You Can Love Them and Still Feel Lonely
Why long-distance relationships are harder than we admit.
Author: Dr. Julie. Sorenson, DMFT, MA, LPC
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Long-Distance Relationships
Staying Connected, Regulated, and Fulfilled When Miles Get in the Way
Long-distance relationships are no longer the exception — they’re becoming an anomaly.
Careers, military service, graduate programs, travel nursing, remote contracts, and economic realities are pulling partners across cities, states, and even continents. While technology makes staying in touch easier than ever, emotional connection still requires effort, intention, and regulation.
Long-distance relationships can strengthen a connection — or quietly strain it.
Understanding both sides matters.
The Good: What Long-Distance Relationships Can Strengthen
Intentional Communication
When couples can’t rely on shared routines or physical closeness, communication becomes more purposeful. Research shows that intentional communication, asking questions, clarifying emotions, and expressing needs, supports relationship satisfaction, even across distance (Stafford & Merolla, 2021). Communications need to be intentional and strong to provide closeness and safety. It is crucial to really listen and hear each other.
Many long-distance couples report:
- deeper conversations
- clearer emotional expression
- stronger listening skills
Distance often shifts couples from a convenience-based connection to a choice-based connection.
Independence and Identity
Healthy long-distance relationships require each partner to maintain their own life. This can support identity development, autonomy, and emotional resilience (Deci & Ryan, 2020).
When done well, distance encourages:
- personal growth
- professional growth
- confidence
- self-trust
Two whole people choosing connection tends to be more sustainable than emotional over-reliance. Loving someone from afar requires a lot of patience, love, and support.
Appreciation for Time Together
Scarcity can heighten presence. Research suggests that couples who spend limited time together often report higher perceived quality during shared moments (Jiang & Hancock, 2013).
Distance can remind partners:
- not to take time for granted
- to plan intentionally
- to savor connection
The Bad: The Emotional Strain That Comes With Distance
Loneliness and Emotional Gaps
Even strong relationships feel the weight of absence. Humans are wired for proximity and co-regulation, meaning emotional safety is often supported by physical closeness (Porges, 2021).
Distance can amplify loneliness during:
- illness
- high stress and cortisol levels
- celebrations
- moments of vulnerability
Video calls help — but they don’t fully replace the need for physical presence.
Miscommunication and Assumptions
Without body language or immediate repair, misunderstandings can escalate quickly. Delayed texts, missed calls, or tone misinterpretations can trigger insecurity or conflict (Hall, Park, Song, & Cody, 2022).
Distance requires:
- clearer communication
- more reassurance
- explicit emotional check-ins
Assumptions thrive where clarity is missing.
Uneven Emotional Labor
Long-distance relationships can magnify imbalances. If one partner consistently initiates contact, plans visits, or provides reassurance, resentment can build, and loneliness can heighten.
Emotional labor matters — even when love is strong (Overall & McNulty, 2017).
The Ugly: Hard Truths About Long Distance
Distance Doesn’t Fix Relationship Problems
Distance doesn’t create problems — it exposes them. Issues related to trust, boundaries, communication, or mismatched expectations often become more apparent when couples are apart. Make sure you know your triggers and learn how to express them can assist in strengthening the connection.
Avoiding these conversations rarely makes them disappear.
Anxiety Can Take Over Without Regulation
Without physical reassurance, anxious attachment patterns may intensify. Research links separation and uncertainty with increased nervous system activation and rumination (Cassidy & Shaver, 2021).
Common anxious thoughts include:
- “Why haven’t they responded?”
- “Am I too much?”
- “Are they pulling away?”
Without regulation, anxiety can quietly drive conflict or self-silencing.
Some Relationships Don’t Survive the Distance
This is painful, and it’s not a failure. Sometimes distance reveals:
- incompatible timelines
- differing commitment levels
- unmet emotional needs
Choosing honesty over endurance can still be an act of self-respect.
How to Stay Connected Across the Miles
Create Rituals, Not Just Conversations
Rituals create predictability and emotional safety. Weekly video dates, shared playlists, watching the same show at the same time, or good morning and good night texts help couples feel emotionally tethered (Gottman & Silver, 2015).
Connection thrives on consistency.
Practice Nervous System Regulation
Distance can dysregulate the nervous system, especially for partners prone to anxiety or hypervigilance. Learn each other’s love languages and attachment styles and work on growing together. Practices such as grounding, breathwork, movement, and emotional labeling help reduce reactivity (Porges, 2021).
Before reacting, ask:
“What does my nervous system need right now?”
Regulation supports clarity.
Name Needs Instead of Expecting Mind-Reading
Clear needs reduce resentment. Research consistently shows that couples who explicitly communicate emotional needs report higher satisfaction (Overall & McNulty, 2017). Ensuring both parties are allowing themselves to be vulnerable and express feelings creates a stronger connection.
Examples:
- “I need reassurance tonight.”
- "Can we plan our next visit?”
- “I need more consistency in check-ins.”
Needs are not demands — they’re information.
Boundaries Matter — With Each Other and Yourself
Boundaries protect connection; they don’t threaten it. Healthy boundaries help prevent burnout, resentment, and emotional overextension (Cloud & Townsend, 2017).
Important boundaries include:
- communication expectations
- time for individual life and friendships
- emotional responsibility (you are not each other’s nervous system)
Distance requires both connection and autonomy.
Fulfillment Comes From More Than the Relationship
One of the biggest risks in long-distance relationships is making the relationship your only source of fulfillment.
Sustainable connection includes:
- friendships
- career
- purpose
- routines
- self-care
- personal goals
A fulfilled individual brings more stability into the relationship, not less.
A Final Word
Long-distance relationships ask more of couples: more communication, more honesty, more self-awareness.
They can deepen connection or reveal hard truths.
Neither outcome is wrong.
What matters most is staying connected to yourself while staying connected. Loving from afar can be difficult, but it can also create a safe and strong connection. You just need to be patient with yourself and each other.
Resources & References
Cassidy, J., & Shaver, P. R. (2021). Handbook of attachment: Theory, research, and clinical applications (3rd ed.). Guilford Press.
Cloud, H., & Townsend, J. (2017). Boundaries: When to say yes, how to say no. Zondervan.
Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (2020). Self-determination theory: Basic psychological needs in motivation, development, and wellness. Guilford Press.
Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The seven principles for making marriage work. Harmony Books.
Hall, J. A., Park, N., Song, H., & Cody, M. J. (2022). Strategic miscommunication in close relationships. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 39(2), 379–398. https://doi.org/10.1177/02654075211045285
Jiang, L. C., & Hancock, J. T. (2013). Absence makes the communication grow fonder. Journal of Communication, 63(3), 556–577. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcom.12029
Overall, N. C., & McNulty, J. K. (2017). What type of communication during conflict is beneficial? Current Opinion in Psychology, 13, 1–5. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2016.04.001
Porges, S. W. (2021). Polyvagal safety: Attachment, communication, self-regulation. Norton.
Stafford, L., & Merolla, A. J. (2021). Idealization, reunions, and stability in long-distance dating relationships. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 38(1), 3–23. https://doi.org/10.1177/0265407520958827