From defining the relationship to navigating money differences, growing apart, or ending things with care — practice the conversations that most couples have too late, too messily, or not at all.
Skills you'll build
Your learning path
You have been seeing each other for three months. Nobody has named it yet. Tonight is the night someone does — and it might be you.
Three months of dates. Three months of careful ambiguity. Tonight you're choosing the restaurant, the moment, the opening line — because someone has to stop calling this 'hanging out.'
You take a breath and say the thing. Not the casual version. Not the test-balloon version. The real one — what you feel, what you want — knowing full well they might not say it back.
They didn't say what you expected. Not better, not worse — just different. Your rehearsed response is useless. Now you're navigating in real time with your heart rate at 140.
You named it. It's real now. The butterflies and the safety nets are both gone — replaced by something more honest and more terrifying: an actual relationship with actual stakes.
You love each other. Your financial lives are completely different. Practice the conversation most couples have too late.
You love each other. You also have no idea what's in their bank account, what they owe, or what they think a 'reasonable' grocery bill looks like. Tonight, the money conversation starts — without starting a fight.
They spend freely. You save compulsively. Neither of you is wrong — but the gap between your financial instincts is starting to feel personal, and it shouldn't.
The way you handle money didn't start with you. It started with a parent who hid bills, or one who counted every rupee out loud. Those stories are running the show — and you haven't named them yet.
Love doesn't need a spreadsheet. But your shared future does. You're building a money system together — joint accounts, spending boundaries, shared goals — that neither of you will resent.
You are both different people than when you started. The relationship hasn't caught up. Have the conversation before you reach the point of no return.
You used to finish each other's sentences. Now you finish dinner in silence. Something shifted — not dramatically, not with a fight — just slowly enough that you almost didn't notice.
There's a thing you haven't said. It's been sitting in your chest for months, compounding interest. Every time you swallow it, it gets heavier — and the distance between you grows by exactly that weight.
You both still care. That's not the question. The question is whether you can find the thread that connects who you were to who you've become — before the distance becomes permanent.
Stay together and change. Stay together and don't. Or let go. Every option costs something. The only thing more expensive than choosing is waiting.
You know it is over. They might not. There is no good way to do this — but there is a better way. One that honors what you had.
You've known for weeks. Maybe months. The relationship is over — but you keep waking up next to them, performing normalcy, waiting for a certainty that already arrived.
You sit them down. The words you rehearsed evaporate. What comes out is messier and more honest — and their face is doing the thing you were afraid of.
They're angry. Or crying. Or terrifyingly calm. Your job right now isn't to make them feel better — it's to hold steady through their reaction without retreating into false hope.
It's done. The door closed. Closure isn't a conversation — it's the months after, the new silence, the slow process of becoming a person who used to be in this relationship.
Earn your certificate
Romantic Communication
Proof of practice — not just completion
Complete all 16 practice scenarios and pass the final Grand Trial to earn a verified Romantic Communication certificate — proof of practice, not just completion.
What you'll demonstrate
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