Every week a Gen X couple sits before me with a very familiar story. They married in their twenties, got the picket fence dream, had kids, became so focused on life and parenting that their marriage fell to the wayside. Sex slipped away. They grew apart. Now, as the kids move into later high school years, they don’t recognise who they married. Sometimes, they don’t even like each other. But here’s the devastating question they face: what are they supposed to do?
The impossible math
The average Australian earns $83,000pa. It’s reported that a Sydney household needs close to $300k per year for a comfortable standard of living. Not to mention the average Sydney home now sits around $1.4mil. Wanna stay local? You’re looking at $2.5 mil for the Beaches, $4.5 mil for Manly. These aren’t statistics – they’re the bars of a financial prison. When previous generations faced relationship crossroads, they had options. Today’s couples face what I call “financial imprisonment”, staying trapped in dysfunctional relationships because separation simply isn’t economically viable.
The relationship costs of no exit
When there’s no realistic exit option, the psychological dynamics of a relationship shift dramatically. Chronic financial stress doesn’t just strain budgets; it rewires how couples communicate. Arguments become more desperate, power dynamics more toxic, resentment more entrenched. The mental health toll is enormous when partners feel like cellmates not soulmates.
Perhaps most heartbreaking is the impact on children. Kids absorb these patterns of stress, conflict, and emotional disconnection, learning love may look like two people barely tolerating each other, that homes are places where tension simmers. We’re inadvertently role-modeling relationship dysfunction because we literally cannot afford to do otherwise.
Survival strategies for the trapped
If you’re financially imprisoned in your relationship, here’s how to create emotional safety within impossible circumstances:
- Create micro-boundaries within shared space
You may share a house, but you can still have emotional privacy and personal time to decompress. - Prioritise communication over connection
You don’t have to like each other right now, but you need to function as co-parents and housemates. Focus on practical, respectful communication. - Protect the children’s emotional environment
Whatever dysfunction exists between you, shield your kids from absorbing it as normal. Consider family therapy to learn healthier conflict patterns. - Invest in your individual mental health
When you can’t change your external circumstances, focus on your internal resilience. Therapy, meditation, exercise – whatever keeps you emotionally regulated. - Plan for the long game
This financial reality may not be forever. Work together on a timeline for when separation might become feasible, even if it’s years away. Furthermore, the current economic situation may push us to reimagine how we envisage home, housing, and family, and borrow alternatives from other cultures.
The cost-of-living crisis isn’t just about housing, it’s reshaping the very nature of intimate relationships. While we can’t control Sydney’s property market, we can control how we navigate these circumstances with dignity, respect, and hope for our future selves.
Enjoy that?
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The Love Scout
Scout Smith-O’Leary is a Relationship Therapist & Educator working with singles and couples based in Manly. Visit thelovescout.com or call 0481 531 555 to book a session.