Relationship Counselling
If you have a bad relationship with your spouse or partner, it will be toxic and debilitating. And this will be impacting on other parts of your life – your relationships with other family members, with friends and perhaps your work also.

Relationship Counselling – what changes can you make?
Relationship counselling is to change direction. You will be spending a lot of your time aroused and angry and resentful and feeling stuck or unsafe. And your efforts to find a way through to meeting some of your essential human needs from the relationship (for intimacy and connection and control) may be leading you to concealment and betrayal or addictive behaviours.
My relationship counselling can help you both find a way through – to calm you, to react differently and bring you both some resolution and sustainable help.
The best relationship counselling advice is to know what you can do to create a new dynamic in your marriage or partnership.
Good couples counselling is less to do with you as a couple but more about you individually. My experience is that most problems can be solved by you (or you both acting separately at first) to find that change and see where it goes.
A good intimate relationship is essential for emotional health and there is a great deal that you can do to save yours. Good couples relationship counselling is not that different from one on one counselling – which is about knowing what you can do differently to live a life of better balance and control.
If you want something you have never had, then you must do something you have never done.
You really do have to do something differently you know – and not just repeat the same old strategy you typically use – but just wrapped up a little bit differently.

Introducing John Gottman – one of the giants in the relationship counselling field
He found that there are four responses of a partner that are toxic for a relationship – the four Horsemen.
- Criticism – always finding something wrong in your partner and generalising
- Contempt – clearly showing a lack of respect
- Defensiveness – always looking and acting to defend yourself
- Stonewalling – for men mainly, just not engaging and running away
Gottman also discovered in his research the 5 to 1 rule. In good relationships – there are 5 good encounters for every 1 that is bad.
The Gottman website
How to use the Gottman insights in your relationship counselling to initiate a small change?
Be less critical, contemptuous, defensive and stonewalling – and getting the ratio up of good to bad encounters.
When are your conversations and words with your partner generalised and toxic? …you always do…you never ever…you are just…I never did say that… why do you always…you know what I mean
- Be specific instead – cut down your habits of generalised criticism and contempt and of cutting off and looking to protect (you never listen, you are so controlling).
- Cultivate specific compliments that require you to observe and think about them in order that you can make them real and specific compliments. Not generalised stuff like you are wonderful or funny but specific like – I really admire you when you ……
Good relationship counselling means working on yourself
Learn about needs and resources – so you are as healthy as you can be.
Listen to this, my Improving Partner Relationships MP3:
Read my Relationship Toolkit
When we are highly aroused – angry or scared or scornful or whatever it is – then we have to calm down to gain control and so be able to use our intelligent developed brain. That part that is aware of consequences and not just the immediate high emotion moment and the overwhelming desire to discharge and complete the emotion – whatever the consequences may be.
See that line in the sand that you know you cannot cross – because if you do, then control is lost. What are the sign posts to that line? How much warning do you have? And how easy is it to turn back and wait until you are calm again?
Ideally, you need at least 20 minutes to calm down, to really calm down. To take a walk, go to a different room; listen to some music or busy yourself or whatever. And you and ideally your partner must heed these signs and take that time out.
If you want something you have never had, then you must do something you have never done.
Because men and women are natural compliments.
Men will tend to focus on problem-solving – being specific and wanting to get on with things. And when aroused or stressed, men are more likely to want to be on their own or doing something else. Men are more aware and happy with pecking orders and are less comfortable with high emotion. They talk less and respond better to structure and order.
Women are more comfortable multitasking – yes they really are. And in contrast to men will be happier talking about it and not necessarily to find the resolution. They can be more sensitive and uncomfortable with the unspoken rules behind social interaction which seem to create inequalities. Women are more comfortable with emotions.