Couples Therapy Works With Patterns, Not Content
Recognising a repeating pattern in your relationship is often the easy part. Changing it in the moment is where the real work begins.
Many couples arrive in therapy having already spotted something: a pattern that repeats, an argument that keeps returning in different forms, a moment where one of them reaches and the other withdraws. Recognising the cycle is often quicker than people expect. What takes longer — and what therapy is really for — is learning to interrupt it in the moment it’s happening.
What often surprises couples is how quickly they can begin to identify and recognise patterns and cycles that they regularly find themselves in.
Recognising patterns is often the easy part
Though recognising these patterns is often fairly straightforward, being able to interrupt these patterns as they are happening in the moment is where the work is focussed.
Why these patterns feel so painful
The reason for this is that the negative cycles that we get caught in with our partner, do not happen from a lack of care… far from it. They get activated because it is our partner, our chosen one… and, it is the very experience of feeling like our partner isn’t getting us, that we are misunderstood in the eyes of our loved one, that makes it all feel so very raw and painful.
Skilful therapy is all about supporting partners to recognise the patterns then tenderly exploring what is fuelling these. I support partners to practice, over and over again, to lean into these moments from a place of vulnerability.
At the beginning of the work this can feel very challenging for partners, but over time and with patience, this is the work of transformation. My great joy, what really makes this challenging work so rewarding for me, is witnessing two people learning to turn towards each other in these moments.
You might also like to read about why consistency matters in this work, or find out more about working together here.
Why Couples Therapy Slows Down the Moments That Usually Speed Up
Many couples describe the same experience: a moment that escalates faster than either of them intended, leaving both feeling unheard or alone. This is often what finally brings them to therapy.
Many couples describe the same experience: a moment that escalates faster than either of them intended, leaving both feeling unheard, alone, or shut out. The pattern repeats despite their best efforts. This is often what finally brings them to therapy.
Working with couples is complex.
Life is busy, and people understandably arrive in the couples therapy space carrying whatever they are carrying from that week. The residue of work, family life, stress, disappointment, exhaustion.
And yet, we often have just sixty minutes to achieve something different relationally.
It is my job to stay focused on the long-term goal: a growing secure connection, emotional safety, and mutual sense of trust in the relationship as a source of support.
Emotionally focused couples therapy is not about avoiding storms, far from it. Life will bring them. What matters is recognising that when things become tough, as they so often do, it is the relationship — built slowly over time — and a willingness to turn towards our partner in moments of vulnerability, that can carry us through safely to the other side.
How couples therapy helps during moments of conflict
This is where therapy begins.
We slooooow things right down.
We get deeply, deeply curious.
We begin to understand that a cycle is happening.
I support couples to risk doing something very different in the moment. Rather than being caught in an escalating cycle, how might it be to risk turning towards, in vulnerability, the person we treasure most?
We interrupt the cycle by leaning in rather than out.
This is where the healing happens.
This is where the bond is strengthened.
A moment of potential disconnection is transformed into a moment of connection.
If you’re curious about what happens beneath these moments, you might find this relevant: It’s Simple — And It’s Brain Science. And if you’d like to explore working together, you can find out more about couples therapy here.

