Couples Counseling: Not Just for When Things Are Falling Apart
By Laura Kietell, DQCS
Licensed Clinical Social Worker | Owner, Thrive Counseling Services
When people hear “couples counseling,” they often think it means something is seriously wrong—like the relationship is already falling apart. That’s usually not the case.
In fact, many couples come in not because they’re at the end, but because something just doesn’t feel right anymore. Communication is off. Things feel tense. Or they keep having the same argument over and over again and can’t figure out why.
At Thrive, we like to say:
You don’t have to wait until things are falling apart to come to couples counseling.
What Couples Are Really Arguing About:
Couples often find that what they’re arguing about isn’t actually the real issue—it’s just what’s showing up on the surface.
It might look like:
- Who’s doing what around the house
- How time is being spent
- Finances
- Intimacy
But underneath that, it’s usually something deeper:
- “Do I matter to you?”
- “Can I trust you to show up for me?”
- “Am I important in your life?”
When those questions don’t feel secure, conflict tends to increase.
The Pattern Couples Get Stuck In:
Most couples don’t have a “communication problem” as much as they have a pattern they keep falling into.
It can look like:
- One person pushes → the other pulls away
- One criticizes → the other gets defensive
- One shuts down → the other escalates
Research from John Gottman, Ph.D. identified four behaviors—criticism, defensiveness, contempt, and stonewalling—that predict relationship distress.
What We Actually Do in Couples Counseling:
We are not here to take sides, decide who is right, or referee arguments.
If one person “wins” in here, the relationship loses.
The client is the relationship itself. We focus on the pattern between you.
We slow things down and look at what is happening underneath the conflict, including:
- Triggers
- Stress responses
- Communication patterns
- Repair after conflict
Why This Matters:
There’s a strong body of research behind couples counseling.
Studies show that about 70–75% of couples who participate in therapy experience significant improvement in their relationship, with many reporting better communication, stronger emotional connection, and increased relationship satisfaction.
Research from the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy also indicates that over 75% of couples report improvement, and nearly 90% report better emotional well-being after therapy.
What this tells us is:
Most couples aren’t failing because they don’t care—they’re stuck in patterns they don’t know how to get out of.
Final Thought
You don’t have to wait until things are falling apart. Couples counseling is a way of taking care of the relationship you’re building.
About the Author
Laura Kietell, MSW, LCSW, DQCS, is the owner of Thrive Counseling Services in Cheyenne, Wyoming. She works with individuals and couples across the lifespan and provides clinical supervision for therapists working toward independent licensure. Her approach emphasizes steady, grounded care and creating a space where clients can slow down, feel understood, and make meaningful changes.
