Confessions Of A Marriage Counselor (95% Tested)

One couple came to me after fifteen years of “never arguing.” They were proud of it. “We never fight,” the wife said, smiling. Within an hour, I discovered she hadn’t told her husband about her promotion. He hadn’t mentioned he was considering a job in another state. They had stopped confiding, stopped disagreeing, stopped existing to each other. Their marriage was a museum—beautifully preserved, utterly lifeless. Conflict is not the enemy. Indifference is.

I have talked more couples out of divorce than into it. Not because I am pro-marriage at all costs—I have also helped couples separate with grace. But because so many of you come to my office exhausted, not broken. You have confused burnout with the end of love. confessions of a marriage counselor

The secret is not to cling to who you were. The secret is to keep introducing yourselves. Keep being curious. “Who are you today? What do you need from me now?” The marriages that die are the ones that freeze a partner in an old photograph—and then resent them for stepping out of the frame. One couple came to me after fifteen years