Love + Sex

Friday, November 27, 2009

Going to Couples Therapy ... Alone

Can couples therapy work if 50% of the couple is MIA?

couple in therapy session

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Dr. Wendy Walsh
: Marriage is hard work. Problems can arise in so many personal "overlap" areas -- from sex and money to child rearing and communication. And during the long haul, in terms of happiness rates, there will be many peaks and valleys. When you find yourself in a valley, couples therapy can be a great way to tune up the machine of love and get your marriage back on track. But there are plenty of husbands who wouldn't step foot in a therapist's office, even if they were the one being paid to be there. So, what's a wife to do? Can couples therapy work if 50% of the couple is MIA?


The answer is a resounding YES. Here's why. A marriage is a system. A family is a larger system where the marriage is a vital gear. If any part of that system changes, the entire system changes. The classic example is the alcoholic family member who refuses to get help. Unknowingly, the other family members' behavior supports and enables the alcoholic's behavior. But if even one member goes to Al-Anon and/or private therapy, they can learn techniques that can help them stop enabling the problem drinker, and the entire family will be affected. It might not be comfortable change. But it will be change.


Another thing that personal therapy can do is help you reframe the problems in your marriage, and assess your place in it. This can change your reactions to your husband's behavior and thus, change the marriage. Here's an example: a wife complains that her husband is a terrible communicator. He comes home from work, gives a few grunts during dinner, and heads to the TV immediately afterward. She nags and nags him in an attempt to get him out of his shell and interacting with her. Eventually she gives him ultimatums. But nothing works.


In personal therapy, she learns that she feels lonely in her marriage. She feels unseen and unheard. The therapist helps her link these feelings to early childhood events that may have been the root of her sadness. Then she asks her to foster the relationships in her life that do help her feel good, perhaps her women friends or family members. As the wife spends more time relying on friends and her feelings of neediness are assuaged, the husband can now safely lower his defenses and come out of his shell a bit. But it's important to remember, this won't work if the goal is to get another person to behave in a new way. If she is trying to manipulate him by going out with her girlfriends more, she won't really have changed inside. She's still a lonely woman, now nagging him with her behavior. But if she actually grows in self-esteem, realizes that she is lovable and can reach out for acceptance from those who will respond in a positive way, her mood will affect the family.


All therapy is a route to personal growth and higher-level thinking. It can take us out of unconscious reactions and help us understand our behaviors as being connected to our thoughts and feelings. My favorite saying is, "Therapy doesn't make you happy. It makes you real." Authentic feelings, when expressed in a non-confrontational way, can create a path toward intimacy in your marriage. Therapy can also help us learn to have empathy and accept others. So many things that we interpret as deliberate attempts to hurt us are actually someone else's protection reflex. In other words, he's not hurting you, he's protecting himself from you. Having empathy for his tender psyche can help bring you back to the place of loving respect that started it all.


And marriage is worth it. It is through the friction created in love relationships that we grow as individuals. Every crisis in a marriage is an opportunity to grow closer through understanding ourselves and the feelings of our partner. Conflict is part of the game. A relationship without conflict is one without emotional intimacy. Relationships should not be judged by the amount of conflict, but by the ability to repair after conflict. And, having a helpful guide in the form of a therapist can help you through that repair process.

Dr. Wendy Walsh holds a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology and her area of interest is Attachment Theory, a psychological, evolutionary and ethological theory that provides a descriptive and explanatory framework for understanding interpersonal relationships between human beings. As a psychological assistant registered with the California Board of Psychology, Dr. Walsh has treated individuals, couples and families for a variety of mental health concerns including personality disorders, anger management, eating and substance disorders, and depression.

Read more: MomLogic.com -- Going to Couples Therapy ... Alone

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Comments 1-10 of 16
  • opiniononly's Avatar
    Posted by opiniononly Thu Aug 27, 2009 12:46pm PDT

    I did it for 4 years without my ex husband. Great for me, but realized that if he wasn't interested in doing the work involved, the relationship had problems that won't go away if the woman bonds with her friends in lieu of both of them working together. This article makes it sound as if the woman gets her emotional needs met via her friends the husband gets a pass on continuing to work on his developmentally delayed emotionally growth. Not in my world.

    One can understand all the intellectual reasons why a person acts as they do, but understanding a person's behavior should not automatically equate to accepting their behavior...no matter how "fragile" their psyche.

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  • another hockey fan's Avatar
    Posted by another hockey fan Thu Aug 27, 2009 1:22pm PDT

    OPINIONONLY: I couldn't agree more!! I was thinking the same thing when I read your response. I think it is great if a person benefits from the one on one sessions, but that's only 1/2 of the equation. Last we all checked a marriage is between TWO people, not one. If he isn't getting help or more importantly, interested in saving the marriage TOGETHER, then eventually it will still fall apart.

    I tried going to a therapist without my first hubby and she told me flat out she could not work with me because he wasn't willing to come. I thought that was fair and right on.

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  • None's Avatar
    Posted by None Thu Aug 27, 2009 1:32pm PDT

    If u want to find yourself, but whats the point if other person not willing to WORK on MARRIAGE! Takes 2

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  • KittyKat's Avatar
    Posted by KittyKat Thu Aug 27, 2009 7:45pm PDT

    Thank you None exactly what I was thinking. It takes two to make a marriage work not 1.

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  • Mauna's Avatar
    Posted by Mauna Fri Aug 28, 2009 5:51am PDT

    The whole body of the "Married" they all need therapy as I call it Group therapy their showing whether it be on TV or in reality their examples of what a relationship is suppose to be as, is nothing more than a complete nightmare in diverse forms and they are all why I continue to choose to remain unmarried.

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  • j2's Avatar
    Posted by j2 Fri Aug 28, 2009 8:07am PDT

    Could couple therapy work if 50% of the couple is MIA? Well, theoretically yes if the 50% that does show up comprises 100% of the problem and works hard to solve it. The cynic in me, however suspects that the MIA fraction would be more likely to have the majority of the blame.

    Not all therapists appear to be very competent, however. I knew a couple having some problems (frequency of sex). She thought a couple of times a year was 2 too many and he thought it was way too few. They tried therapy. She found a (female) therapist who basically told the husband that he was being selfish for wanting more sex. He found a male Baptist minister, who basically told the wife to submit to her husband. After a year of therapy, there was no improvement & the wife was unwilling to go to any more therapy. My recommendation to the guy was if she wasn’t willing to work on the problem to get a divorce. He did & is now happily married. The woman is alone, bitter & now having some health problems. I think if they’d found a competent therapist that they might have uncovered the root cause of the problem.

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  • another hockey fan's Avatar
    Posted by another hockey fan Fri Aug 28, 2009 9:33am PDT

    J: Excellent point. There are many therapists in and out of the church that are completely one-sided in favor of the husband or the wife. It makes matters worse because duh, who wants to think it's all THEIR fault. A GOOD therapist will remain neutral and listen to both sides and find solutions that they can work on together (and some separately) to resolve their issues. No wonder so many men hate the idea of going to one.

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  • Kikki's Avatar
    Posted by Kikki Fri Aug 28, 2009 12:12pm PDT

    I went to couples therapy alone and now the other half is MIA permenantly. It was great to figure out what I wanted and needed and then to ask for it. When I didn't get it, I left and now I have everything I could ever want or need. He came in once and complained about how the world was never all about him, which he thought it should be. My therapist talked to me afterwards and urged me to reconsider my desire to stay with him. That marriage was definately not worth it. Yeah couples therapy!

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  • Joy in Seattle's Avatar
    Posted by Joy in Seattle Fri Aug 28, 2009 4:26pm PDT

    With all do respect, you do have some very good points - BUT!

    A lot of problems in all marriages come from a lack of communication. We fail in communicating about the sex, the money, or the children. We fail to communicate about the alcoholism. Whatever it is, often it is not the actual problem which can be solved but the lack of communicating about the problem that causes friction. Therefore, if one half of the pair does not come to therapy, the opportunity to communicate and resolve the problems fail.

    I repeat: it is often not the problem but that lack of communicating about the problem that leads to strife in a marriage.

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  • VS's Avatar
    Posted by VS Fri Aug 28, 2009 5:09pm PDT

    i have always gone to couples therapy myself and he is the one who always caused the problems. so nothing has really changed. it gets a little better when i ignore the problems, but they resurface along with my misery.

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