
Sara and Anna are back with even more thoughtful conversation, starting with great hair, trusted hairdressers, carnival glitter and a lovely Valentine’s weekend.
Anna shares stories from carnival celebrations in Greece, complete with sparkle, music, day drinking and neighbourhood festivities, while Sara reflects on a sweet Valentine’s dinner at the restaurant where she and her fiancé had what he still insists was their first date. Get ready for the warmth, laughter and those small personal details that make relationships feel special.
Love Desk: Red baskets for singles
This week on the Love Desk, Sara brings a Valentine’s story from the UK. Supermarket chain ASDA trialled red shopping baskets for single people on Valentine’s Day, designed to signal they were open to meeting someone while doing their weekly shop.
Sara and Anna chat about:
• whether they would have picked up a red basket if they were single
• how supermarkets can strangely feel full of relationship energy
• the funny reality of overhearing couples negotiating dinner in the aisles
• the mix of hope, awkwardness and curiosity that comes with modern dating
It leads into a wider reflection on how people meet, how connection begins, and how even everyday places can carry a surprising amount of emotional meaning.
Hot Topic: Can you really talk to your partner for the rest of your life?
The main conversation explores something many couples quietly wonder about, especially once the early intensity of a relationship settles.
At the start, talking can feel endless. You want to know everything about each other. Curiosity is high, patience is easy, and even the worst jokes feel charming. But over time, life gets fuller, responsibilities grow, and couples can slowly drift into more practical, surface-level communication.
Sara and Anna unpack:
• why conversation often feels effortless at the beginning of a relationship
• how busyness and routine can squeeze out deeper connection
• the difference between talking with someone and simply sharing the same space
• why curiosity is such an important part of long-term compatibility
• how growth, change and new experiences keep conversation alive
• why emotional safety matters if deeper conversations are going to happen
• how real listening means not planning your response while the other person is still speaking
• why silence can sometimes be just as important as words
They also reflect on how long-term connection is not just about being able to chat, but about continuing to bring fresh energy, honesty and openness into the relationship over time.
Listener Question
“My partner doesn’t really open up emotionally. He’ll chat about work and practical things, but avoids the deeper conversation. I don’t want to nag, but I feel very lonely. What should I do?”
Sara and Anna explore the many layers behind this, including:
• how emotional distance is not always obvious at the start of a relationship
• why people often choose relationships based on feeling chosen, rather than asking whether they truly feel met
• how one partner can grow or change faster than the other
• why emotional openness can feel unfamiliar or even threatening for some people
• how assumptions often replace real conversations
• why people can spend months or years silently carrying dissatisfaction before saying anything out loud
• the importance of creating enough safety to talk honestly without judgment
Their answer is compassionate and realistic. This is not about forcing someone to become a completely different person overnight. It is about recognising what is missing, being brave enough to speak it, and understanding that meaningful change often starts with one person choosing a different way to communicate.
Closing thoughts
This episode is a gentle but important reminder that good relationships do not just happen. They need curiosity, honesty, safety and room to grow.
The ability to keep talking to each other over time is not about always having something clever to say. It is about staying open enough to keep learning each other as life changes.
Till next time
Get in touch
Sara Liddle — info@inflori.co.uk | www.inflori.co.uk
Anna Stratis — coachdocanna@gmail.com | www.coachdocanna.com
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