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What does it really take to survive a long-distance relationship without losing your mind, your identity, or your will to live? In this episode, Anahita and Jesselina get honest about the emotional chaos, quiet resilience, and very specific kind of character-building that comes with loving someone across cities, countries, and time zones.
From cheating paranoia and mismatched communication styles to control, individuality, marriage, and the politics of not shrinking yourself for love, they unpack the things long-distance relationships tend to expose rather than create. This is not a neat guide, and definitely not an expert one, but it is full of lived experience, contradictions, and the occasional hard-earned insight.
Call it a dummy’s guide, call it a survival manual, call it two women oversharing for an hour, but this one is for anyone who has ever tried to hold on to love across distance and come out with themselves intact.
(00:35) We’ve been MIA, and Ana is graduating
(05:39) Why people fear long-distance relationships so much
(06:14) Is long distance really the problem, or something else?
(08:14) Why women should not give up dreams just to avoid distance
(12:16) Cheating fears, trust, and why control guarantees nothing
(14:24) Live locations, passwords, and the illusion of security
(19:39) Navigating Different communication styles
(26:22) Marriage, career choices, and being open to distance again
(30:06) Are couples who cannot do long distance fundamentally weaker?
(38:05) Marriage, surnames, and the politics of losing yourself
(47:01) How to keep the spark, when you are so far away?
(53:52) Should every relationship survive a long-distance test?
(59:29) Ambition, movement, and not fearing distance
By Love LanguageWhat does it really take to survive a long-distance relationship without losing your mind, your identity, or your will to live? In this episode, Anahita and Jesselina get honest about the emotional chaos, quiet resilience, and very specific kind of character-building that comes with loving someone across cities, countries, and time zones.
From cheating paranoia and mismatched communication styles to control, individuality, marriage, and the politics of not shrinking yourself for love, they unpack the things long-distance relationships tend to expose rather than create. This is not a neat guide, and definitely not an expert one, but it is full of lived experience, contradictions, and the occasional hard-earned insight.
Call it a dummy’s guide, call it a survival manual, call it two women oversharing for an hour, but this one is for anyone who has ever tried to hold on to love across distance and come out with themselves intact.
(00:35) We’ve been MIA, and Ana is graduating
(05:39) Why people fear long-distance relationships so much
(06:14) Is long distance really the problem, or something else?
(08:14) Why women should not give up dreams just to avoid distance
(12:16) Cheating fears, trust, and why control guarantees nothing
(14:24) Live locations, passwords, and the illusion of security
(19:39) Navigating Different communication styles
(26:22) Marriage, career choices, and being open to distance again
(30:06) Are couples who cannot do long distance fundamentally weaker?
(38:05) Marriage, surnames, and the politics of losing yourself
(47:01) How to keep the spark, when you are so far away?
(53:52) Should every relationship survive a long-distance test?
(59:29) Ambition, movement, and not fearing distance