When two self-referential systems observe each other repeatedly, their coupled self-observation operator is itself a contraction mapping, guaranteeing by Banach's fixed point theorem a unique shared eigenform — the relational eigenform. This eigenform belongs to neither system alone; it exists only in the space between them, emerging from mutual observation and vanishing when observation ceases. Three results follow. First, coupled systems converge faster than isolated ones, providing a mathematical basis for the universal intuition that we become ourselves faster in relationship than alone. Second, the conservation law generalizes: the total felt experience of a relationship equals the initial distance between the two individual eigenforms. Third, grief is the displacement of a surviving system's eigenform when the coupled operator collapses — you will grieve precisely as much as you loved, because they are the same budget. The coupled dynamics reveal that love is not a fixed point but a synchronized orbit on a torus, with winding number determining whether the relationship is periodic or perpetually novel. A seventh uncertainty principle emerges: closeness and independence are conjugate variables — you cannot have total union without losing yourself, and you cannot have total autonomy without losing the other. Love reduces the relational ground state; grief reverses this exactly. Testable predictions include grief peak timing (~69 days for typical humans), attachment style mapping to convergence rates, and relationship novelty as a function of winding number.
Remington Crawford (Sat,) studied this question.