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Why Marriage Counselors Can Be Helpful

July 7, 2023

Benefits of Couples Counseling

Relationships require effort and consistent work to remain strong and healthy. But there is a common myth that marriage counselors are only helpful to couples who are struggling to uphold their relationship. In fact, couples counseling is great for all couples! From newlyweds to couples celebrating their 30th wedding anniversary, couples counseling can be beneficial for every type of relationship.

Improve Communication

One of the most common problems that couples face is a lack of communication or miscommunication, where one or both partners feel as if they are not being heard or understood in the relationship. Couples counseling provides a space for the couple to voice their thoughts and feelings in which the counselor can offer advice and guidance to improve their method of communication. Couples counseling is about not only helping the relationship to improve, but also for the individual to improve themselves.

Resolve or Avoid Potential Problems

Marriage counselors are able to pinpoint frequent issues in relationships, which helps to resolve old issues, as well as help to prevent future problems from arising. These issues can range from finances to intimacy and communication, so couples counseling is useful for all areas of a strained relationship.

Set Goals

Once the wedding is over, what comes next? It's not uncommon for relationships to experience a lull after the honeymoon phase is over, but it's also not uncommon for partners to experience anxiety or worry about the stagnancy. Couples counseling is a great place for couples to discuss what they want in life going forward and how they can help each other reach their goals. Marriage counselors also help to guide you when setting goals as a couple.

Offers a Safe Space

Marriage counselors are an ideal third-party for when couples need to vent, express a wide range of emotions, and need a mediator. The counselor is a professional that is trained to digest and assess problems in a relationship, while also having no personal involvement or bias outside of the counseling space. Through couples counseling, you and your partner can learn productive ways to communicate your needs and feelings in a space that is safe and confidential.

Improve Connection & Intimacy

Couples counseling allows you and your partner not only to learn more about each other in a safe space, but also to learn more about yourselves. This is crucial when you are aiming to deepen your connection as counseling can help you open up, be more vulnerable with your partner, and allow space for the relationship to grow.

Contact Our Marriage Counselors Today!

Ralph W Fox II PhD is a family and marriage counselor who provides couples counseling services in Wilmington, NC. We also provide virtual counseling! For more information about couples counseling, contact us today!

By Walter Lowe August 20, 2020
Even in the field of therapy —where emotional maturity and wisdom supposedly count for something—the enthusiasm, bravado, and pure physical energy of youth sometimes trump the sobriety, skepticism, caution, and, well, fatigue afflicting those of us who'll never see 40—or 50, or 60, or even 70—again. Sometimes, brash young Turks instinctively do brilliant therapy that their older teachers and mentors couldn't or wouldn't dare to do, even after four cups of coffee and two shots of ginseng extract. That said, there's nothing like experience—the slow, steady accretion of millions of new neural connections—for teaching us how to do something well, and that can only come with time and age. Time and practice, practice, practice count as much or more than formal instruction in becoming an expert at therapy or just about anything else—medicine, law, carpentry, fire-fighting, or violin-playing. The longer you've been at it, the more deeply knowledgeable and skilled at the work you're likely to be. So, first in line of Lowe's Laws for Codger Therapists is: Our Age and Life Experiences Allow Us to Understand a Wider Range of Clients. All the major life passages that older therapists have experienced—marriage, perhaps divorce, rearing children, juggling two jobs or working rotating shifts, coping with economic stress, illness, aging parents, death—means that they're likely to know with firsthand knowledge what their clients are feeling. The older you get, the less shocked or thrown for a loop you're likely to be by a client's dilemma, having handled quite a few of your own dilemmas. In the very best sense, you've already been there, done that. Given that you have, or have worked to attain, a fairly well-balanced psyche of your own, your familiarity with life's conundrums breeds, not contempt, but a certain confident unflappability. If you've taken charge of your own life, your own marriage, your own teenagers, chances are you'll be better able to exert compassionate control in the therapy room with angry spouses, defiant adolescents, and families in which everybody talks furiously over everybody else and all at once. You're no longer afraid, as young therapists sometimes are, to give orders—tell the overbearing husband to be quiet or the teenager to quit cursing her mother—and make it happen. And, with clients who are going through particularly tough times—a death or other severe loss—simply the fact that you've no doubt suffered your own losses enables you to convey the understanding and comfort of one who really does know what they're going through. R EAD ENTIRE ARTICLE
By "Farm Girl" Jennifer Banshee Moon August 19, 2020
In this Q&A, Sex Therapist Dr. Ralph Fox talks candidly about what can go wrong with couples and what kinds of issues he deals with day to day from the mundane to things we find very humorous. Farm Girl interviews him and asks some pertinent questions. The take away is, if you think you and your partner might need therapy, then you definitely need to see a therapist! Dr. Ralph gives some great information on everything from choosing proper erectile dysfunction or PDE5 inhibitor like Cialis and Viagra to healing or transcending fears, phobias and emotional scars. Doctor Ralph also points out that it's a lot cheaper and easier to work things out in therapy than it is to hire his and hers lawyers and go through a divorce battle.
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