Every close relationship contains tension. We want people near us, but we also want room to breathe. We want honesty, but we still need privacy. We appreciate familiar routines, yet we sometimes long for something new.
These desires may appear contradictory, but they are not necessarily signs that a relationship is unhealthy. They are part of what it means to relate to another person.
Consider Kokou and Mara, who had been married for twelve years. They loved spending time together, but they did not always agree on how much togetherness was enough.
Kokou enjoyed quiet evenings at home. After a demanding week, he wanted to read, work in the garage, or take a walk by himself. Mara preferred using their free time to talk, visit friends, or plan something they could enjoy together.
One Saturday morning, Mara suggested a day trip. Kokou hesitated and said he had hoped for a quiet day at home.
Mara heard, “I do not want to spend time with you.”
Kokou meant, “I need some time to recover.”
A small disagreement began to grow because each person interpreted the other’s need as a rejection of their own. Yet neither desire was unreasonable. Mara wanted connection. Kokou wanted independence. The problem was not that one person was right and the other was wrong. The problem was that they had not learned to talk about the tension between two legitimate needs.
That is the heart of relational dialectics theory.
Relationships are filled with competing needs
Relational dialectics theory was formally developed by communication scholars Leslie Baxter and Barbara Montgomery. Their 1996 book, Relating: Dialogues and Dialectics, drew on Mikhail Bakhtin’s ideas about dialogue and examined how relationships are shaped through competing meanings and desires.
The theory challenges the idea that healthy relationships move in a straight line toward complete closeness, openness, and certainty. Instead, relationships continually change as people negotiate different needs.
Baxter’s research identified recurring contradictions in relationship development, including openness and closedness, autonomy and connection, and predictability and novelty. These contradictions may become more or less noticeable during different stages of a relationship.
In everyday language, people often want both sides.
They want to belong without losing themselves. They want to be known without revealing everything. They want stability without becoming bored.
The tension comes from trying to honor both needs.
Closeness and independence
After their disagreement, Kokou and Mara made the mistake many people make. They treated the situation as a choice between closeness and independence.
Mara believed that if Kokou valued the relationship, he should want to spend the day with her. Kokou believed that if Mara respected him, she should understand his need for time alone.
Both began defending their own side rather than listening for the need beneath the other person’s position.
Later that evening, the conversation changed.
Kokou said, “When I ask for time alone, I am not trying to get away from you. Quiet helps me recover so I can be more present.”
Mara replied, “When we have free time and you immediately choose something alone, I start wondering whether spending time with me still matters to you.”
Now they were no longer arguing about a day trip. They were talking about what the situation meant.
Kokou needed restoration. Mara needed reassurance.
Once the real needs became visible, they found a better answer. They spent the morning separately and went out for dinner that evening. Neither person received everything exactly as first requested, but both needs were recognized.
Relational dialectics does not promise a perfect balance. It teaches people to stop treating every tension as a battle that one side must win.
Honesty and privacy
Another common contradiction is the desire for openness alongside the need for privacy.
People often say that healthy relationships require complete honesty. Honesty matters, but that does not mean every thought must be spoken immediately or every private experience must be shared with everyone.
A person may need time to understand an emotion before discussing it. A friend may want to keep part of a family matter confidential. An employee may value openness with coworkers while still protecting sensitive information.
Privacy does not always mean secrecy. Sometimes it means having healthy boundaries.
Problems arise when one person interprets privacy as rejection or when privacy becomes a way to avoid necessary conversations. The challenge is to discuss what openness should look like within that particular relationship.
A useful question might be, “What do we owe each other the honesty to discuss, and what can remain personal?”
That question does not eliminate the contradiction, but it helps people manage it with respect.
Stability and change
People also want relationships to feel dependable without becoming stale.
Kokou and Mara valued familiar traditions. They had favorite restaurants, weekend routines, and holiday habits. Those patterns gave their relationship stability.
But too much predictability began to feel repetitive. Mara wanted new experiences, while Kokou valued knowing what to expect.
Again, neither desire was wrong.
Stability creates security. Change creates growth and renewed interest. A relationship often needs both.
They began alternating familiar plans with new ones. One weekend might include their usual breakfast spot. The next might involve visiting somewhere unfamiliar.
The goal was not to find a permanent formula. Their needs would continue changing. The important thing was learning to notice and discuss the tension before it turned into resentment.
How to use this theory in real life
The first step is to name both sides of the contradiction.
Instead of saying, “You are too distant,” try, “I think we are trying to balance closeness and personal space differently.”
Instead of saying, “You never tell me anything,” try, “I want openness between us, but I also understand that you may need time before talking.”
Naming both needs changes the conversation. It makes room for complexity instead of forcing one person into the role of the problem.
The second step is to avoid turning preferences into proof of love or loyalty. Wanting time alone does not automatically mean someone cares less. Wanting more connection does not automatically mean someone is controlling. Wanting routine does not mean someone lacks imagination, and wanting change does not mean someone is dissatisfied.
The third step is to negotiate for the current season rather than searching for a permanent solution. Relationships change as work, health, family responsibilities, and personal needs change. An agreement that worked last year may need to be discussed again.
Finally, listen for the need underneath the request. People often argue about plans, schedules, phone calls, money, or household routines when the deeper issue is reassurance, respect, freedom, security, or belonging.
Watch out for this
Relational dialectics theory should not be used to excuse harmful behavior. Abuse, manipulation, dishonesty, and repeated disrespect are not ordinary contradictions that people simply need to accept.
The theory is most useful when two legitimate needs compete within a relationship. It helps explain why a person can love someone and still need space, value honesty and still need privacy, or appreciate stability and still desire change.
It also reminds us that communication does not permanently remove every contradiction. Relationships remain dynamic because people continue growing.
One thing to remember
Healthy relationships do not eliminate tension. They create better ways to talk about it.
Kokou and Mara did not solve the need for closeness and independence once and for all. They learned to stop treating those needs as evidence that something was wrong.
The next time two valid desires seem to collide, resist the urge to ask, “Which one of us is right?”
A better question may be, “How can we honor what matters to both of us?”
Reflection question
What recurring tension in one of your relationships might become easier to manage if you stopped treating it as a problem that one person must win?





