Geordie Lass & Doc Sass copertina

Geordie Lass & Doc Sass

Geordie Lass & Doc Sass

Di: Dr. Anna Stratis & Sara Liddle
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A proposito di questo titolo

Welcome to Geordie Lass & Doc Sass, the relationship podcast hosted by relationship coaches Sara Liddle and Anna Stratis.

Together, we explore the real, honest experiences that shape our relationships, from emotional disconnection and communication struggles to intimacy, trust, and the quiet questions many people carry but rarely say out loud.

Each episode brings thoughtful conversation, practical insight, and a deeper understanding of what it means to build, maintain, and sometimes repair a relationship over time.

Whether things feel strong, uncertain, or somewhere in between, this podcast offers space to reflect and see your relationship more clearly.

If any of these conversations feels familiar, you can begin with a private Relationship Reset Review. This is a gentle, personal reflection designed to help you understand what’s been happening and what might need attention next.

Start your Relationship Reset Review here

Copyright 2020 All rights reserved.
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  • 219. Does Technology Improve Your Relationship or Hinder It?
    Apr 25 2026

    This week on Geordie Lass & Doc Sass, we’re chatting dating fatigue, AI partners, phone addiction, and whether technology is quietly getting in the way of the relationships we say matter most.

    From the rise of the “dating recession” to doom-scrolling our evenings away, we unpack how modern life is reshaping connection, intimacy, and the way we show up for each other.

    Plus, we answer a listener question about what to do when one partner needs more space than the other, and why that dynamic can feel so painful.

    Love Desk:

    This week we discuss the rise of the dating recession and why fewer young adults are actively dating despite many saying they still want relationships.

    We explore:

    • Why dating app fatigue may be putting people off romance

    • The confidence crisis affecting modern dating

    • Whether technology is making connection easier or harder

    • Why more people seem to be turning to AI companionship

    • Why “putting yourself out there” may matter more than ever

    Hot Topic: Does Technology Improve Your Relationship or Hinder It?

    Technology should make life easier… but is it actually making us less connected?

    We unpack:

    • How endless notifications and multiple messaging platforms create communication overload

    • Why social media and scrolling can quietly steal presence from your relationship

    • The addictive nature of phones and the “autopilot scroll” many of us fall into

    • Why being physically present isn’t the same as being emotionally present

    • How technology can become a wedge between partners without us noticing

    • The challenge of screen time awareness and reclaiming time for your relationship

    Challenge for listeners:

    Check your weekly screen time report and ask yourself, if I put just some of that time back into my relationship, what would change?

    Listener Question:

    “My partner says they need more space than I do. I don’t want to smother them, but it makes me feel rejected. How do we balance this?”

    A deeply relatable question, and one many couples quietly struggle with.

    We discuss:

    • Why needing different amounts of space is common in relationships

    • How attachment styles can influence this dynamic

    • Why your partner needing space does not automatically mean rejection

    • The stories we tell ourselves when someone asks for distance

    • How insecurity and fear of abandonment can shape our reactions

    • Why understanding your own triggers matters before addressing the issue together

    • How to explore what “healthy space” looks like for each partner

    • When compromise is possible, and when deeper incompatibility may be present

    Final Thoughts

    Relationships in 2026 come with challenges previous generations never had to navigate.

    From dating apps to AI partners to social media addiction, technology is changing how we connect, communicate, and show up for one another.

    But the heart of the conversation remains the same:

    Connection requires presence.

    And presence is something we have to choose, intentionally.

    Till Next Time…

    Thanks for listening to another episode of Geordie Lass & Doc Sass.

    If this episode resonated, please share it with someone who needs to hear it, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode.

    Get in Touch

    Sara Liddle — info@inflori.co.uk | www.inflori.co.uk

    Anna Stratis — coachdocanna@gmail.com | www.coachdocanna.com

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    39 min
  • 218. Most couples miss this
    Apr 10 2026

    Welcome back to Geordie Lass & Doc Sass, the podcast where we chat all things love, relationships, connection and the messy bits in between.

    This week, we begin with a little spring energy, from daffodils in Jersey to sunshine in Athens, before settling into another honest and thoughtful conversation about modern relationships, everyday connection and the small things that matter more than most people realise.

    On the Love Desk, we chat about the rise of low-effort dating. Not low standards, not less care, but a move away from endless messaging, overthinking and emotional intensity before two people have even met. We also take a little detour into the world of AI, dating bots, and what happens when technology starts creeping into our love lives in ways that feel both fascinating and slightly unsettling.

    For our Hot Topic, we explore something many couples overlook. It is often not the big moments that shape a relationship most, but the small daily ones. The check-in. The message in the middle of the day. The compliment that is left unsaid. The presence that slowly slips when life gets busy. We talk about how easy it is to drift into autopilot and how important it is to keep choosing each other in small, intentional ways.

    We also discuss:

    • why daily presence matters more than grand gestures • how distraction and technology can quietly weaken connection • the difference between being in a relationship and actively nurturing one • why rituals, simple habits and thoughtful messages can make such a big difference • how easy it is to focus on what is missing and forget what is already good • why difficult seasons do not last forever, and what that reminder can offer when things feel hard

    In our listener question, we respond to this:

    “My partner is kind and reliable, but they rarely compliment me or show affection unless I ask. I don’t want to nag, but I miss feeling chosen. What should I do?”

    We explore the tension between love languages, unmet needs and the fear that asking for affection somehow makes it less meaningful. We talk about why asking clearly is not the same as nagging, why reminders are sometimes part of building a relationship, and how consistency matters. We also reflect on the importance of noticing the love that may already be there, even if it is being shown in a different form.

    This episode is a warm reminder that relationships are not built in one big moment. They are built in the ordinary, everyday choices to notice, respond, appreciate and stay present.

    Till next time, keep noticing the little things, keep choosing each other, and if someone pops into your head today, maybe send the message.

    To get in touch, you can find us here:

    Sara Liddle — www.inflori.co.uk Anna Stratis — www.coachdocanna.com

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    35 min
  • 217. Could you talk to your partner for the rest of your life?
    Mar 28 2026

    Sara and Anna are back with even more thoughtful conversation, starting with great hair, trusted hairdressers, carnival glitter and a lovely Valentine’s weekend.

    Anna shares stories from carnival celebrations in Greece, complete with sparkle, music, day drinking and neighbourhood festivities, while Sara reflects on a sweet Valentine’s dinner at the restaurant where she and her fiancé had what he still insists was their first date. Get ready for the warmth, laughter and those small personal details that make relationships feel special.

    Love Desk: Red baskets for singles

    This week on the Love Desk, Sara brings a Valentine’s story from the UK. Supermarket chain ASDA trialled red shopping baskets for single people on Valentine’s Day, designed to signal they were open to meeting someone while doing their weekly shop.

    Sara and Anna chat about:

    • whether they would have picked up a red basket if they were single

    • how supermarkets can strangely feel full of relationship energy

    • the funny reality of overhearing couples negotiating dinner in the aisles

    • the mix of hope, awkwardness and curiosity that comes with modern dating

    It leads into a wider reflection on how people meet, how connection begins, and how even everyday places can carry a surprising amount of emotional meaning.

    Hot Topic: Can you really talk to your partner for the rest of your life?

    The main conversation explores something many couples quietly wonder about, especially once the early intensity of a relationship settles.

    At the start, talking can feel endless. You want to know everything about each other. Curiosity is high, patience is easy, and even the worst jokes feel charming. But over time, life gets fuller, responsibilities grow, and couples can slowly drift into more practical, surface-level communication.

    Sara and Anna unpack:

    • why conversation often feels effortless at the beginning of a relationship

    • how busyness and routine can squeeze out deeper connection

    • the difference between talking with someone and simply sharing the same space

    • why curiosity is such an important part of long-term compatibility

    • how growth, change and new experiences keep conversation alive

    • why emotional safety matters if deeper conversations are going to happen

    • how real listening means not planning your response while the other person is still speaking

    • why silence can sometimes be just as important as words

    They also reflect on how long-term connection is not just about being able to chat, but about continuing to bring fresh energy, honesty and openness into the relationship over time.

    Listener Question

    “My partner doesn’t really open up emotionally. He’ll chat about work and practical things, but avoids the deeper conversation. I don’t want to nag, but I feel very lonely. What should I do?”

    Sara and Anna explore the many layers behind this, including:

    • how emotional distance is not always obvious at the start of a relationship

    • why people often choose relationships based on feeling chosen, rather than asking whether they truly feel met

    • how one partner can grow or change faster than the other

    • why emotional openness can feel unfamiliar or even threatening for some people

    • how assumptions often replace real conversations

    • why people can spend months or years silently carrying dissatisfaction before saying anything out loud

    • the importance of creating enough safety to talk honestly without judgment

    Their answer is compassionate and realistic. This is not about forcing someone to become a completely different person overnight. It is about recognising what is missing, being brave enough to speak it, and understanding that meaningful change often starts with one person choosing a different way to communicate.

    Closing thoughts

    This episode is a gentle but important reminder that good relationships do not just happen. They need curiosity, honesty, safety and room to grow.

    The ability to keep talking to each other over time is not about always having something clever to say. It is about staying open enough to keep learning each other as life changes.

    Till next time

    Get in touch

    Sara Liddle — info@inflori.co.uk | www.inflori.co.uk

    Anna Stratis — coachdocanna@gmail.com | www.coachdocanna.com

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    38 min
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