Let's Build a Future (No, Really, Let's Get a Corkboard)
When was the last time you and your partner talked about what you actually want from life—not next week, or next year, but the big picture?
When was the last time you and your partner talked about what you actually want from life—not next week, or next year, but the big picture?
Not logistics (we should probably refinance the mortgage). Not immediate plans (let's go to Japan next summer). The deep stuff. What kind of life are you trying to build together? What matters most? Where do you want to be in ten years, twenty, fifty?
For a lot of couples, the answer is: we haven't talked about it in ages. Life gets busy. You focus on the immediate. The big vision fades into the background.
But here's the thing: if you're not rowing in the same direction, you're working against each other. Alignment on the big stuff makes everything easier.
Why vision matters
Day-to-day decisions make more sense when they connect to a larger picture. Should we buy this house? Depends on what you're trying to build. Should I take this job? Depends on what we're prioritising. Should we have kids / move overseas / change careers? Depends on what life you want.
Without a shared vision, every big decision becomes a standalone negotiation. With one, decisions flow from something you've already agreed on.
How to have the conversation
This isn't a one-off chat. It's an ongoing exploration—something you revisit as you grow and change. But you have to start somewhere.
Pick a time. Don't spring it mid-dinner. Set aside a few hours when you're both relaxed and can think expansively. A weekend morning. A long walk. A drive.
Dream first, practicality later. Start with "what do you want?" not "what can we do?" The constraints come later; first, get clear on the desires.
Cover the big domains. Where do you want to live? What role does work play? Family? Travel? Community? Money? Health? Freedom vs security? You don't need to nail down answers—just understand each other's priorities.
Look for alignment and tension. You won't agree on everything. That's fine. What matters is knowing where you align (build on that) and where you diverge (work on that).
Make it tangible
Abstract vision is nice; tangible goals are better. Once you've talked about what you want, translate it into something concrete.
Some couples make a literal vision board—images, words, goals pinned to a corkboard somewhere visible. Sounds cheesy. Works surprisingly well. Seeing your shared vision daily keeps it alive.
Others keep a "dreams document"—a shared file where you collect ideas, possibilities, things you want to do and be. You add to it over time, review it periodically, and refer to it when making decisions.
The format matters less than the act of making the intangible tangible.
Revisit and revise
People change. What you wanted at 25 might not be what you want at 35 or 45. The vision isn't static—it evolves as you do.
Build in periodic reviews. Annually, at least. Where are we on the things we said we wanted? Has anything shifted? Is our direction still right?
This keeps the vision alive rather than letting it become a dusty relic from a conversation you had years ago.
The payoff
Couples who share a clear vision feel like partners in the truest sense—collaborators building something together. It makes the daily grind feel purposeful. It makes sacrifice meaningful. It makes decisions easier because you know what you're working toward.
So: what are you building? And when's the last time you talked about it?
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