💞 How We Keep the Spark Alive (Even From Prison)

People ask all the time how we keep our marriage alive — how we stay close, how we stay connected, how we stay us.

The truth is, there’s no secret formula. There’s no perfect script or guide for loving someone through incarceration. What we have isn’t cinematic or easy or romanticized. It’s real. It’s effort and consistency and laughter and compromise. It’s doing life together in a way most people will never understand — but it’s ours.

We’ve learned to make love work between walls, time limits, and dropped calls. We’ve built something that’s resilient, intentional, and rooted in the belief that connection doesn’t fade just because circumstances are hard.

Sometimes it’s as simple as a photo. I send him pictures all the time — snapshots of my day, the dogs, a good dinner, or the sky at sunset. I use collage apps so I can fit multiple memories into one print. Every photo is a reminder that the world is still moving and that he’s still a part of it.

He’s part of everything, really. He helps me plan our meals for the week. We grocery shop “together” over the phone. He weighs in on what to cook, or I’ll describe what I see at the farmers market. It might sound small, but those small moments are where our marriage lives.

Intimacy matters too — and I don’t just mean the kind you whisper about. We talk about what we miss, what we love, and what we want. We don’t hide behind shame or distance. Emotional and physical intimacy look different for us, but they’re still vital and intentional.

We build things together, too. The Couples Communication Guidebook started as one of our collaborations. So did this blog. He reads drafts, gives input, and helps me shape ideas. Creating things together keeps us moving forward, not just waiting.

We still have date nights. Movie nights, cooking “dates,” question games, playlists — little rituals that turn ordinary time into connection. He might be eating ramen while I’m eating popcorn, but for an hour or two, we’re side by side in spirit.

We check in on our mental health constantly. Some days it’s a short text asking, “How’s your heart today?” Other times it’s deeper conversations about goals, triggers, or what’s been weighing on us. We’ve learned that love doesn’t grow in silence — it grows in shared reflection.

We even have a book club, just the two of us. We read to each other and talk about the story. It’s one of the few ways we can feel close in real time, our voices overlapping across the line.

A few times a week, I send what we call “the newsletter.” It’s a running update of my life and our family’s life — random stories, jokes, songs, quotes, and thoughts I want him to know. It’s simple, but it’s us staying woven together.

We also give each other space. That’s something not everyone expects in a prison marriage. We don’t talk every minute of every day. We live our separate moments and then share them later. That independence is part of how we stay strong.

And honestly, we’re just compatible. He’s my calm; I’m his chaos. We make each other laugh. We share inside jokes, silly messages, and ridiculous conversations that probably wouldn’t make sense to anyone else. We find humor in the hard parts because laughter is its own kind of survival.

We dream together. About what life will look like when he’s home, about what we’ll build next, about simple things like cooking breakfast or going on a drive with the windows down. Those dreams keep us motivated and give meaning to the waiting.

And we talk about everything. The fears, the jealousy, the frustrations, the growth. We’ve learned that honesty — even when it’s messy — keeps us connected in ways perfection never could.

Love doesn’t pause because of prison. It just requires creativity, patience, humor, and the decision to keep showing up for each other even when it’s hard. What we’ve built is far from perfect, but it’s alive, it’s strong, and it’s ours.

Because love like this doesn’t just survive.
It evolves.


🖤 What Keeps Our Spark Alive

If you’re trying to find your rhythm with someone on the inside, here are a few things that have helped us stay close:

  • Share photos — collage apps make it affordable, and it lets you send glimpses of your world all at once.
  • Include them in your life — grocery shop together on the phone, ask for opinions, make everyday decisions as a team.
  • Keep intimacy alive — talk about desire, affection, and emotional connection without shame.
  • Create together — collaborate on projects, art, writing, or goals that give you both purpose.
  • Have date nights — watch a movie at the same time, eat together, or listen to a playlist you both love.
  • Do mental health check-ins — ask “How’s your heart today?” and mean it.
  • Read together — start your own two-person book club and share your thoughts like you’re side by side.
  • Send updates or “newsletters” — keep them in the loop with small joys, funny moments, and family news.
  • Make space for individuality — time apart gives you both something new to bring back to the relationship.
  • Laugh often — humor is medicine, even through a phone line.
  • Dream together — plan for life after release; it gives hope direction.
  • Be radically honest — the hard conversations build the strongest foundation.

Love in a prison marriage takes work, but it’s also a living example that connection can thrive anywhere.
And when you build it intentionally, it doesn’t just survive the distance — it deepens because of it.

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This is Chapters and Chains

Welcome to Chapters and Chains – I created this site for those looking for a way to connect with a loved one who is incarcerated and who are navigating the complex correctional systems across the United States.

Find out more about us in this LWW Podcast .

Here you will find ways to connect through reading and books with your loved one, information on how to put parole packets together, resources for reintegration and helpful planning documents. All resources are and will always be free or low-cost.

However, if you would like to say “Thank you!” you can donate below or at $ChaptersNChains

You can also purchase “Beyond the Walls: A Couples Communication Guidebook” that helps fund this site and the work that we do!

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