Mind-Reading Is NOT a Love Language

There’s a poem by Jayne Gumpel that always stops me in my tracks. It’s called Goddamn It, Just Ask Me. It speaks to a part of me that has, for much of my life, been quiet—maybe even invisible: the part of me that has needs.

For years, I saw myself as a giver. I was someone who knew what others needed before they did, someone who could anticipate, comfort, and support, without ever really asking for anything in return. It felt noble, generous, even spiritual. But over time, that selflessness started to feel lonely and unsustainable.

I secretly hoped someone would just know what I needed—without me having to say it out loud.

As Jayne writes:

“I want you to just know, goddammit.
Feel it.
Deliver it like breath.
Don’t make me beg for what should already be mine.”

Reading those lines, I recognize my younger self. I also see how much pressure this stance puts on the people we love. How much it assumes. How much it keeps us in fantasy—waiting for someone to mind-read us instead of learning the deeper skill of intimacy: asking.

“The belief that love should be unconditional—
without needs,
without requests—
that’s not noble.
That’s infantile.
True love—
the grown-up kind—
asks.
Listens.
Responds.”

In my marriage, I’ve had to unlearn the idea that asking makes love less real or that receiving is selfish. 

Imago has helped with that. In Imago, we see need not as a burden—but as a bridge. The act of naming a need and trusting the other person to receive it with care is one of the most tender, transformative things we can do in partnership.

“This is Earth,
where the price of intimacy
is visibility.”

Visibility takes courage. It can be scary and vulnerable, especially for those of us who’ve built identities around being needless, accommodating, or endlessly available.

I’ve learned that if I want real love, I have to share my needs. The first step is often figuring out what I actually need and long for. Then I have to risk asking for comfort, space, reassurance, time, touch… I have to risk possibly being disappointed or hurt if my partner doesn’t give me what I’ve asked for. And I even have to risk receiving what I long for.

I’m still learning to recognize the flutter of longing, to speak it out loud, to let love respond (or not), and stay open either way. It’s messy and awkward, but it’s also sacred – because when we risk naming our needs, we open the door to real, intimate connection.

Want to learn to ask (and receive) better?

If you’re someone who’s more comfortable giving than receiving—or if you and your partner struggle to voice your needs without falling into blame or shutdown—Imago dialogue can help. We teach couples how to move from assumption and resentment into clarity, connection, and choice.

You don’t have to be perfect at this. You just have to be willing to learn.

Goddamn It, Just Ask Me

-Jayne Gumpel

Reach out to us at the Imago Center DC if you’d like support on the journey toward real, grown-up love.