Relationships
Do you experience one or more of the following?
Struggling to make or hold on to friendships
Wanting to be in a relationship but struggling to find one or stay in one
Feeling socially awkward
Making the same mistakes in relationships over and over again
Finding it difficult to open up to others
Having problems communicating with your partner
A lack of intimacy in your relationship
Having feelings of jealousy, frustration or anger
Wanting to explore an open relationship
Feeling stuck or trapped in your relationship
How counselling can help:
Counselling work can help you better understand how you relate to other people and what’s working and not working for you, whether this be friends, work colleagues, family or a partner. It can help identify what you want from an intimate relationship and why your current relationship, or past relationships haven’t worked so well for you. This might include why you keep repeating patterns of behaviour or keep making the same choices that then lead to difficulties. These insights can help you relate better to both yourself and the world of others, to really connect and avoid making the same mistakes you feel you’ve made in the past.
The additional option of couples counselling can help you manage conflict better and to reconnect with what you found attractive about one another when you first met. Having you both together can help you better understand why the relationship dynamics aren’t working like they used to or how you’d like them to.
Rather than trying to change one another, couples counselling can help you better understand each other and better navigate differences. For some couples, it’s about managing the fall-out from discovering an affair or other sexual behaviour kept hidden from the other. Counselling can help provide a stable platform from which the couple can work to re-build trust if their intention is for the relationship to try and survive the rupture.
Relationships
Do you experience one or more of the following?
Struggling to make or hold on to friendships
Wanting to be in a relationship but struggling to find one or stay in one
Feeling socially awkward
Making the same mistakes in relationships over and over again
Finding it difficult to open up to others
Having problems communicating with your partner
A lack of intimacy in your relationship
Having feelings of jealousy, frustration or anger
Wanting to explore an open relationship
Feeling stuck or trapped in your relationship
How counselling can help:
Counselling work can help you better understand how you relate to other people and what’s working and not working for you, whether this be friends, work colleagues, family or a partner. It can help identify what you want from an intimate relationship and why your current relationship, or past relationships haven’t worked so well for you. This might include why you keep repeating patterns of behaviour or keep making the same choices that then lead to difficulties. These insights can help you relate better to both yourself and the world of others, to really connect and avoid making the same mistakes you feel you’ve made in the past.
The additional option of couples counselling can help you manage conflict better and to reconnect with what you found attractive about one another when you first met. Having you both together can help you better understand why the relationship dynamics aren’t working like they used to or how you’d like them to.
Rather than trying to change one another, couples counselling can help you better understand each other and better navigate differences. For some couples, it’s about managing the fall-out from discovering an affair or other sexual behaviour kept hidden from the other. Counselling can help provide a stable platform from which the couple can work to re-build trust if their intention is for the relationship to try and survive the rupture.
Relationships
Do you experience one or more of the following?
Struggling to make or hold on to friendships
Wanting to be in a relationship but struggling to find one or stay in one
Feeling socially awkward
Making the same mistakes in relationships over and over again
Finding it difficult to open up to others
Having problems communicating with your partner
A lack of intimacy in your relationship
Having feelings of jealousy, frustration or anger
Wanting to explore an open relationship
Feeling stuck or trapped in your relationship
How counselling can help:
Counselling work can help you better understand how you relate to other people and what’s working and not working for you, whether this be friends, work colleagues, family or a partner. It can help identify what you want from an intimate relationship and why your current relationship, or past relationships haven’t worked so well for you. This might include why you keep repeating patterns of behaviour or keep making the same choices that then lead to difficulties. These insights can help you relate better to both yourself and the world of others, to really connect and avoid making the same mistakes you feel you’ve made in the past.
The additional option of couples counselling can help you manage conflict better and to reconnect with what you found attractive about one another when you first met. Having you both together can help you better understand why the relationship dynamics aren’t working like they used to or how you’d like them to.
Rather than trying to change one another, couples counselling can help you better understand each other and better navigate differences. For some couples, it’s about managing the fall-out from discovering an affair or other sexual behaviour kept hidden from the other. Counselling can help provide a stable platform from which the couple can work to re-build trust if their intention is for the relationship to try and survive the rupture.
