Volume LI - The Soft Collapse of Intimacy

EPISODE · Jul 13, 2025 · 5 MIN

Volume LI - The Soft Collapse of Intimacy

from The Architect Speaks · host The Architect

You did not fall out of love dramatically.There was no rupture. No single moment where everything changed and the before and after became distinguishable. Just the gradual, almost undetectable accumulation of the things that were not said. The truths that were felt and managed. The needs that were present and converted into something smaller before they were voiced — or not voiced at all, filed quietly into the growing archive of what this relationship could not hold.And now you are lying beside the person you chose and feeling something that has no clean name. Not hatred. Not indifference. Something more disorienting than either. The presence of someone who was once home and the absence of the feeling of home. The proximity without the contact. The shared life without the shared interior. The performance of a closeness that you remember being real and can no longer fully locate.This is not a failure of love. It is the cost of withheld truth, compounded over time.Intimacy is not built through shared experience alone. It is built through shared reality — the ongoing, vulnerable, often inconvenient practice of letting another person know what is actually happening inside you. Not the curated version. Not the managed presentation of your inner life that preserves the peace and maintains the image of the partnership you both agreed to perform. The real one. The one with its uncertainty and its need and its grief and its hunger and all the particular, inconvenient textures of a self that is alive and therefore constantly in motion.But settled and hollow are not the same thing. And the body knows the difference even when the mind has agreed to call them equal.The loneliness of this particular experience is among the most isolating available to a human being. Because it carries no social permission to grieve. The relationship is intact. The person is present. The structure of the life you built together is functioning. And you are alone in it in a way that you cannot fully explain and are therefore not entirely sure you are allowed to feel.The aloneness beside someone you once called home is real. The grief of the connection you remember and can no longer reach is real. The exhaustion of performing love in the silence where love used to be spoken is real. And the longing — the specific, persistent, quietly devastating longing for real contact with the person who is right there — is not evidence that something is wrong with you. It is evidence that you have not stopped wanting what intimacy was always supposed to offer.That wanting is the beginning. Not the end.Because the distance between two people who never left is not permanent. It is the accumulated distance of everything that was not said — and what is accumulated can, with the willingness of both, be addressed. Not through the dramatic conversation that resolves everything in a single evening. Through the smaller, more demanding, more continuous practice of returning to honesty. Of voicing the thing instead of managing it. Of letting yourself be known again, imperfectly and at real cost to the comfort of the familiar silence, in the presence of the person you chose.The truth that created the distance is also the truth that can close it. But only if it is spoken.Not performed. Not strategised. Spoken — from the part of you that has been waiting, in the silence, for permission to be real.This is the recognition you may have never been given:The longing you feel is not a problem to be solved. It is a direction to follow.Follow it back toward the truth. That is where the connection is waiting.To begin the work, download your free books — Before Approaching the Threshold and On Voice, Integrity and the Masculine Frame here: https://www.codexofthearchitect.com/libraryAnd sign up to The Weekly Cut — One Sentence, Once a week, $0.99c a week … to show you where you need to look: https://t.me/theweeklycut_bot

NOW PLAYING

Volume LI - The Soft Collapse of Intimacy

0:00 5:54

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

No similar episodes found.

MG Show MG Show The MG Show, hosted by Jeffrey Pedersen and Shannon Townsend, is a leading alternative media platform dedicated to uncovering the truth behind today’s most pressing political issues. Launched in 2019, the show has grown exponentially, offering unfiltered insights, comprehensive research, and real-time analysis. With a commitment to independent journalism and factual integrity, the MG Show empowers its audience with knowledge and encourages active participation in the political discourse. The Game Radio Popolare Soldi, lavoro, avidità, disoccupazioni: il grande gioco dell’economia smontato ogni giorno da Raffaele Liguori. Photo Breakdown Scott Wyden Kivowitz Photo Breakdown is a podcast in which we explore the world of photography with a trusted guide, host Scott Wyden Kivowitz. His expertise and passion bring the industry to life as we explore the stories, trends, and ideas shaping it today. Join us as we dissect everything from incredible photographs and creative techniques to the latest gear releases and hot topics in the photography community.In each episode, we break down what’s happening behind the scenes - whether it’s making a powerful image, a candid discussion on industry trends, or a reflection on the tools and technology changing how we make photographs. You’ll get insights, expert opinions, and a fresh perspective on what’s top of mind for photographers right now.Anticipate short, engaging episodes brimming with ideas and inspiration. Be part of the conversation by sharing your thoughts, voice notes, and comments. Your participation is what makes our community vibrant and dynamic.It’s more than just photography - everyth The Last Outlaws Impact Studios at UTS In a History Lab season like no other, we're pulling on the threads of one of Australia's great misunderstood histories, moving beyond the myths to learn what the Aboriginal brothers Jimmy and Joe Governor faced in both life and death.Australia's budding Federation is the background setting to this remarkable story, that sees the Governor brothers tied to the inauguration of a 'new' nation and Australia's dark history of frontier violence, racial injustice and the global trade and defilement of Aboriginal ancestral remains. This Impact Studios production is a collaboration with the Governor family, UTS Faculty of Law and Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research.The Last Outlaws teamKatherine Biber - UTS Law Professor and Chief InvestigatorAunty Loretta Parsley - Great-granddaughter of Jimmy Governor and the Governor Family Historian Leroy Parsons - Governor descendant, Narrator and Co-WriterKaitlyn Sawrey - Host, Writer and Senior ProducerFrank Lopez - Writer,
URL copied to clipboard!