When I was single, I had this mental checklist of what my ideal relationship would look like. Spontaneous weekend trips, deep philosophical conversations until 3 AM, someone who’d match my independent streak perfectly, and zero drama whatsoever.
Then I actually got into a relationship. And you know what? Most of those things I thought were dealbreakers turned out to be completely irrelevant.
After years of dating, getting married to my Vietnamese wife, and now navigating early parenthood, I’ve realized that what single people think they want and what actually makes a relationship work are often worlds apart.
The funny thing is, we get so caught up in these idealized versions of relationships that we miss what really matters. We chase the Instagram-worthy moments while overlooking the foundation that actually makes couples last.
Today, I’m sharing seven things that seem incredibly important when you’re single but lose their shine once you’re actually in a committed relationship. And trust me, I’ve been guilty of valuing every single one of these.
1. Complete independence
Remember when maintaining your independence felt like the most important thing in the world? I used to pride myself on needing absolutely no one. My own schedule, my own space, my own decisions.
But here’s what nobody tells you: real relationships require interdependence, not independence.
When you’re with someone, your lives naturally intertwine. You check in before making plans. You consider their feelings when making decisions. You actually want to include them in your day-to-day life.
At first, this felt suffocating to me. But then I realized something crucial. Interdependence doesn’t mean losing yourself. It means building something together that’s stronger than what either of you could create alone.
The irony? The more I learned to lean on my partner and let her lean on me, the more secure and confident I became. Turns out, having someone genuinely in your corner makes you braver, not weaker.
2. Having all the same interests
I used to think my perfect partner would love everything I loved. Running, Buddhism, writing, the whole package.
But when I met my wife in Vietnam, we had surprisingly few hobbies in common. She wasn’t into meditation or long-distance running. I wasn’t particularly interested in her passion for cooking or K-dramas.
You know what though? It didn’t matter one bit.
What actually matters is respecting each other’s interests and giving each other space to pursue them. She doesn’t need to join my morning runs. I don’t need to watch every show she loves. We support each other’s passions without needing to share all of them.
In my book Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego, I write about the importance of maintaining individual identity within relationships. Having separate interests actually keeps things interesting. It gives you something new to talk about, maintains mystery, and prevents that suffocating feeling of being joined at the hip.
3. Zero conflict
This one makes me laugh now. I genuinely thought healthy relationships meant never fighting.
Wrong. So incredibly wrong.
Conflict is inevitable when two people with different backgrounds, perspectives, and ways of doing things try to build a life together. The question isn’t whether you’ll disagree, but how you handle those disagreements.
My wife and I have had our share of arguments. Cultural differences, communication styles, parenting approaches – we’ve navigated it all. But these conflicts have actually strengthened our relationship because we’ve learned to fight fair.
We don’t attack each other’s character. We focus on the issue at hand. We take breaks when things get heated. And most importantly, we always come back to the conversation with the goal of understanding, not winning.
The couples I know who “never fight” often have the most problems. They’re usually avoiding difficult conversations, letting resentment build, or one person is constantly sacrificing their needs to keep the peace.
4. Constant excitement and adventure
Singles often dream of relationships filled with endless adventures. Spontaneous road trips, trying new restaurants every week, keeping that spark alive with constant novelty.
But real life? It’s picking up groceries together. It’s folding laundry while chatting about your day. It’s sitting in comfortable silence while you both scroll your phones.
And here’s the thing: these mundane moments are where real intimacy grows.
Those small, seemingly boring moments of early parenthood with my wife have been far more meaningful than any grand adventure we took while dating. Watching her rock our child to sleep or sharing a quick coffee before the chaos of the day begins – this is where the magic actually happens.
Adventure is fun, don’t get me wrong. But if your relationship needs constant excitement to feel fulfilling, you’re missing the deeper connection that comes from simply existing together in everyday life.
5. A partner who completes you
“You complete me” might be romantic movie gold, but it’s relationship poison in real life.
Nobody can complete you because you’re not incomplete. You’re a whole person looking for another whole person to share your life with.
When I was single, I thought I needed someone to fill all my gaps. Someone more organized to balance my chaos, someone more social to drag me out of my hermit tendencies.
But relationships aren’t about finding your missing piece. They’re about two complete people choosing to build something together.
My wife doesn’t complete me. She complements me. There’s a huge difference. She brings her own strengths, perspectives, and experiences to our relationship. Together, we’re not filling each other’s voids but creating something entirely new.
6. Perfect timing
How many times have you heard someone say they’re waiting for the “right time” to start dating? When their career is settled, when they’ve figured themselves out, when they’ve healed from past relationships?
Here’s the truth: there’s no perfect time to fall in love.
I moved to Vietnam for work, not love. The timing was terrible for a relationship. Different country, cultural barriers, uncertainty about the future. But life doesn’t wait for your perfect timeline.
In Buddhism, there’s a concept of impermanence that I explore in Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego. Everything is constantly changing, including you. If you wait until you’re “ready,” you’ll wait forever because you’re always evolving.
The right person at the “wrong” time is still the right person. You figure it out together. That’s what partnership means.
7. Instant chemistry and passion
We’re fed this narrative that real love means instant fireworks. That stomach-dropping, can’t-eat, can’t-sleep infatuation that consumes everything.
But sustainable love? It often starts much quieter.
My relationship didn’t begin with dramatic passion. It grew slowly, built on friendship, mutual respect, and gradually deepening affection. The fireworks came later, after we’d built a foundation of trust and genuine connection.
That intense early passion is actually just your brain on a cocktail of dopamine and norepinephrine. It literally can’t last. What remains when those chemicals calm down is what actually matters: genuine compatibility, shared values, and the choice to keep choosing each other.
Some of the strongest couples I know started as friends. No dramatic first meeting, no love at first sight. Just two people who gradually realized they’d rather navigate life together than apart.
Final words
Looking back at my single days, I realize I was focused on all the wrong things. I wanted the highlight reel, the perfect match, the relationship that would never challenge or change me.
What I actually needed was someone willing to build an imperfect but real life with me. Someone who’d sit with me through the mundane Tuesday evenings and occasional conflicts. Someone who had their own life but chose to intertwine it with mine.
The truth is, relationship quality really is the biggest predictor of life satisfaction. But that quality doesn’t come from checking boxes on some idealized list. It comes from communication, commitment, and the courage to be vulnerable with another person.
So if you’re single and reading this, maybe it’s time to revise that mental checklist. Focus less on finding someone who meets all your criteria and more on finding someone you can grow with. Because the things that actually matter in relationships are usually nothing like what you imagined they’d be.
If Your Soul Took Animal Form, What Would It Be?
Every wild soul archetype reflects a different way of sensing, choosing, and moving through life.
This 9-question quiz reveals the power animal that mirrors your energy right now and what it says about your natural rhythm.
✨ Instant results. Guided by shaman Rudá Iandê’s teachings.
Did you like my article? Like me on Facebook to see more articles like this in your feed.





