Ep. 158: Genee Francis on staying connected in relationships.
Two people can sit at the same table, raise the same kids, and still slowly drift apart.
Schedules replace conversations. Logistics replace intimacy. And somewhere along the way, two people stop feeling seen.
In this episode of the Mercycast, I talk with Genee Francis, Assistant Director for Content and Programming at WinShape Marriage. We discuss marriage, emotional connection, faith, and how couples can quietly drift apart over time.
Genee offers useful advice from her years of helping couples reconnect before distance turns into disconnection. We discuss building healthy marriages through regular connection, emotional safety, good communication, identity, sacrifice, and the idea that consistency matters more than perfection.
One idea stood out to me in the course of our conversation: drifting apart can happen gradually, but it does not have to last forever.
That matters because many couples assume distance means failure. Often, it simply means the relationship needs intentional care again.
Key Takeaways
Healthy marriages require intentional connection.
Emotional safety creates deeper communication.
Shared rhythms help couples stay current with each other.
You can grow individually without growing apart.
Drift happens slowly, but reconnection is possible.
Covenant love calls for sacrifice, grace, and consistency.
Memorable Quotes
“You can still be you in marriage.”
“The marital drift is a progressive loss of connection, but it is not permanent.”
“Marriage is a selfless journey.”
“United goals and vision help navigate tension.”
Healthy marriages do not happen by accident.
They are built on honesty, grace, and the choice to keep showing up for each other.
If you’ve ever felt cut off, unseen, or unsure how to reconnect with your spouse, this conversation will encourage you.
Please subscribe to the Mercycast, leave a review, and share this episode with anyone who could use some hope for their marriage, faith, or relationships.
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For more conversations like this one, check out my book, Vulnerable: Rethinking Human Trafficking.