Posts Tagged ‘couples counseling Phoenix’
Thursday, June 9th, 2011
In your relationship or marriage, maybe you’ve found yourself getting caught up in a rollercoaster-type experience where you and your wife, girlfriend or partner fight for some time, and then all goes back to serenity, and then it happens again and again, with constant repetition and no solution.
Fighting and conflict happen repeatedly, in a cycle format, and usually it’s tough to see what triggers your fall into fighting, conflict and attacks. When we’re in the fighting, we have no perspective. How can we help ourselves get out of it?
We’re going to talk about how to stop conflict and fightingthrough better understanding your negative relationship cycle.
As a fundamental component of the model of couples therapy known as Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), developed by Canadian psychologist Susan Johnson, PhD., identifying your negative cycle consists of looking at certain layers that exist behind the conflict you get into and actually see.

The negative cycle you and your partner get stuck in usually consists of negative behaviors, thoughts, and feelings that causes distress. We get sucked into this “vortex” and have a difficult time seeing ourselves when we get lost in our “cycle.” We often resort to reactive – and hurtful – words, actions and facial gestures when we are upset, needing something from our partner, or not feeling connected or understood.
When you get lost in conflict, look out for these things that you might be doing to aggravate your negative cycle:
- Avoiding or withdrawing from your partner
- Saying hurtful things that produce more conflict
- Feelings that bubble up that don’t get communicated
- Not feeling like you’re being heard
- Trigger words or statements your partner says that cause you to react
- Identifying what you’re telling yourself about your relationship (or your partner) when in conflict
- What behaviors you engage in when you’re upset
Here’s a free worksheet on identifying your negative relationship cycle. Download and print two copies, one for you and one for your partner or spouse. Open up a conversation around your results, and you might be really pleasantly surprised. And you might just surprise her, too.
For further help, read Sue Johnson’s “Hold Me Tight,” an excellent read to help you start to make sense of this confounding cycle.
Tags: alcohol fighting, alcohol problems Phoenix, boyfriend drinking Phoenix, couples counseling Phoenix, dating problems the next, EFT Arizona, EFT Phoenix, EFT therapists in Scottsdale, Emotionally Focused Therapy, getting drunk and fighting, marriage counseling Phoenix, men and alcohol Phoenix, relationship problems Phoenix
Posted in Dating and Relationships, Family, Healthy Marriages, Men and Relationships, Men and Women, Sex | No Comments »
Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011
If you’re like most men, it may take you a while to come around to the realization that there are problems in your relationship or marriage. some couples think that if they don’t fight, all is well. But is it? Are you both really okay, or is that what you’re telling yourselves?
For guys, the thought of going in the couples counseling is comparable to getting a root canal. The thought of showing up in the counselor’s office and starting to take a look at the problems, and ultimately, their role in the problems, is no picnic. Added to that, most guys think that the therapist is going to side with their wife or girlfriend, and end up attacking them.
Most of the myths that we generate about couples counseling are false. The right counselor can understand these things, and work with you to help you feel comfortable and not like you’re on the hot seat. The right approach to couples counseling is also critical for the successful goals you want to accomplish with your wife or girlfriend.
One extremely effective orientation to marriage counseling comes in the form of what’s known as EFT, or Emotionally Focused Therapy for Couples. The success rate is quite high: studies are coming out that show couples have a better than 70% repair rate from EFT.
Developed by Susan Johnson, Ph.D, a Canadian psychologist, Emotionally Focus Therapy looks at the attachment bonds between couples. This is an approach that looks deeper than just building better communication skills or developing more effective negotiation or coping skills. EFT helps couples connect in an emotional way. And yes, men do want to connect with their wives in the emotional way, even if they don’t say so. It’s this emotional bond between partners that is sustainable, and many of the reactive behaviors and emotions that result are part of a complex “dance” or chronic negative cycle that emerges between partners.
The idea is to bring awareness to that negative cycle, and all work together in therapy to help couples stop fighting, reduce conflict and connected and more animate an emotional way. The negative cycle becomes the problem, and therapist and couple work towards understanding and reducing the negative cycle together.
Even guys who are hesitant to dive into their feelings talk about really making progress with this form of marriage counseling. a lot of guys really enjoy it, and not only turn around the destructive path of their relationship, but are able to improve it in ways that they never thought that they could.
Here’s a free worksheet on identifying your negative cycle with your partner. Download this and do it together to begin the process of identifying how you both get stuck in your own relationship patterns: http://phoenixmenscounseling.com/clinicalforms/negative-cycle.pdf
You don’t have to feel hopeless and trapped in your relationship or marriage situation. There is help, and options for you to explore instead of a breakup or divorce. You might be really surprised with the results.
Tags: counselors in Phoenix, couples counseling Phoenix, economic stress for men, EFT Arizona, EFT couples counselors Phoenix, EFT marriage counselors, EFT Phoenix, EFT therapists Phoenix, Emotionally Focused Therapy Arizona, financial stress, financial stress for couples, Jason Fierstein, marriage counseling Phoenix, money management, stress management counselors Phoenix
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Friday, January 7th, 2011
For couples already in relationship crisis, alcohol can fuel the fire pretty quickly. If there are problems already underlying a relationship or marriage, alcohol can surely make everything worse.
For men, who can often binge drink for drink to excess, alcohol takes the lid off of our emotions, which are usually held in check in our sober lives. Men have a difficult time dealing with emotions already, and alcohol has an effect of drudging up those negative emotions, bringing them to the surface, and amplifying them under the influence of alcohol. If we have repressed emotions or thoughts concerning our relationship partner, alcohol gives us the freedom to express those in a big way, often to the dismay of our partner.
What’s worse, when those unexpressed emotions or thoughts do come out at a relationship partner, it’s usually in a social setting, such as at a party, a bar, or another place that would generally be inappropriate to hash it all out. Furthermore, we are not in the right state of mind to have an argument–were not thinking clearly, and were inebriated and irrational. There can be no good that comes from an argument or fight under the influence of alcohol, yet most couples get into fighting when they’re drunk. This is making a bad situation worse.
Being able to communicate and talk about the problems between you and your partner is very important, so as those issues that have been repressed or not talked about don’t spring open when you people been drinking together. The point of drinking together is to enjoy each other’s company and have fun, not to open up the powder keg and start drunk fighting in front of all your friends. learning to identify and work through the problems in an ongoing way, so they don’t build up and come out only when you both were drinking, is certainly a way to help de-pressurize the relationship problems between you and your loved one. Limiting the amount of alcohol that you both consume together is also going to help, or simply having an understanding before you go out drinking about how much you’re going to drink so there’s no surprises.
Tags: alcohol abuse Phoenix, alcohol fighting, alcohol problems Phoenix, boyfriend drinking Phoenix, couples counseling Phoenix, dating problems the next, getting drunk and fighting, marriage counseling Phoenix, men and alcohol Phoenix, relationship problems Phoenix
Posted in Dating and Relationships, Drugs and Alcohol, Healthy Marriages, Men and Relationships, Men and Women | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, December 15th, 2010
Like no other time in the year, the holidays demand that we get quite gluttonous. Starting with gorging ourselves with turkey and stuffing, to im-
bibing on New Year’s Eve, the holidays make it easy for us to push rationality aside to indulge in the joyful holiday spirit.
For most, overindulgence happens all across the board, from eating to drinking to spending. Learning how to reduce some of your holiday stress might lower the post-celebratory hangover in January (your relationship and your wallet may thank you later).
Spending too much is pretty much a given for most people during the holidays, but use these tips to help you deal with your holiday money stress:
- Plan your spending early: Whether you’re trying to decide how much to spend on gifts, eating out or traveling, getting in touch with how much you figure on spending, or setting a budget, can help you deal with some of the post-sticker shock experiences of the new year. Try to get a sense of how many people you’re spending on, plan what events or functions require you to shop, or pick up wine,or get a sense your specific travel expenses may be. Planning early, and setting a budget and sticking to it, will help you not get caught up in the mad consumerism of the holiday season.
- Understand your reasons for spending money/saying “no”: Gifts and holiday expenses are normal, but going over the top may not be, especially in today’s economic climate. For some, especially people pleasers, the tendency to buy gifts for people so they’ll be happy with us may be going too far. Also, if you are going to holiday parties or events where you feel obligated to, don’t. There may be the obligatory work party that everyone needs to go to, but if there are parties or dinners you’re invited to and you don’t really want to go, and where you can reasonably decline, stay true to yourself and say ‘no’.
- Communicate with your wife or girlfriend about spending: Talk and plan with the one you love about what the financial expectations are for the season. Are you both on the same page about how much you are wanting to spend, say on the children’s gifts, on each other’s gifts, eating out, etc.? Do you both have the same ideas about how much you think is reasonable to spend? Talk and get on the same page.
- Use Mint.com: This is one of the best websites out there, for tracking your expenses, setting short term goals, or getting a sense of what parts of your life you spend most in. There are pretty color pie charts and line charts to help illustrate your spending and saving, so you can feel like you’ve got a nice hold on your holiday spending. They’ve got a pretty handy iPhone application to boot, so you can track while you’re shopping.
- Don’t “emotionally spend”: Emotional spending is probably the majority of what we end up consuming up holidays, whether that’s the impulsive peppermint latte at Starbucks, or that quick $50 photo shoot with Santa for your kids at the mall. Christmas and the holidays have a way of stoking our emotions to open up our wallets, so just be careful that you don’t end up spending out of emotion instead of logic and planning. The retailers and businesses depend on our emotional spending, this time of the year more than any other, but as far as stress goes, it could be better to just leave the house with a firm list.Don’t give into those merry Christmas tunes piped into the store you’re browsing, and buy just on impulse.
- Watch That Debt: If you can, leave the credit cards at home completely this holiday season. Debt is lessen vogue now, after the chilly economic recession we’re trudging out of. Adding more debt is going to leave you more financially stressed and may push some into depression or anxiety. Debt will make you stress, and why would you want to have more stress to an already stressful season? Leave that credit card of home, and pay with cash. To take it one step beyond, try shopping this season with just a planned wadful of cash. Decide early how much lump sum to to pull out, and use that strictly for your gift shopping this season.
The men who are firmly centered this holiday season are the men who are mindfully spending. Reckless spending’s not good for anyone, except for the credit card companies and retailers. If you’re in a relationship this holiday season, try to use these tips to help you and your partner stay the same page about how you’re both spending money. This will add to a lot less relationship stress, too. Dealing with holiday money stress can be difficult, when we get swept up in the good times and tidings of the holiday season. Watching your money may help you start the new year in a much less stressful way.
Tags: counselors in Phoenix, couples counseling Phoenix, economic stress for men, financial stress, financial stress for couples, Jason Fierstein, marriage counseling Phoenix, money management, stress management counselors Phoenix
Posted in Anger and Stress, Dating and Relationships, Healthy Marriages, Men and Relationships, Men and Women, Mens’ Mental Health, Money, Stress | No Comments »
Friday, July 16th, 2010
We’ve explored receiving support, and giving support, in the last two posts. Today, we identify the ways to express more support to your wife or girlfriend, so you can start employing them into your relationship or marriage.
- Take the time (even for 5 min. a day) to simply listen. Sit down with her, make eye contact, and actively listen. Reflect back what you hear from her, as she says it; you can achieve this without sounding like a counselor or therapist.
- Understand that “doing” things for her is different from “being”; making weekend plans, doing the grocery shopping or laundry, or taking her car in for a wash are “doing” things. Guys have a hard time with this, as we’re executors. Try “being” their for her (see above bullet point)
- Tell her she’s a great girlfriend/wife/mother

- Be specific about what you love about her, or what you support her for (women like the specifics)
- Communicate to her that she’s smart or funny, as well as sexy; a healthy mix of support about her physique, as well as her character, will get you a long way.
- Ask simply: “How can I help?” This will payoff big-time. It’ll communicate to her that you care about her and her needs. Develop a “how can I help” mindset, and this will radically change your relationship for the better.
- If there’s a problem in your relationship that you don’t see, or don’t want to see, consider that there might be one for her. Just because you don’t see the problem, doesn’t mean it’s not there. Admitting that there’s a problem, and risking asking for help, is supporting her, and supporting your relationship
These tips should go a long way towards both communicating your support for the woman you love, and express your caring and concern for the well-being of your relationship. If you commit to working on these actively, and making them an integral part of your relationship on a day-to-day basis, you’re both going to be a lot happier that you did. She’ll be quite happy with you.
Tags: communication problems, couples counseling Phoenix, divorce counseling Phoenix, how to show her support, Jason Fierstein, Mens’ Mental Health, Phoenix Mens Counseling, premarriage counseling Phoenix, relationship problems in Scottsdale
Posted in Dating and Relationships, Healthy Marriages, Men and Relationships, Men and Women, Women | No Comments »
Monday, May 24th, 2010
It’s easy to see what a bad relationship looks like. You’re probably surrounded with plenty of anti-models everyday. But what about those really functional relationships that stick in your mind?
We all have severely idealized versions of what happy and healthy relationships and marriages look like. Sometimes, if we look closely, some people are more attracted to those fantasy relationships in their minds than they are to their actual partners. During our formative years, we are socialized in many ways (through schooling, religious institutions, friends, media) to come up with our private version of a good and healthy relationship. No one grows up thinking their marriage will grow cold and distant over time (at least I haven’t heard that in therapy).
But, what does make for a health relationship? What are the marks of a truly healthy relationship? What am I missing? I’m interested to hear your comments, and your perspectives on your version of a healthy relationship.
Here’s 15 of the most important (not necessarily in order of importance):
- Self-awareness
- Empathy
- Communication, and ability to have conflict within a safe “container”
- Love and fulfilling sex life
- Fun and laughter
- Respect of your partner
- Trust in your partner
- Shared and common interests
- Similar ideas about how to construct
- Shared power
- Understanding about money and how it’s managed in the relationship
- Supportive and nurturing; validating for both people
- Mutual willingness to work together on relationship/marriage problems
- Similar “worldviews”, or ways to create shared experiences together
- Good handoff of time together, and time apart (some couples need more, others less)
Creating a healthy relationship takes a lot of willingness, hard work and mutual love and respect, and each relationship could be optimized in its own way. There are myriad ways to relationship success, and many of the roads to relationship health are unique to each relationship, as is the uniqueness of each person. Finding what works – and what doesn’t – for your own relationship is part of the journey of awareness and growth for yourself, your partner, and your relationship.
Tags: counseling for men, couples counseling Phoenix, couples counselors Phoenix, Healthy Marriages, healthy relationships, Jason Fierstein, marital therapy Phoenix, marriage counseling Phoenix, marriage counselors Phoenix, Mens’ Mental Health, Scottsdale couples counseling
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Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
In relationships – intimate or otherwise – your single greatest weapon for success is communication. We have so much power in our hands with good communication, and we don’t even know it.
So many relationships end, or fade out, because communication sours or stops. Family members stop talking because of some ancient grudge from some relative’s wedding way back when. Marriages end because of issues that could have been worked out with clearer communication. Work relationships fail because we didn’t quiet mean to say what we said to our boss, and in our fiery impulsivity, leads to us getting fired.
We get in our own way when we communicate ineffectively. If we’re failing to state our needs and feelings, then we’re probably not getting what we want. If we’re not listening to what the other says, including when they have a problem with us, we’re ensuring a problematic conversation. If we’re not in touch with what we want, they others will have no clue about how to meet our needs.
For men, shutting down their anger is a universal issue every guy seems to deal with. Some guys explode; other guys stuff it in. Ineffectively dealing with anger is big time related to poor communication. A lot of guys are afraid of their own anger, or are afraid if they communicate it to the person they’re upset with, that person will reject them (e.g. their wife/girlfriend). Some guys are so busy people pleasing, that they would rather take care of other people’s needs instead of take care of their own. Over time, this builds up lots of anger, and it’ll come out in harmful ways.
The other thing on anger: it’s o.k. to be angry and communicate it. If you’re angry, it doesn’t mean you’re “that” guy, the jerk no one wants to be around. Being angry once doesn’t mean it becomes your identity. This is an important difference. Too many guys get afraid of being “that guy”, and stuff their anger further.
Here’s the skinny on what works and doesn’t work in good communication:
What works?
- Learning how to state your needs and feelings directly (first with yourself)
- Being open to your feelings
- Communicating your anger directly, not passively; don’t hold it in – it’ll corrode you
- Listen, and really hear what the other person is saying
- Get in touch with what you want from the person, and request it instead of demand it from them
And what doesn’t work?
- Criticizing others; they’ll shut down – guaranteed
- Judging others
- Acting superior to others
- Making demands upon others
- Using “always” and “never” with others
- Rehashing history with someone, and using it as ammo against them
- Passive-aggressive behavior (like saying “I’m not mad at you,” but acting mad at them in other ways)
Tags: Arizona, communication skills, couples counseling Phoenix, Jason Fierstein, marital fighting, marital problems, mens counseling, Phoenix counseling, Phoenix counselor, Phoenix Mens Counseling, Phoenix therapist, Phoenix therapy, premarital counseling Phoenix, relationship counseling Phoenix, relationship problems
Posted in Anger and Stress, Dating and Relationships, Healthy Marriages, Men and Relationships, Men and Women, Mens’ Mental Health, Uncategorized, Work, Family and Everything Else | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 20th, 2010
As a Phoenix counselor for men, I specialize in helping men deal with the difficult issues they face: relationship problems, depression, work stress, anger issues, sexual concerns and effective communication skill building.
My practice – Phoenix Men’s Counseling – also helps guys create the types of lives that they see in their minds. Working in counseling together, a treatment plan is developed, and strategies are created to work towards those end results. Forging a relationship based on trust, client and counselor proceed to identify those unconscious barriers that prevent forward progress. Without the help of a professional counselor, think of it as knowing you’ve got to lose weight or get to the gym, actually going a handful of times, and stopping repeatedly before accomplishing your goal. You don’t know what’s stopping you, and know matter how hard you try to punch through it, you can’t. That’s where Phoenix Men’s Counseling comes in.
Book at online appointment through our site today. If you’re struggling, and you want greater happiness, take the risk today. You’ll be happy you did.
Tags: anger management, anxiety counseling Phoenix, couples counseling Phoenix, depression counseling Phoenix, divorce counseling Phoenix, Jason Fierstein, marriage counseling Phoenix, Phoenix counseling, Phoenix counselor, Phoenix Mens Counseling, Phoenix therapist, Phoenix therapy, stress management
Posted in Anger and Stress, Dating and Relationships, Healthy Marriages, Men and Relationships, Men and Women, Mens’ Mental Health | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 12th, 2010
For those who have never been part of the counseling process before, the idea of sharing one’s most intimate self with someone (a therapist), as well as their spouse, is fear-inducing. Many couples come to couples counseling because they want to learn how to better communicate with each other, and lack the trust to be able to breach the topics of the most sensitive issues: sex, money, trust, power. Men have a hard time with relationship counseling. Most would rather enjoy a root canal that have to buy into couples counseling.
But, couples counseling is not as scary as most people think it is. In couples counseling, it is the job of the therapist or counselor to be an impartial and participatory observer, among other things. Many fear that the therapist will take sides, which is understandable yet false. A good couples counselor should be supportive of both sides, and encourage dialogue, awareness and insight for both relationship partners.
Usually, a two-hour intake will include designing a treatment plan, which is based on the agreed upon goals each couple wants to work towards together, completing an in-depth interview, and agreeing on the treatment process with a consent to treatment conversation and paperwork completion.
Couples counseling sessions are designed to identify the blocks and barriers that keep relationship or marriage partners apart and disconnected. Moreso, through insight, greater awareness and ownership, each partner is encouraged to dialogue in a way that is not falling into blaming, avoiding, hurting or any of the other myriad ways couples dysfunctionally interact with each other outside of the counseling office. Goals are set, and weekly homework assignments are given to each couple/partner to work on between sessions. Always, prioritization of quality time together needs to be the foundation, even if there are hurt or angry feelings that need to be communicated about. Couples that maintain their distance will continue to: it’s addictive to want to avoid potential conflicts, especially for many men and people who are conflict-avoidant.
These are a couple of things to think about when considering starting the process of couples counseling. It’s critical that you interview your couples counselor and make sure that the therapist is competent, experienced, compassionate, and, most of all, that you connect with your marriage counselor. Couples counseling is an investment: psychically, financially, chronologically, emotionally. Because you are putting in so much, get a sense that you’ll get out of it what you need to by researching and choosing the right therapist for you.
Tags: anger issues, communication skills, couples counseling Phoenix, couples counselor, divorce counseling Phoenix, fighting, marital counseling, marriage counseling Phoenix, marriage counselor Phoenix, mens counseling, parenting issues, Phoenix psychotherapists, psychotherapy Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tempe
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