. In a shared-location relationship, proximity often resolves minor friction organically. In an LDR, it doesn't — it festers between calls.",{"type":50,"tag":58,"props":162,"children":164},{"id":163},"on-visits",[165],{"type":55,"value":166},"On Visits",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":168,"children":169},{},[170],{"type":55,"value":171},"Let visits be normal. The pressure to make every visit amazing means you're often not actually being present — you're performing togetherness. Some of the best visits are the ones where you just do ordinary things together. That's closer to what you're actually working toward.",{"type":50,"tag":58,"props":173,"children":175},{"id":174},"when-to-reassess",[176],{"type":55,"value":177},"When to Reassess",{"type":50,"tag":51,"props":179,"children":180},{},[181],{"type":55,"value":182},"If the end date keeps moving, that's worth a direct conversation. Not as an ultimatum, but as an honest check-in: is this still moving somewhere? What's actually in the way? A relationship both people want to continue usually finds a way to continue — but it requires both people actively working toward the same thing.",{"title":7,"searchDepth":184,"depth":184,"links":185},2,[186,187,188,189],{"id":60,"depth":184,"text":63},{"id":117,"depth":184,"text":120},{"id":163,"depth":184,"text":166},{"id":174,"depth":184,"text":177},"markdown","content:blog:relationships:long-distance-relationship-tips.md","content","blog\u002Frelationships\u002Flong-distance-relationship-tips.md","blog\u002Frelationships\u002Flong-distance-relationship-tips","md",{"loc":4},1775272860516]