Therapeutic Aproaches - Gottman Method
Learning to Fight for Your Relationship, Not Against Each Other
Most couples don’t come to therapy because they stopped loving each other. They come because the same argument keeps happening, and nobody wins.
What This Can Feel Like
It’s easy to assume conflict means something is broken beyond repair. But most couples in Gottman-informed therapy are dealing with patterns that feel stuck, not permanent. Here’s what often brings people in:
- You’ve had the same fight about money, parenting, or housework so many times you both know exactly how it ends
- One of you shuts down completely mid-argument while the other keeps pushing for a response
- Small digs and eye-rolls have started to outnumber the moments of warmth
- You feel more like roommates or co-managers than partners
- After a blowup, neither of you knows how to come back and reconnect without pretending it didn’t happen
- Compliments and affection feel less natural now, almost forced
- One partner brings up a concern and the other immediately goes on the defensive
- You find yourself keeping score, mentally cataloging every unmet need
- There’s love there, but it feels buried under layers of resentment and distance
- Big life transitions (a new baby, a job loss, aging parents) have left you feeling more like strangers
Why this happens
Conflict itself isn’t the problem. Every couple has disagreements, and research consistently shows that how couples handle conflict matters far more than how often it happens [Gottman Institute, 2024]. What tends to erode a relationship over time is the presence of certain recurring patterns: contempt, criticism, defensiveness, and stonewalling, which researcher John Gottman identified as the most reliable predictors of relationship breakdown [Gottman & Silver, 1999]. These patterns usually aren’t signs of bad intentions. They’re often learned behaviors, stress responses, or habits that formed gradually, sometimes over years, without either partner fully noticing.
How Gottman Method Can Help
Gottman Method Couples Therapy is built on decades of observational research with real couples and gives therapists a structured framework for understanding where a relationship is struggling and what it needs [Gottman Institute, 2024]. In practice, sessions involve both assessment and skill-building: identifying the specific patterns getting in the way, then practicing concrete tools for communication, repair, and reconnection. There are no guarantees, but couples often leave sessions with something specific to work with, not just insight but actual practice.
- Slowing down the escalation cycle before it takes over a conversation
- Learning how to raise concerns in a way that doesn’t immediately trigger defensiveness
- Rebuilding small moments of connection that tend to erode during stressful periods
- Developing a shared understanding of each other’s emotional triggers and history
- Practicing real repair attempts after conflict, not just waiting for the tension to fade on its own
- Rediscovering what the relationship does well, not only cataloging what’s broken
- Navigating gridlocked disagreements on topics that have no easy resolution
How Ellie Makes Support More Accessible
Starting couples therapy can feel like a big step, and finding the right fit matters even more when two people are involved. Here’s how Ellie tries to make that easier:
- Therapists who work with couples are specifically trained in Gottman Method principles, so you’re not starting from scratch with someone unfamiliar with this approach
- Ellie’s insurance support team helps you understand your benefits upfront, so cost is less of a barrier to getting started
- Evening and weekend appointment times are available at many locations, because most couples can’t both leave work mid-afternoon
- Both telehealth and in-person sessions are offered, so you can choose the format that works for your lives and schedules
- If the first therapist isn’t the right fit for both of you, Ellie can help with rematch rather than leaving you to start the search over from the beginning
- The intake process is designed to gather enough background that your therapist walks into the first session with real context, not just names and a blank slate