MIDTOWN MANHATTAN · TELEHEALTH
Couples Therapy & Marriage Counseling
My work with couples is grounded primarily in Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), an empirically supported approach to couples’ treatment.
EFT helps couples address two powerful forces: the need for closeness and the fear of vulnerability. In relationships, the tension between this need and this fear can produce distressing and reactive interpersonal cycles that can be difficult to change without guidance.
With EFT, the work focuses first on identifying these cycles and on developing a shared understanding of how each partner’s perceptions and reactions contribute to their persistence. As this understanding deepens, the therapist helps the couples experiment with new ways of communicating and of expressing their needs. With practice, these new and more effective communications begin to replace the painful and reactive cycles and begin to foster connections that feel safe and solid.
More Information on Couples’ Therapy
EMOTIONALLY FOCUSED THERAPY (EFT)
In my work with couples, I mostly employ EFT as a treatment modality. The main underlying assumptions in EFT are that partners want to feel emotionally closer to each other but also want to protect themselves from emotional pain and vulnerability.
This tension between a need for more closeness and the urge to protect oneself may, for example, yield a so called “pursuer-withdrawer” dynamic where one partner is making great efforts to connect, and the other partner feels under siege and is trying to protect themselves from their partner’s “demands.”
Though couples’ dynamics may follow a certain pattern, like this “pursuer-withdrawer” dynamic, each couple’s dynamic is also unique, as it emerges from the shared experiences of two people with unique psychologies.