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Research suggests that one of the behavioral indicators of where someone’s emotional energy is directed is how much effort they put into their appearance for a specific person. So what does it mean when you realize you’ve been applying lipstick in a parking lot for a colleague you see three times a week, while your husband gets the version of you who hasn’t looked in a mirror since brushing her teeth at 6:45 a.m.?
I know what it means. And the fact that I knew before I could even finish the thought is exactly why I ended the coffee routine that same week.
The moment that was louder than it should have been
I’d been meeting a male colleague for coffee about twice a week for roughly four months. We worked in adjacent departments. The routine started organically, the way these things always do: a shared complaint about a meeting, a discovery that we both liked the same café two blocks from the office, an unspoken agreement that 10:15 on Tuesdays and Thursdays worked for both of us. Nothing happened. I want to be extremely clear about that, because I think the clarity matters, and also because “nothing happened” is often the most dangerous sentence in this particular story.
The lipstick moment was a Thursday. I was sitting in my car, engine off, and I caught my reflection reaching into my bag for a tube of muted rose that I hadn’t worn in weeks. My hand was already twisting the cap. And then I stopped, because a question arrived that I couldn’t unhear: When was the last time you did this before walking into your own house?
I sat there for probably two minutes. The answer wasn’t complicated. I just didn’t want to look at it.
What grooming patterns actually reveal
There’s a reason therapists pay attention to where people direct their effort. Studies suggest that unconscious behavioral shifts, the kind you don’t plan or announce, are often signals of where emotional energy is flowing. We perform for the people who hold our attention. We prepare for the encounters that carry charge. And when I was honest with myself, the lipstick was a performance. A small one. Barely noticeable. But performances don’t need to be large to be telling.
I’ve written before about the gap between who we are at work and who we actually are, and how that gap can become so expensive to maintain that people withdraw entirely. But there’s a related phenomenon that gets far less discussion: the gap between who we are for a specific person outside our primary relationship and who we’ve become inside it. The withdrawal happens quietly. You stop reaching for the lipstick at home not because you’ve made a decision, but because no part of you is activated enough to bother.
The colleague hadn’t done anything wrong. He was funny, attentive, and asked questions about my work that felt genuinely curious rather than performative. He remembered things I’d said weeks earlier. He made me feel like the version of myself I used to enjoy being. And that was the whole problem.

The economy of attention in long relationships
When I talked to a therapist I’d previously interviewed for a different piece, she said something that stuck with me: emotional affairs often begin not with attraction, but with attention. Someone begins receiving a quality of presence that has quietly drained from the primary relationship, and the body responds before the mind catches up.
That word, presence, is the one I keep returning to. Because what I was giving my colleague during those coffee sessions was a kind of focused, undivided attention that I genuinely could not remember offering my husband in recent memory. Not because I don’t love my husband. I do. But love, after enough years, can become a series of logistics. Who’s handling the car insurance renewal. Whether we need to call the plumber about the leak that’s been dripping since January. The mental load of a shared life is real and heavy, and somewhere inside that weight, the part of me that used to get dressed with intention for this person had gone dormant.
I think about the couples who slowly become strangers who share a thermostat, and I understand now how that drift happens. The drift doesn’t announce itself. There’s no dramatic argument, no betrayal, no moment of rupture. There’s just a slow redistribution of where your best energy goes. And by the time you notice, you’ve been redirecting it for months.
Why “nothing happened” is the wrong metric
Our culture has a very binary understanding of infidelity. Something either happened or it didn’t. Physical lines were either crossed or they weren’t. And within that binary, I was safe. I could have continued the coffee routine indefinitely and told myself, with complete technical accuracy, that I had done nothing wrong.
But the lipstick told a different story. The lipstick said: your body is preparing for someone. Your nervous system has identified a person who matters enough to perform for. And that preparation, that quiet activation, was happening for a man who was not the person I’d built my life with.
I grew up watching my parents’ marriage dissolve. They divorced when I was twelve, and one of the things I absorbed from that experience, probably too young and too deeply, was a hypervigilance about the space between what people say and what they actually do. My mother would tell us everything was fine while her jaw was clenched so tight I could see the muscles working. My father would say he was happy while spending every evening in a room by himself. I became fluent in the language of discrepancy. And now, sitting in my car with a tube of lipstick in my hand, I was living one.
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The conversation I had with myself instead
I didn’t tell my colleague why I stopped suggesting coffee. I just let the routine dissolve. A missed week, then another, then a vague “things are busy” that he accepted without pushing. He probably assumed work had shifted. Maybe he sensed something. I don’t know, and I’ve decided that his interpretation is not my responsibility to manage. (This from someone who spent her entire twenties managing everyone’s interpretation of everything.)
The harder conversation was internal. I had to sit with the fact that I’d allowed my marriage to become the place where I showed up with the least effort, the least curiosity, the least version of myself. My husband got the exhausted, end-of-day, sweatpants-and-logistics person. My colleague got the woman who checked her reflection, who laughed with her whole face, who asked follow-up questions because she was genuinely engaged rather than mentally drafting a grocery list.
That disparity is common. I know that. Therapists I’ve interviewed over the years have told me that a frequent complaint in couples therapy is some version of: “You give your best self to everyone else, and I get what’s left.” But knowing it’s common didn’t make it less painful to recognize in my own behavior. If anything, the commonality made it worse. Because it meant I’d been sleepwalking into a pattern that millions of people sleepwalk into, and the only thing that woke me up was a tube of lipstick and a parking lot.
What I’m doing with what I found
I don’t have a tidy resolution here. I haven’t “fixed” my marriage in the three months since I stopped the coffee routine. My husband and I haven’t had some cinematic breakthrough where we fell back in love over a candlelit dinner. What’s happened is smaller and less satisfying than that: I’ve started paying attention to where my effort goes.
Some days that looks like putting on something other than my default outfit before he gets home. Some days it looks like asking him a real question about his day and then actually listening to the answer instead of half-listening while scrolling. Some days, honestly, it looks like nothing, because I’m tired and the plumber still hasn’t fixed the leak and the car insurance is due. But the awareness is there now. The lipstick cracked something open.
I think about what researchers studying resistance and rupture-repair in relationships describe: the idea that the break, the moment of disruption, is actually where the real work begins. The rupture itself can become the catalyst for something more honest than what existed before it. But only if you catch it. Only if you’re willing to look at what your own hands are doing and ask why.
I’ve explored before how people panic when asked what they’d do with unstructured time, and I think something similar happens in long relationships. We stop asking ourselves what we actually want from the person beside us, because the question itself is frightening. What if the answer reveals how much has atrophied? What if the distance is larger than we can close?
I don’t know yet. But I know I’d rather measure the distance honestly than keep applying lipstick in the wrong parking lot.
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