Integrative Couples Therapy ™
This is what happens:
As couples fall in love they create the “good story” of their relationship – for instance – how they met and the details of their growing romance. Over time, conflicts normally arise, and if those problems are not resolved, they come together to create the “bad story” of the relationship. Integrative Couples Therapy© can help couples resolve their problems and have those past issues become part of the “good story.”
“Are you ready for some serious fun?”
SINGLE WOMEN'S RELATIONSHIP THERAPY GROUP: late 20's – late 30's
Educational/Therapy/Process Group
This group is for single female adults who want to change the way they experience themselves and others in relationships, especially romantic. Group members will explore their personal issues in the process of learning new and more successful ways of interacting with others and forming lasting ties.
Educational/Therapy/Process Group
This group is for “committed” couples that want to change the way they are experiencing themselves and their mates. Group members will explore their personal issues in the process of learning new and more successful ways to communicate and form more flexible and enduring bonds for today and into the future.
Read the rest of Are you ready to dig down deep?: Couples Therapy Group
Romantic Relationships:
Looking for love in all the wrong places… (looking for love in too many faces)?
Do you know people who experience their romances like “déjà vu”? You know.. over and over again? You may see them regularly or periodically. When one relationship breaks up and they get into another one, the similarities between this current relationship and the last one become glaringly similar. It seems your friend (or you) is in the same relationship, but with a different person (each time around). The truth is that people attract similar personality types into their lives, over and over again, which can lead to one unsatisfying relationship after another. The problem is that "where ever we go, there we are." We often repeat behaviors hoping that maybe, the next time will be different. The result is that, even though a new relationship will be with a different person, it will probably still have some (or most) of the same dysfunctional elements as previous relationships.

