Live-In Relationships: Love, Chemistry, or Just About Lust?

Live in relationship debate viral clip

A post on X (Twitter) featuring a clip from a Telugu YouTube podcast has gone viral and sparked interesting debate online. In the video, upcoming actress Manasa Varanasi talks about pre-marriage live-in relationships and why some couples choose them.

In the clip, she says live-in relationships help partners understand each other better before marriage. According to her, living together improves communication and helps couples learn about each other’s habits, expectations, and personalities. She stresses that knowledge and communication are very important in relationships and argues that living together can reduce the compromises people often face after marriage.

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However, the clip triggered strong reactions in the comment sections. Many users argued that while live-ins are often described as a way to build compatibility, they mostly involve sexual relationships and repeated sexual encounters. Many mocked the idea that couples would live together only for emotional understanding.

One comment read that if a couple is living together, sex is naturally part of the relationship. Another user sarcastically said that if a man and woman live together without touching each other, people would call the man “impotent.”

At the same time, others defended the original point made in the video. Some users argued that life and marriage are not just about sex, and that emotional connection, communication, and mutual respect are equally important. They said reducing live-in relationships only to sexual activity ignores the broader reasons why couples choose them.

Some people trolled arranged marriages as outdated, while others described live-in relationships as unstable experiments driven by sexual lust that often end in breakups.

While live-in relationships are becoming more common in urban areas, they still provoke extreme reactions, especially around issues like pre-marital sex, social expectations, and changing attitudes toward marriage.

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