
Sara and Anna are back with another episode of Geordie Lass & Doc Sass, bringing their usual mix of humour, honesty and real talk about relationships.
The conversation begins with the collective relief of making it through January, reflections on Dry January discipline (or flexible discipline), and the feeling that the light is finally returning after the long winter months. But quickly the conversation turns to something many couples quietly experience but rarely name.
This week’s Love Desk introduces the concept of relationship burnout, and it sparks a deeper conversation about the pressure modern life places on connection, communication and emotional energy.
Later in the episode, Sara and Anna explore a thought-provoking question: if your relationship had a warning label, what would it say? It’s a surprisingly powerful way to reflect on the patterns we bring into relationships and how those patterns shape the way we communicate, argue, and reconnect.
The episode closes with a listener question that many people will recognise — what to do when your partner says “that’s just how I am” when something they do hurts you.
Love Desk: Relationship Burnout — when life gets too full for connection
Sara introduces a rising trend being discussed more frequently in relationship circles: relationship burnout.
Much like workplace burnout, it happens slowly and often without us realising it.
They explore how:
• modern life creates constant pressure from work, family and responsibilities
• the mental load leaves very little emotional capacity for relationships
• couples can slowly drift into “transactional living” rather than real connection
• busyness becomes a badge of honour, even when it erodes wellbeing
• partners can end up sharing space but not emotional closeness
• guilt and emotional exhaustion can be early signs of burnout
They also discuss how many couples postpone addressing relationship issues because life feels too busy — only to discover later that the connection has quietly faded.
A key reminder from this conversation: being busy together is not the same as being connected.
Hot Topic: If your relationship had a warning label, what would it say?
In this playful but insightful exercise, Sara and Anna explore the idea of relationship “warning labels”.
It’s a way of looking honestly at the patterns we bring into our relationships without shame or blame.
Possible warning labels might include:
• “Avoids difficult conversations until things explode.”
• “Very loving but terrible under stress.”
• “Defaults to practical solutions when emotions are needed.”
• “Assumes mind-reading instead of asking.”
• “Forgets fun when life gets busy.”
The exercise encourages listeners to step back and reflect on their own patterns and the dynamics they co-create with their partner.
Sara and Anna also explore how many relationship behaviours come from childhood experiences and family norms. What feels “normal” to one partner may feel overwhelming or unhealthy to the other.
The key insight: awareness creates the opportunity for change.
Listener Question: “My partner says ‘that’s just how I am’ when I raise something that hurts me.”
This week’s listener asks a question that highlights a very common relationship dilemma.
How do you address behaviour that hurts you when your partner insists it’s simply part of their personality?
Sara and Anna unpack:
• why this situation often appears in anxious–avoidant relationship dynamics
• the fear that can sit underneath emotional avoidance
• how defensive responses can shut conversations down quickly
• why “you always” and “you never” statements often make conflict worse
• how changing the way we ask questions can open safer conversations
• why curiosity often works better than accusation
They also highlight an important truth: it often only takes one partner to begin shifting the dynamic of communication.
Small changes in how conversations are approached can create surprisingly powerful changes in how partners respond.
Reflection from this episode
• Busyness can slowly erode connection if we’re not paying attention
• Many relationship patterns come from family experiences we’ve never questioned
• Awareness is the first step toward changing unhealthy dynamics
• The way we communicate matters as much as what we communicate
• Even one partner making small changes can influence the whole relationship dynamic
There is always a way to take one small step back towards connection, even if you start on your own.
Till Next Time
Stay Connected
Sara Liddle — info@inflori.co.uk | www.inflori.co.uk
Anna Stratis — coachdocanna@gmail.com | www.coachdocanna.com
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