Couples Coaching

June 15, 2026

Bids for Connection: The Small Things That Make or Break a Marriage

The strength of your marriage isn’t built on the vacations or the grand gestures. It’s built in dozens of tiny, easy-to-miss moments every single day. Here’s what the research says about those moments, and how to start turning toward your partner today.

IT’S NOT THE BIG MOMENTS. IT’S THE SMALL ONES.

When couples picture what keeps a marriage strong, they usually think big: the anniversary trips, the thoughtful gifts, the grand romantic gestures. Those things are lovely. But they’re not what determines whether a relationship thrives or quietly drifts apart.

As Dr. John Gottman puts it, “Successful long-term relationships are created through small words, small gestures, and small acts.”

That’s not just a nice sentiment. It’s one of the most consistent findings in decades of marriage research — and once you understand it, it changes how you see your everyday life together.

WHAT IS A “BID FOR CONNECTION”?

After studying thousands of couples in his research lab, Gottman found that the difference between marriages that lasted and marriages that ended came down to something almost invisible: the micro-moments. Dozens of tiny opportunities every day where one partner reaches out, and the other either turns toward them or turns away.

He called these reaches bids for connection.

A bid is any small attempt to get your partner’s attention, affection, or support. It can be as ordinary as:

  • “Look at that sunset.”
  • A sigh after a hard day.
  • “Did you see this article?”
  • Reaching for your hand in the car.

Most bids are easy to miss precisely because they’re so small. But how you respond to them, again and again, is what slowly builds (or erodes) the foundation of your relationship.

WHY THIS MATTERS MORE THAN YOU THINK

Here’s the finding that tends to stop couples in their tracks. In Gottman’s research, couples who stayed happily married turned toward each other’s bids about 86% of the time. Couples who later divorced? Only 33%.

That gap isn’t about love or commitment. Both groups loved each other. It’s about attention — whether the small reaches got met or got missed, day after day, until the missing added up.

There are really three ways to respond to a bid:

  • Turning toward — engaging, even briefly. (“Oh wow, look at those colors.”)
  • Turning away — missing or ignoring it, usually not on purpose. (Staying absorbed in your phone.)
  • Turning against — responding with irritation. (“Can’t you see I’m busy?”)

Most disconnection in marriage isn’t caused by big betrayals. It’s caused by a slow accumulation of turning away.

THE GOOD NEWS: SMALL ACTS MULTIPLY

Here’s the part I love as a counselor. Connection is contagious.

When one spouse starts paying attention to the small things, the other almost always begins doing it too- not because they were asked, but because the whole climate of the home shifts. Generosity invites generosity. You set the tone, and your partner responds to it.

This is also why “small things often” is one of the most practical ways to climb out of disconnection right now. You don’t need a weekend away or a big conversation to start. You just need to turn toward the next bid that comes your way.

SMALL THINGS TO TRY THIS WEEK

If you want a place to start, pick one or two of these and do them on purpose:

  • Reach for their hand for no reason
  • Take out the trash before they ask
  • Make their morning coffee the way they like it
  • Pack a lunch with a quick note
  • Give a six-second hug when one of you walks in the door
  • Text “thinking of you” in the middle of a workday
  • Put your phone down when they walk into the room
  • Say “thank you” for something they normally do without acknowledgment

None of these take more than a minute. That’s the whole point. Small things, often.

A QUESTION TO SIT WITH

What’s one small bid my partner has made recently that I might have missed — and how can I turn toward them today?

Sit with that one for a moment. For a lot of couples, simply noticing the bids they’ve been missing is the first turn back toward each other.

WHEN SMALL THINGS AREN’T ENOUGH

Sometimes the small things aren’t landing because there’s a deeper pattern in the way — recurring arguments, broken trust, or a distance that’s been building for a while. If that’s where you are, that’s not a failure. It usually means you’re missing some tools you simply haven’t been given yet.

That’s the work I’m most passionate about. As a Licensed Professional Counselor in Allen, TX specializing in marriage and couples counseling, I help couples across Allen, Plano, McKinney, and Frisco get unstuck and feel like a team again. If you keep landing in the same fight, you might also find my post on how to stop having the same argument over and over helpful, and you can read more about what marriage counseling actually involves here.

If this resonated and you want a simple way to actually do the small things consistently, I created a 30 Day Challenge for this exact purpose. You’ll get daily activities to complete to keep you connected without overthinking it. It’s the exact kind of structure that helps “small things often” become a habit instead of a good intention.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What are bids for connection in a relationship? A bid is any small attempt to get your partner’s attention, affection, or support — a comment, a touch, a question, a sigh. Dr. John Gottman’s research found that how consistently partners respond to each other’s bids is one of the strongest predictors of whether a marriage lasts.

What does it mean to “turn toward” your partner? Turning toward means responding to a bid with engagement, even briefly — answering the question, acknowledging the comment, returning the touch. The opposite is turning away (missing or ignoring the bid) or turning against (responding with irritation). Happy couples turn toward each other’s bids far more often than couples who drift apart.

How can I feel more connected to my spouse? Start small and consistent rather than grand and occasional. Notice the little bids your partner makes throughout the day and respond to them — a hand reached for, a thank-you offered, a phone put down. Those small, repeated moments build connection more reliably than big gestures.

When should we consider couples counseling? If the small things aren’t landing because of recurring arguments, broken trust, or growing distance, working with a couples counselor can help you understand the pattern underneath and learn tools to reconnect. Wanting help isn’t a sign your marriage is failing — it’s a sign you’re investing in it.

About the author

Catherine is a licensed therapist, coach, and advocate for all things holistic living. Her blog is designed to offer resources that people can use to go from surviving to thriving. 
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