You are here:
Home » dating » Can You Save A Marriage With Counseling?

Can You Save A Marriage With Counseling?

June 5, 2010 by Sabrina Summerfield  
Posted in: dating

Where do most couples end up when their marriage starts to fall apart? For the most part it is couples therapy or counseling of some nature, right? When neither person wants to let go but they do not know how to fix their issues, then they turn to an objective third party to show them the way. The question is whether counseling can actually save a marriage.

If you fall into this category seeking help with marital issues, it all hinges on how you go into your therapy sessions. You have to realize right from the start that there is no guarantee that someone else can fix your marriage. Ultimately, the real work has to be done by you and your spouse.

Before even walking in the door to your first session, have a clear understanding that the therapist is going to give an objective point of view, not validation to your own thoughts and feelings. If you go in there expecting this person to see that you are right and “fix” your spouse, then you will get nothing out of it but frustration and disappointment.

This is not what a therapist is there to do. They are not going to take sides, mainly because there is no one person who is right in a marriage. Problems are a collective mess and both people have some things they are doing wrong and some things they are doing completely right.

What a therapist does is get you to ultimately open up to one another so that the root issues standing in the way of happiness can be discovered. Believe it or not, the real issues are not who forgets to take out the trash or who forgot someone’s birthday.

There are deeper issues driving those petty arguments, and until those are fixed you will continue to fight over every little thing.

Couples who go into therapy knowing that finger pointing is useless and they both have their own flaws have a higher chance of success. Both people have to be willing to put their own defensiveness aside and just listen to one another.

For example, instead of getting defensive that she says she feels lonely and screaming that you have to work so it’s not your fault; just listen. Don’t translate it to mean anything about you. She is lonely. That is all.

That is extremely hard to do, but if you can both force it at first then things will get easier. You have to remind yourself that the other person’s problem doesn’t always mean something negative about you. If you can do this, then chances are high that you can save a marriage through counseling.

Learn more about how to save your marriage and prevent a divorce today! Click here and check out: Save Marriage or have a look at: How To Save A Marriage and see what you can do now!


Tell us what you think

Tell us what you're thinking about this content! Get a personal pic from Gravatar and share your thoughts!