In this day and age, it is easy for couples to find themselves feeling more separate than together. Life is busy, filled with a long list of things-to-do. Couples have a hard time finding time together and when they do, it is usually after a long day when they are both tired. Sometimes, a couple’s sexual spark begins to dim.
Most couples wait, on average, six years before seeking marriage counseling, according to research conducted by John Gottman. Unfortunately, sometimes couples wait too long, and the relationship ends in divorce. If you’re having problems in your marriage, don’t wait to get help from a qualified professional.
Here are some signs that your relationship could be in distress:
One way of working with couples that has quite a lot of research showing its effectiveness is Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy (EFT). EFT sees the connection between partners, the emotional bond, as holding a place of primary importance. This model is based on the idea that the sense of feeling safe, and secure, and knowing that the other person is there for you, is a human need. EFT has found that couples can solve life’s problems more easily when each person in the couple knows that they can count on the other.
If you think your relationship might be in distress, run, don’t walk, to a psychotherapist who provides marriage counseling. You are worth the investment in helping you gain tools to have a close, intimate and satisfying relationship.
I have years of experience dealing with just these kinds of issues. Contact me for more information.
Beth Levine
LCSW-C
For an appointment, please call:
(301) 279 - 7779
932 Hungerford Drive, #2A
Rockville, MD 20850
Licensed Clinical
Social Worker
Over 10 years of experience
•
Certified Emotionally Focused
Couple Therapist
Assistant Director of the
Attachment and Human
Development Center,
The Washington School
of Psychiatry
Member of The Insitute of
Contemporary Psychotherapy
and Psychoanalysis
Member of The
Greater Washington Society of
Clinical Social Work