Communication
Bridging the Communication Gap
It’s easy to assume that if we’re speaking, we’re communicating—but many couples find that despite constant talking, they’re not truly connecting. Often, couples get caught in cycles of defensiveness, blame, avoidance, or silence. What begins as a disagreement about dinner or chores can quickly spiral into deep emotional wounds when neither partner feels safe to speak openly or be vulnerable.
Poor communication can manifest in many ways:
- Interrupting or talking over each other
- Escalating conflict instead of resolving it
- Avoiding difficult conversations entirely
- Misinterpreting each other's intentions
- Failing to express needs clearly
- Using criticism or sarcasm instead of directness
- Feeling emotionally shut down or ignored
Broken Communication
Why Communication Breaks Down
There are many reasons communication issues arise. For some couples, stress from work, parenting, or financial struggles spills over into the relationship. For others, unresolved trauma, family-of-origin dynamics, or emotional injuries from the past create invisible walls that block authentic dialogue. Sometimes, each partner has a different communication style—one may want to talk everything out, while the other prefers to process quietly before speaking.
Our Approach to Couples Counseling
Identifying and interrupting negative communication patterns
Creating emotional safety during conversations
Learning to express feelings without blaming
Practicing active, reflective listening
Rebuilding empathy and emotional attunement
Making space for difficult conversations without shutting down