Posting relationships on social media starts with one uncomfortable question. Your partner never shares photos of you two together. Their feed shows friends, food, travel, everything except you. You’re three months in. Six months. A year. You finally ask why. They say they value privacy. You hear: they’re hiding you. Who’s actually being performative here?
Kirsch argues the person demanding to be posted is the one performing, not the one posting. It signals underlying issues like lack of trust or jealousy over a work spouse. Tedesco counters that posting is cute and endearing, shouting from the rooftops that you like someone enough to put it on the internet. Both agree intent matters more than action. Psychology research claims eight privacy values predict relationship success, with the first being intimacy works best when protected, not performed. But then Facebook trained an entire generation to announce relationship status changes automatically, creating drama before anyone could process the breakup privately. Kirsch notes couples now feel obligated to announce splits because people invested in the highlight reel demand explanations.
The narrative exists whether you control it or not. Getting ahead of the story doesn’t stop the chatter. And deleting photos without explanation? People notice that too. The question isn’t whether to post. It’s who needs the validation and why.
Topics: posting relationships on social media, relationship privacy, performative relationships, Instagram couples, social media breakups
GUEST: Jen Kirsch, Tony Tedesco
Originally aired on2026-01-27