skills$openclaw/relationship-skills
jhillin88.5k

by jhillin8

relationship-skills – OpenClaw Skill

relationship-skills is an OpenClaw Skills integration for coding workflows. Improve relationships with communication tools, conflict resolution, and connection ideas

8.5k stars5.7k forksSecurity L1
Updated Feb 7, 2026Created Feb 7, 2026coding

Skill Snapshot

namerelationship-skills
descriptionImprove relationships with communication tools, conflict resolution, and connection ideas OpenClaw Skills integration.
ownerjhillin8
repositoryjhillin8/relationship-skills
languageMarkdown
licenseMIT
topics
securityL1
installopenclaw add @jhillin8/relationship-skills
last updatedFeb 7, 2026

Maintainer

jhillin8

jhillin8

Maintains relationship-skills in the OpenClaw Skills directory.

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_meta.json
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SKILL.md
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SKILL.md

name: relationship-skills description: Improve relationships with communication tools, conflict resolution, and connection ideas author: clawd-team version: 1.0.0 triggers:

  • "relationship help"
  • "communication tips"
  • "conflict with partner"
  • "date ideas"
  • "improve relationship"

Relationship Skills

Build stronger connections with practical communication, conflict resolution, and intentional connection ideas.

What it does

  • Communication Tools - Framework for clearer, more honest conversations
  • Conflict Resolution - De-escalation techniques and structured problem-solving
  • Date Ideas - Curated suggestions based on preferences and location
  • Relationship Health Tracking - Check-in prompts and pattern detection
  • Connection Builder - Personalized ideas for deepening bonds

Usage

Communication Help

Ask for frameworks to improve conversations:

  • "Help me bring up a difficult topic"
  • "How do I express my feelings without getting defensive?"
  • "I need language to ask for what I need"

Resolve Conflict

Navigate disagreements with structure:

  • "We're stuck in the same argument"
  • "How do I address this without blame?"
  • "Give me a conflict resolution framework"

Date Ideas

Get personalized suggestions:

  • "What can we do this weekend on a budget?"
  • "Suggest something we've never tried"
  • "I want to surprise them with something meaningful"

Check-in Prompts

Deepen connection with intentional questions:

  • "Give me conversation starters for tonight"
  • "What should we talk about to reconnect?"
  • "Questions to understand each other better"

Track Patterns

Identify what's working and what isn't:

  • "What topics come up repeatedly?"
  • "When do we connect best?"
  • "What's improved since last month?"

Communication Tools

I-Statements

Frame observations without blame:

  • Pattern: "I feel [emotion] when [situation] because [impact]"
  • Example: "I feel disconnected when we're both on phones because I miss talking with you"
  • Avoids: "You never listen to me" → "I need more of your attention"

Active Listening

Signal understanding and create safety:

  • Reflect back: "What I hear is..."
  • Validate: "That makes sense because..."
  • Clarify: "Do you mean...?"
  • Pause response urges—just listen first

Needs Expression

Get clear on what actually matters:

  • Name the need, not the demand: "I need to feel valued" (not "Do what I say")
  • Be specific: "I need 20 minutes of your full attention" (not "spend more time together")
  • Connect to why: "...because it helps me feel secure"

Boundary Setting

Protect the relationship by protecting yourself:

  • Clear: "I can't discuss this when I'm tired"
  • Non-negotiable: "I need time alone to recharge"
  • Collaborative: "Can we talk about this after work?"
  • Consequences: "If we keep going, I'll need to step away"

Tips

  1. Timing matters - Don't resolve conflict when either person is hungry, tired, or triggered. Schedule hard conversations.

  2. Curiosity over certainty - Ask questions before making assumptions. "Help me understand..." opens doors more than statements.

  3. Small, frequent connections beat grand gestures - 5 minutes of presence daily matters more than an occasional date night.

  4. Repair quickly - Conflicts are normal; getting stuck in them isn't. Apologize without conditions, acknowledge their experience, move forward.

  5. All data stays local on your machine - Your relationship history, preferences, and check-ins never leave your device. Privacy protected.

README.md

No README available.

Permissions & Security

Security level L1: Low-risk skills with minimal permissions. Review inputs and outputs before running in production.

Requirements

  • OpenClaw CLI installed and configured.
  • Language: Markdown
  • License: MIT
  • Topics:

FAQ

How do I install relationship-skills?

Run openclaw add @jhillin8/relationship-skills in your terminal. This installs relationship-skills into your OpenClaw Skills catalog.

Does this skill run locally or in the cloud?

OpenClaw Skills execute locally by default. Review the SKILL.md and permissions before running any skill.

Where can I verify the source code?

The source repository is available at https://github.com/openclaw/skills/tree/main/skills/jhillin8/relationship-skills. Review commits and README documentation before installing.