Marriage Counseling May Reignite That Spark

Your marriage is falling apart for whatever reason. The two of you were once so happy. You were excited to wake up next to one another and you were even more excited to go to sleep next to that person. You had so much love to give and take but somewhere along the line that love fizzled. It now seems that the two of you do nothing but argue. And it's not even over important things. You argue about who left crumbs on the counter, or who left the toilet seat up or down. It seems the two of you now can't stand each other and so you're thinking about a divorce. However, you must realize that there was once something strong between the two of you. That's why you got married in the first place. You must try everything you can to reignite that spark and marriage counseling may the be way.

You Must Both Attend

Marriage counseling will not work if only one of you attend sessions. Let's say the wife attends marriage counseling sessions and then goes back and tries to talk to the husband. The husband is only going to get defensive and another fight will erupt. This will push the two of you further apart. The one not going to marriage counseling is going to think the one who is attending is spending the entire time talking bad about them. Therefore, you must both attend if you expect marriage counseling to work at repairing your marriage.

How Does It Work?

You may be thinking how marriage counseling could possibly reignite that spark that has long since died away. You probably think there's nothing left to do but go your separate ways. You may be right. Not all marriages work. Some people change so much during the marriage that they are completely different people than when they first said, "I do."

However, you must give it a shot. Marriage counseling works by using a mediator, the counselor, to help you work through the issues plaguing your marriage. It goes way beyond crumbs and toilet seats. It goes beyond money and whatever else you fight about.

There's some other issues deep down and these need to be uncovered. It's like treating a wound. You need to dress the wound, apply ointment and then wait for it to heal. It's the same with marriage counseling. It's going to take time but if you work at it, and you tend to the problems that are underlying all the bickering, you'll hopefully feel that spark that initially brought the two of you together.