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Five Tips For Marriage Counselling (Couples Therapy) To Succeed

July 19, 2021

This article takes inspiration from Blue Therapy on Trend Centrl and shares five tips for marriage counselling to succeed.



What Marriage Counselling Provides

Couples Therapy (or marriage counselling) helps increase your understanding of yourself, your partner, and things that are not going right in the relationship.

Once these have been explored and understood, you will learn how to change your feelings, thoughts, and actions.

Then you can change ineffective or destructive behaviours into positive ones that will enhance your relationship.

Sounds like a brilliant way to address problems that arise in relationships, doesn’t it?

But there are some worrying statistics about couples therapy.

For example, according to an expert in this area:

“Couples therapy ….isn’t always effective. Only about 50% of partners view their couples work as effective two years into treatment, and 25% believe they are worse off than before. Perhaps more concerning, 43% of divorced partners sought couples therapy while still married, but the relationship ended anyway. This data suggest that we have work to do to improve treatment efficacy for distressed partners.” – Matthew McKay, PhD, 2017

So this tells us that marriage counselling does help a significant number of people. However, in an equally large number, it fails.

This may be due to irreconcilable differences, of course.

But sometimes, couples seeking therapy do not benefit from it, thanks to their expectations as they begin.


Tips For Marriage Counselling

Five Tips For Marriage Counselling Success

Now let’s look at five tips for successful marriage counselling that couples going into therapy for the first time often get wrong. We also consider how you can handle things a little better.

Today’s video follows the recent Youtube series Blue Therapy featuring two ‘fictional’ couples in counselling sessions that viewers were allowed to peek into.

They played the roles so well, they spawned a lot of spirited discussions online!

The Therapist’s Role

#1. Expectation About the Therapist’s role.

Unlike in individual sessions where you are the only client, in marriage counselling, where you have the therapist and two individuals, the relationship is the client.

The aim is to help the relationship get better. Between the two of you, your therapist is neutral and is not there to take sides or Judge YOUR Partner on your behalf.

Instead, they act as a guide and help hold up a mirror to look at the relationship. They are really present as an advocate for the relationship.

Hopefully, they can provide a safe space where you as a couple can discuss conflicts and really listen to each other.

The Nature of Sessions

#2. REALISE how INTRUSIVE Sessions can Become.

It should be obvious that if you go in honestly to discuss your partnership, intimate details could be exposed.

You are certainly entitled to your privacy as an individual. You may not feel comfortable divulging some information and want to keep it to yourself in some cases.

However, take the example of your work for instance. Is knowing a little of what you do relevant to the session?

Yes. It could help the therapist frame ‘who you are’ a bit better.

It may help them understand the kind of pressure your job could be putting you under, affecting your relationship.

Who Should Change?

#3. Don’t Expect Change To Come From Your Partner ONLY.

This expectation builds up consciously or unconsciously where one partner believes they have done nothing wrong. But really, they are not listening to their other half or even willing to work with them.

They just see the problem belongs to the other person who needs to deal with it.

Sadly, that will not help a relationship to heal.

Tips For Marriage Counselling

Nature of Therapy – I

#4. Therapy can be Unpleasant – With Surprising Revelations.

Therapy could turn up unexpected and sensitive issues like sex, weight, or relatives that your partner does not even realise exists or just takes for granted.

Knowing this, you can prepare for the unexpected and ready yourself mentally to help absorb some of the shocks if it happens.

The hurt or surprise may still be present, but you may handle the revelation a little better.

Exploring difficult scenarios is at the centre of successful marriage counselling – but you should realise that while some issues may be obvious – a lot more may not.

Nature of Therapy – II

#5. It can get tense/nasty, or argumentative.

Out of our bag of tips for marriage counselling, this may seem the most obvious.

But the truth is that just as we are all different, conflict will arise from time to time.

Conflict can lead to growth. So having disagreements in a respectful space where neither party feels threatened or intimated can help to reveal true feelings that have been hidden for ages.

Handled properly, they could heal. So realising that it may not be smooth sailing and readying yourself mentally for that can help.

According to an experienced therapist:

“ATTITUDE IS KEY. CHANGE YOURSELF – NOT YOUR PARTNER. CONFLICT PRODUCES GROWTH. MANAGING CONFLICT LEADS TO A HARMONIOUS RELATIONSHIP” – The Psychotherapy Center.


What Are Your Expectations Now?

Many couples don’t know what they expect when they attend marriage counselling sessions.

So, they create expectations in their minds that could derail their progress. Hopefully, with these tips for successful marriage counselling, you can scale the initial hurdles and progress to useful discussions and transformations in your relationship.

Did you have marriage counselling, or are you planning to? Tell us what you think is the biggest hurdle in starting therapy sessions in the comments section below. Stay Well!

More Reading

Editing by AskAwayHealth Team

Disclaimer

All AskAwayHealth articles are written by practising  Medical Practitioners on a wide range of health care conditions to provide evidence-based guidance and to help promote quality health care. The advice in our material is not meant to replace the management of your specific condition by a qualified health care practitioner.
To discuss your condition, please contact a health practitioner or reach us directly through info@askawayhealth.org

Image Credits: Canva

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