Below are 5 ways to improving intimacy for couples, with fun variations to keep them fresh (and awkward in the best way). These aren’t your typical checklist activities. They’re experiences designed to help partners feel seen, soften defenses, and build relational glue.
Long-term relationships aren’t built on grand gestures. They’re crafted in the quiet, quirky, and beautifully mundane moments couples share when no one else is watching. Think forehead breathing while your toddler yells about string cheese in the background. Or silent eye contact that’s one part vulnerable, one part “why are your pupils so big right now?”
Sit face-to-face, knees touching, and gaze into each other’s eyes for 3–5 minutes. Blink all you want! This isn’t a medieval torture test. It’s a practice in being truly present.
Try These Tweaks:
Why It Works:
This practice improves intimacy by creating emotional attunement and reinforces the belief: “You matter, and I see
you.” Shared rituals like this foster trust and deepen a couple’s sense of safety.
Deepens mutual attunement and emotional safety
Creates space for being “seen” beyond the surface
Builds shared rituals that foster meaningful presence
Laughter releases oxytocin, lowers cortisol, and reminds couples that life isn’t always about conflict resolution schedules or who left the sponge soaking.
Playful Variations:
Benefits:
Humor gives couples shared language and emotional regulation tools. It’s also a magical
pressure release valve when stress is high.
Sparks oxytocin and playful bonding
Acts as relational “glue” during tough times
Builds a shared emotional language beyond words
Quietly observe your partner and share three things that make you swoon. The more specific and random, the better.
Remixes to Try:
Impact:
Appreciation combats resentment, increases relational satisfaction, and creates micro-moments of joy that buffer conflict.
One partner speaks uninterrupted for up to five minutes. The other listens. No fixing, no rebuttals—just curious presence.
Creative Spins:
Therapeutic Effect:
Nonverbal connection is underrated. Sit face-to-face, knees touching, and gaze into each
other’s eyes for 3–5 minutes. Initiate touch and guide your partner to affirm what feels good. Try
silent cuddles, hand-holding, or head-on-chest breathing. Just exist together.
Variations:
Benefits:
Co-regulation through touch creates embodied memories of safety. For many couples, improving intimacy isn’t always about physical contact. Yet when language feels limited, the body often offers a pathway back to closeness.
Enhances co-regulation and emotional grounding
Builds trust through sensory presence
Creates somatic memories of comfort and safety
Couples who intentionally cultivate positive experiences:
Whether it’s a funny moment, a silent gaze, or a weird metaphor that somehow just works, intimacy rituals remind partners: We’ve chosen each other, and we’re still choosing.
Partners take turns reminiscing about a shared positive memory. It can be a trip, a moment of
quiet support, or the time you couldn’t stop laughing at something ridiculous. The goal is to
relive and reflect on experiences that remind each other of the strength, joy, and tenderness in
the relationship.
Variations:
Benefits:
Reinforces emotional connection by celebrating shared meaning and reminding partners of their
relational foundation.
Still feeling stuck or need more support to improving intimacy as a couple? In my therapy practice, here in Pleasanton, CA, I guide couples toward improving intimacy in a way that creates emotional safety, shared meaning, and joy.
Alanna Esquejo, LMFT is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist based in Pleasanton, CA, offering in‑person sessions locally and telehealth across California. She trained Gottman Method Couples Therapy, level 2 and ADHD Certified Clinical Service Provider. She specializes in trauma‑informed, neurodivergent‑affirming care for couples and professionals, blending warmth, humor, and direct guidance to help clients move from survival mode to intentional living.
September 11, 2025
74 Neal St #202 Pleasanton, CA 94566
esquejo.am@gmail.com
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