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Couples Counseling Can Improve Your Relationship

By Dr. Randi Fredricks, Ph.D.

Are you unhappy with your relationship? When things are going well, we tend not to ask ourselves this question. Yet, in order to create the connection and intimacy we would like to have, we sometimes need help. Couples counseling can help people develop the satisfying relationships they desire.

Couples counseling can actually help to improve all your relationships because it helps you to communicate more clearly and get your need met. Often, our others relationships are affected my our most intimate one. Keeping a romantic partnership going is always work.

Keeping an intimate relationship going is a difficult task. Once the initial excitement and intensity starts to wear off, many people find themselves unhappy with what is going on with their partner. Often there is more conflict and less good communication. Couples don’t enjoy their time together as much and don’t even enjoy each other at times. The connection that made their partner so attractive in the first place can fade and often people find themselves feeling lonely - even while with their partner. Some couples get to the point where it feels like there isn’t much benefit on an emotional level to being part of the relationship and that it isn’t worth the strife it brings to their lives.

It is possible to keep the qualities you want going in a relationship so that it sustains you and brings happiness. It is much more comfortable going through life feeling connected to your partner and that this connection brings you harmony and balance. We all dream of feeling supported, loved, and like we don’t have to face the world alone. It is possible to create such a connection and keep it going for the long haul.

If such relationships are possible, why don’t more people create them? Why do almost half of marriages end up in divorce and another portion just plug along without bringing their members much happiness? Though our intimate connections are one of, if not the most important things in our lives, most of us learn very little about how to create, nurture, and sustain them. The movies and television generally give us the message that if you love each other and the chemistry is right, things just work themselves out. Oh that it were so easy.

Like most valuable things in this world, relationships need care and maintenance. When you learn the skills for maintaining a healthy and vital connection, you can be happy with your relationship indefinitely. Learning to communicate well, turn conflict into growth, and understand your own emotional reactions and needs make such a connection possible. These are all things that can be learned and put to good work for you and your partner.

Couples counseling can help you learn skills to solidify relationships, such as communicating openly, problem solving together and discussing differences rationally. As you go through marriage counseling, you may learn to be more accepting and tolerant of differences.

Talking about your problems with a therapist may not be easy. Sessions may pass in silence as you and your partner seethe over perceived wrongs. Or you may bring your fights with you, yelling and arguing during sessions. Both are okay. Your therapist can act as mediator or referee and help you cope with the emotions and turmoil and you can benefit by learning more about your reactions and behavior in the relationship.

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About the Author

Dr. Randi Fredricks, Ph.D. is a psychotherapist and author specializing in the treatment of mental health using integrative medicine and natural therapies. She works with individuals, couples, and families at her office in San Jose, California and is the founder of All Things Well, a certified provider of The Listening Program. Dr. Fredricks' publications include the landmark book Healing & Wholeness: Complementary and Alternative Therapies for Mental Health. No part of this article may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems. Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Dr. Randi Fredricks as articles often present the published results of the research of other professionals. Copyright © 2012.



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Dr. Randi Fredricks, Ph.D., is a certified provider of the Listening Program. This site does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment and is intended for informational purposes only. No therapeutic relationship is established by the use of this site. Dr. Fredricks is a Licensed Marriage Family Therapist MFC 47803.
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