The Gold Standard In Couples Counseling

Discover why Emotionally Focused Therapy is the gold standard in couples counseling. Learn how this proven tool helps partners break negative cycles and build secure, lasting connections.

EMOTIONALLY FOCUSED THERAPY

Dr. Bernis Riley, Psy.D., LPC-S

2/18/20264 min read

Several gold bars stacked on a dark surface
Several gold bars stacked on a dark surface

With the high cost of gas and everything else, our pool guy is shutting down his business. So, my husband decided that he’ll take care of the pool himself. He went to the local pool supply store and found a pool maintenance starter kit. Everything he needs to get started is in there.

It struck me that a lot of couples could use a starter kit for Emotionally Focused Therapy. EFT is the gold standard in couples counseling, but many couples don't know anything about it.

EFT Is The Gold Standard in Couples Counseling, But What Is Emotionally Focused Therapy?

Not to be confused with Emotion Focused Therapy (also called EFT), Emotionally Focused Therapy was developed by Dr. Sue Johnson. It has as its foundational underpinnings, several well-respected and proven psychological theories and approaches. Three main ones are…

Humanistic-Experiential Approach:

EFT is based on the assumption that human nature is the same for everyone. We have reasons why we behave in the ways we do. We are whole persons, not just psychological labels. So, in EFT, we don’t pathologize you or try to find the bad guy in your relationship. Instead, we look at you as whole persons and seek out the reasons and emotions behind your behavior.

Systems Theory:

EFT recognizes that in relationships, we are part of a system that is interconnected. Each part of the system affects all the other parts of the system. Your actions cause a reaction in your partner, which becomes a self-perpetuating negative cycle of disconnection. He is not the problem, and she is not the problem. The system is the problem, and the negative cycle within the system is the problem. Therefore, addressing the emotional triggers that spark off the negative cycle is the solution, not “fixing” the husband or the wife.

Attachment Theory:

Humans seek attachment above all else. God said it in Genesis, “It is not good for man to be alone.” We are literally created for connection. We are always reaching out for our loved ones for comfort and emotional support. We become extreme upset and resort to dysfunctional behaviors when our loved ones become physically or emotionally remote. When we are securely attached, we can handle uncertainty, threats, anxiety, or sadness; we become much more resilient.

The Negative Cycle

Drawing on these and other theoretical understandings, Emotionally Focused Therapy focuses on the predictable negative conflict patterns that arise when a couple becomes disconnected. When partners lose connection with their partner, they fall into distress and subconsciously employ usually destructive tactics to reconnect. We protest, we get angry, we cling, we get depressed, we yell, we criticize, we run away or shut down. This attack/withdraw pattern is what we call “the negative cycle, the unending cycle of conflict that takes over the relationship.

The negative cycle usually takes on one of three forms:

Attack/Attack

This is where both partners attack one another. One is usually the main attacker, but they both push and push back against one another.

Attack/Withdraw

This is where one partner attacks with criticism, complaining, nagging, pleading, crying, and shouting while the other withdraws with defending, stonewalling, shutting down, silence, and leaving.

Withdraw/Withdraw

This is where both partners are shut down emotionally. Conversation is about day-to-day chores, assignments, tasks, but neither dares to draw close or seek to draw the other close. The couple have basically become roommates at this point.

How EFT Works

EFT sessions are designed to foster emotional connection between you again, which will result in a reduction of conflict. You will both talk to your therapist and with one another in a safe and structured environment where you can regulate or deal with difficult emotions and bring them back into balance by sharing them with your partner in a way that will be received.

Most of your time in therapy will be spent de-escalating your conflict. We will listen for and share the emotions and the unmet primary emotional attachment needs that are driving your conflict. Your EFT therapist will help you get underneath the arguments to the emotions fueling them. When you are able to identify your true needs and communicate those in a way that is understood and received, the conflict in your relationship will de-escalate so that you can begin to reconnect again.

You will learn to talk about and accept one another’s feelings, understand the role you each play in the negative cycle, learn to spot your triggers, and re-focus on the negative cycle as the “bad guy,” not one another. You’ll learn how to tune in to your emotions so that you know what you need from one another, and you’ll be able to express those desires in a way that is received. You will be able to see one another as a safe haven and secure harbor in this crazy world we live in.

It's Time To Get Started

If you and your partner are feeling disconnected and you want to reconnect, we can help. At SoulCare Counseling, we’re a little different than most counseling centers in that we only do Emotionally Focused Therapy. Most counseling practices use an eclectic mix of approaches, but we focus one doing one approach really well, the one that has the highest success rate of any couples therapy model: EFT.

To get started, read more about Emotionally Focused Therapy and then contact us to schedule a free, no-obligation thirty-minute consultation. We’ll talk with you about how we do therapy, let you ask any questions you have, and see if it feels like a good fit. If so, we’ll schedule your first actual counseling appointment, give you your paperwork, and take half payment. Then you’ll be on your way to that difference you’ve been longing for in your relationship.