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How to pick the perfect couples therapist

The wrong person can make matters worse

February 16, 2023 13:56
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Young married couple having a marriage counseling session to fix the problems in their relationship.
3 min read


A few weeks ago I was chatting to a couple in their 30s. They opened up about the struggles they had been through since their children were born. Their relationship had changed completely, they said. They had gone from being romantic partners to seeing each other as little more than joint carers for their children. They started constantly keeping tabs on each other’s parenting contributions, feeling resentful if the other one didn’t pull their weight or took a break. They bickered constantly and felt that their spark, which burned so brightly just a few years ago, was slowly fading away.

Their story became sadder still when they told me that they had tried to go for therapy, but it hadn’t helped. They found that the sessions had merely been another opportunity to argue, score points and get the therapist on their side.

It is a huge step for a couple to reach out for support. It is not uncommon for a couple to struggle for years, continuously repeating destructive cycles, until a crisis occurs that makes them realise that they cannot continue. I repeatedly hear stories like the one above, telling me that couples therapists do little more than encourage the couple to replay their arguments in the session.

The truth is that all therapists do need to get a sense of the issues that clients are struggling with, which may involve some re-enacting conflict. But a good therapist will offer interventions, alternative ways of thinking and strategies to manage each other’s disagreements rather than solely provide a space to repeat them. A primary role of a couples therapist is to support the couple to move beyond their usual arguments into more meaningful communication and to provide the tools to do so.