Marriage is not a static emotional state, nor is it maintained by affection alone. It is a continuously evolving psychological system shaped by communication patterns, emotional regulation, behavioral repetition, and mutual perception. What most people experience as "e;relationship problems"e; are rarely isolated events; they are the predictable outcomes of small, repeated interaction patterns that gradually define the emotional climate between two individuals.This framework presents marriage not as romance preserved over time, but as a structured relational ecosystem that must be consciously maintained. Love, in this sense, is not merely felt, it is practiced, reinforced, and stabilized through behavior.The following principles form a unified model of relational psychology, where stability is not accidental but engineered through consistent emotional intelligence, behavioral discipline, and shared cognitive alignment.