Better Relationship Blog

James Christensen James Christensen

Overfunctioning and Underfunctioning

Overfunctioning and underfunctioning are patterns of behavior that can mess up the balance in your relationship. One partner ends up doing way too much (overfunctioning), while the other doesn't do enough (underfunctioning). Think of it like a seesaw that's permanently tilted.

Overfunctioning and underfunctioning are patterns of behavior that can mess up the balance in your relationship. One partner ends up doing way too much (overfunctioning), while the other doesn't do enough (underfunctioning). Think of it like a seesaw that's permanently tilted.

Overfunctioning

When you're the overfunctioner, you feel the need to take control and handle everything in the relationship. You might:

  • Anticipate your partner's needs before they even ask. You're like a mind reader, always knowing what they want and jumping to fulfill their needs.

  • Give advice even when it's not wanted. You think you're being helpful, but it can come across as controlling and make your partner feel incompetent.

  • Become the emotional caretaker. You try to fix their problems and manage their feelings, leaving you emotionally exhausted.

For example: Imagine you're always the one planning dates, making dinner reservations, and organizing weekend activities. You end up feeling like the event planner in your own relationship, and it takes a toll.

Underfunctioning

If you're the underfunctioner, you tend to rely on your partner to make decisions and handle responsibilities. You might:

  • Avoid expressing your opinions or preferences. You'd rather go with the flow than assert yourself, even if it means not getting what you want.

  • Let your partner handle all the practical stuff. You depend on them to deal with finances, chores, and even emotional support, even if you're capable of doing it yourself.

  • Seek constant validation from your partner. You feel insecure and unsure of yourself, needing their reassurance to feel good about yourself.

For example: Imagine your partner manages all the finances, even though you have a job. You never look at the bills or discuss spending, making you feel financially dependent and powerless.

Finding a Healthier Balance

To break this unhealthy cycle, you both need to take responsibility for your actions and work toward greater equality in the relationship.

  • If you tend to overfunction: Start by setting boundaries and letting your partner handle more. Resist the urge to jump in and fix things for them. Give them space to figure things out on their own and learn from their mistakes.

  • If you tend to underfunction: Start by taking more initiative. Voice your opinions, make decisions, and take on more responsibilities, even if it feels uncomfortable at first. Build your self-confidence and learn to handle challenges independently.

Remember, true intimacy requires both partners to be strong and independent while supporting each other. When you're both able to stand on your own two feet, you can create a more fulfilling and passionate relationship.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Dr. David Schnarch on Mind Mapping

Dr. Schnarch defines mind mapping as the ability to understand another person's mind and predict their behavior. This involves stepping into their perspective and understanding their motivations, even if they differ from your own. Mind mapping delves deeper than simply guessing someone's thoughts or feelings; it involves understanding their mental model of the world, encompassing their beliefs, values, and experiences. According to Dr. Schnarch, this is an ongoing process that occurs automatically during interactions. Our brains continuously work to understand others so we can navigate social situations effectively.

Dr. Schnarch defines mind mapping as the ability to understand another person's mind and predict their behavior. This involves stepping into their perspective and understanding their motivations, even if they differ from your own. Mind mapping delves deeper than simply guessing someone's thoughts or feelings; it involves understanding their mental model of the world, encompassing their beliefs, values, and experiences. According to Dr. Schnarch, this is an ongoing process that occurs automatically during interactions. Our brains continuously work to understand others so we can navigate social situations effectively.

Dr. Schnarch suggests mind mapping is more than intuition, as it involves complex neurological processes. Several brain areas, including the reptilian brain, mammalian brain, and neocortex, collaborate to process information about others, interpret their emotions and intentions, and guide responses. This ability is shaped by both genetics and life experiences. He explains that the foundation for mind mapping begins in infancy, with children progressively understanding that others have different perspectives. By age four, children develop "explicit" mind-mapping abilities and demonstrate an understanding of differing beliefs and desires, even engaging in intentional deception.

Mind mapping is not solely focused on understanding others but also plays a key role in self-awareness. By mapping our own minds, we gain insights into our thoughts, feelings, and motivations. This self-awareness influences how we perceive the world, interact with others, and shape our life stories. Dr. Schnarch highlights that mind mapping can have both positive and negative consequences depending on how it is used. It can foster empathy, compassion, and healthy relationships, but it can also be used for manipulation, deception, and emotional harm. Recognizing the potential for misuse is crucial for ethical and responsible application of mind-mapping skills.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

7 Things I learned from Dr. David Schnarch

Nobody's ready for marriage; marriage makes you ready for marriage. Schnarch believed that marriage is a journey of self-discovery. It's not about finding the perfect person; it's about growing together and learning to be a better partner. Marriage challenges you to become more mature, responsible, and understanding.

Dr. David Schnarch created Crucible Therapy and is one of my heroes. His writing has helped me save my own marriage, and help other couples do the same.

  1. Nobody's ready for marriage; marriage makes you ready for marriage. Schnarch believed that marriage is a journey of self-discovery. It's not about finding the perfect person; it's about growing together and learning to be a better partner. Marriage challenges you to become more mature, responsible, and understanding.

  2. Differentiation means being able to stand up for what you believe in, even when your partner or other important people in your life pressure you to conform. It's about calming yourself down, not letting your anxiety take over, and not overreacting. Schnarch's own experience in graduate school taught him the importance of differentiation.

  3. Embrace your sexual potential. Schnarch emphasized that everyone has sexual potential, but many people are afraid to explore it. He believed that good sex requires emotional maturity and vulnerability. It's not just about technique; it's about being open and honest with your partner and yourself.

  4. Intimacy isn't easy. Schnarch believed that true intimacy requires courage and a willingness to be vulnerable. It's about being able to share your deepest thoughts and feelings with your partner, even if it's scary. Schnarch emphasized that intimacy isn't about constant bliss; it's about navigating the ups and downs of a relationship with love and respect.

  5. Sexual desire problems are common. Schnarch recognized that most couples will experience sexual desire problems at some point. He believed that these problems are often rooted in deeper emotional issues, such as fear of intimacy or a lack of differentiation. Schnarch developed a therapeutic approach called Crucible® Neurobiological Therapy to help couples address these underlying issues.

  6. Deal with emotional regressions. Schnarch used the analogy of "living at the bottom of the ocean" to describe emotional regressions, which are moments when we revert to immature or unhealthy behaviors. He believed that we can learn to recognize these regressions and develop strategies to manage them, such as mindfulness and self-soothing.

  7. Therapy is a journey of growth. Schnarch viewed therapy as a process of self-discovery and growth. He believed that successful therapy requires a willingness to face difficult emotions and to challenge your own beliefs. Schnarch emphasized that therapists must also be willing to grow and learn from their clients.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Why Crucible Therapy is Better than Gottman Relationship Therapy

David Schnarch created Crucible therapy as a comprehensive approach to helping married couples with both relationship and sexual issues. At its core is the idea of "differentiation" - keeping your own identity and beliefs while still maintaining emotional connections with your partner. Unlike traditional therapy that might see relationship problems as things to fix, Crucible therapy views these challenges as chances for both partners to grow stronger.

David Schnarch created Crucible therapy as a comprehensive approach to helping married couples with both relationship and sexual issues. At its core is the idea of "differentiation" - keeping your own identity and beliefs while still maintaining emotional connections with your partner. Unlike traditional therapy that might see relationship problems as things to fix, Crucible therapy views these challenges as chances for both partners to grow stronger.

This approach differs significantly from the Gottman Method, developed by John Gottman. While Gottman focuses on teaching couples better ways to communicate and handle conflicts - with an emphasis on making both partners feel safe and secure - Crucible therapy takes a bolder approach.

One of Schnarch's key insights is that relying too heavily on your partner for emotional validation (what he calls "other-validated intimacy") can actually damage your relationship over time. Think of it like using crutches - while they help in the moment, depending on them too much can weaken your ability to walk on your own. Instead, Crucible therapy promotes "self-validated intimacy," where you learn to trust your own experiences and maintain your viewpoint, even when it differs from your partner's.

Schnarch disagrees with therapists who encourage partners to constantly validate each other's feelings. He argues this approach can backfire by making people too dependent on their partners for emotional stability. Instead, Crucible therapy teaches people to manage their own emotional reactions and stay calm even when their partner is stressed or anxious. This ability to self-regulate emotions, Schnarch believes, is essential for building stronger, healthier relationships.

Schnarch’s approach addresses the underlying forces that slowly wear down relationships over time. It helps couples grow out of the character weaknesses that keep them from really loving and cherishing each other. It addresses the things that actually make communication so hard.

As a young therapist, I trained in Gottman Relationship Therapy because it was the only modality that was allowed by the practice where I worked. As I gained experience, I gradually replaced Gottman-style couples counseling with more advanced methods I learned from training in Schnarch Crucible Therapy.

I prefer Schnarch Crucible Therapy because it works faster, and is more effective when working with high-conflict couples. I’m never going back.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Dr. David Schnarch and Crucible Therapy

Schnarch pushed couples to face problems directly during therapy sessions. He believed growth comes from dealing with discomfort, not avoiding it.  His ideas about sexual development were also groundbreaking. While most experts thought sexual peak happened when people were younger, Schnarch argued that people could have their best sexual experiences in their 40s, 50s, and 60s. 

When Dr. David Schnarch created the Crucible Approach and was a leader in combining sexual and marital therapy. Instead of focusing on communication and solving conflicts, he emphasized differentiation: the ability to be true to yourself while staying connected to your partner.  

Schnarch pushed couples to face problems directly during therapy sessions. He believed growth comes from dealing with discomfort, not avoiding it.  His ideas about sexual development were also groundbreaking. While most experts thought sexual peak happened when people were younger, Schnarch argued that people could have their best sexual experiences in their 40s, 50s, and 60s. 

David Schnarch’s Books

Crucible Therapy Training

Dr. Schnarch trained therapists in his Crucible Approach from 1995 until his death in 2020. Today, the International Crucible Therapy Education Center continues his work with online and in-person training events. 

Crucible training has helped me become a much more capable therapist, a better husband, and a better father. I have attended a lot of therapist training events, and Crucible training is different:  The focus is on personal growth and development, not on learning skills, theory, or methedology. Crucible training is about becoming. 

If you are looking for a Crucible-Trained therapist, or are a clinician interested in pursuing training, feel free to reach out to me for more information. 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Collaborative Parenting

Children learn from what I do, not from what I say. As adults, we have more capacity to learn from what people say to us. Children mostly just learn through observation and repetition. So if you want your child to be more honest, you need to learn how to be more honest. If you want your child to be more courageous, you need to learn how to be more courageous. If you want them to be more kind, you get the idea.

1. Children Learn From What You Do, Not What You Say

Children learn from what I do, not from what I say. As adults, we have more capacity to learn from what people say to us. Children mostly just learn through observation and repetition. So if you want your child to be more honest, you need to learn how to be more honest. If you want your child to be more courageous, you need to learn how to be more courageous. If you want them to be more kind, you get the idea.

This makes parenting really hard because most of the things that my children do that I don't want them to do, they actually learned from me. That sounds harsh, but it's true because a child's brain is very much programmed to repeat the behaviors that the child observes from their parents.

2. Children Operate at a Fraction of Their Parents' Maturity Level

If I want my child to grow in maturity, I have to increase my own maturity to a much higher level than the maturity level I hope my child will achieve. This ties into what I was saying earlier about if I want my child to manage conflict better, I need to manage conflict better.

3. Demonstrate Collaborative Conflict

One of the most important skills that most of us never got growing up was how to step into a collaborative conflict. This usually comes up between husband and wife: how do I handle myself when I disagree with you? How do I handle myself when I perceive the world differently than you do? How do I handle myself when I perceive you and I perceive myself differently than you perceive yourself and differently than you perceive me?

These things are really hard for adults to manage, and they're even harder for children to manage. But if I can allow my child to see myself stepping into collaborative conflict where I talk straight to you without using anger or manipulation or coercion, then my child can learn that through example. They won't learn that from me talking to them about it. It has to be demonstrated, which means that I have to grow myself up first before I can hope for my children to grow up more.

4. Demonstrate Self-Soothing

Self-soothing is my ability to calm myself down once I've gotten upset. This is one of the most important things that I can demonstrate to my children because it's harder for children to do than it is for adults. A child who never gets to see their parents calm themselves then address the situation is going to have a much harder time learning that skill than a child who actually gets to see their parents do that.

5. Courage is a Prerequisite to Honesty

If you want your children to tell the truth more often, the actual underlying problem is a lack of courage, not a lack of honesty. It's pretty easy for kids to understand the difference between telling the truth and telling a lie—that's not the problem. So there's no use in talking to your kids about "tell the truth, tell the truth, tell the truth."

The reason they're lying is that they're afraid or they're trying to manipulate you. They would be less likely to do that if they had more courage. Now, here's the problem: it's a lot harder for children to be courageous than it is for adults, and it's already really hard for adults to be courageous.

If I want my kid to be more courageous, I have to be a lot more courageous first, and I have to allow my child to see me being courageous. The most common opportunity I'm going to have as a parent to show my child what courage looks like is to collaboratively confront my partner where my child can see it. So can I talk straight to my wife, for example, while my children are present, without getting angry, without being manipulative, without being cruel? Can I be kind and straightforward and honest and courageous in my child's presence?

The answer for most of us is that we don't really know how to do this. We're not very good at it. If I want my children to learn the skill, I have to learn it first. I have to practice it, and I have to demonstrate it in my children's presence.

6. Most of Your Child's Undesirable Behavior is Caused by Anxiety

If you think of your family system, there's going to be an undercurrent of anxiety that travels through each person in that family system, and children have a much lower ability to handle that anxiety than adults do. So if you as the parent bring a certain amount of anxiety and put that into your family system, your children are going to be more affected by that anxiety than you are, and a child will often deal with that anxiety by doing something you don't want them to do.

This means calming your own anxiety and doing what you can to keep from taking your anxiety and dumping it onto your children, or dumping your anxiety into the family system. One typical example is if the parents are upset at each other, the children will behave poorly because they're sensing the anxiety that's being put into the family system by the parents not liking each other.

7. Don't Use Emotional Punishment

Emotional punishment is just "you didn't do what I want, so now you have to deal with my unpleasant emotion"—so I'm going to get mad at you, or I'm going to withdraw my love and affection, or I'm just going to develop some kind of unpleasant, negative emotion and you're going to have to deal with it. This is the most common way that we parents try to manipulate our children's behavior.

There's a lot of problems with this, but one of the biggest problems is that it just doesn't work. It might work for a few minutes, maybe even a couple hours, but it never works for more than that. You will never improve your child's behavior tomorrow by using unpleasant, intense emotions today.

One of the problems with this is it's much harder to use other discipline methods as opposed to just getting mad or just yelling or just using your unpleasant emotions to try to control your children. The other ways of providing consequences for a child's behavior require a lot more effort and a lot more creativity and a lot more focus than just allowing yourself to get mad.

Now, if you think you can't control yourself, if you can't change the way your emotions come out with your kids, just think about what would happen if your boss showed up at the door while you were in the middle of yelling at your child. If you answered the door, you would not immediately start yelling at your boss, so you actually can control yourself. You're just choosing to allow your emotions to affect your child because it's your instinctive response when your kid doesn't do what you want them to do. This happens to the best of us. It happens to all of us. It's also something we need to work on changing.

8. Immediate Consequences Are Much More Effective Than Extended Consequences

Children respond to immediate consequences much more powerfully than they do to extended consequences. If I tell my child, "you're grounded for a month," that honestly doesn't mean anything more than being grounded for a day or two. To an adult, being grounded for a month has a lot of significance, but children have a very limited ability to imagine what life is going to be in the future. They tend to be very present-focused, and so a consequence that extends out for hours or days or weeks is not very meaningful to most children.

9. Positive Feedback is More Powerful Than Negative Feedback

Providing positive feedback to your child is always going to be more effective than providing negative feedback. So catch your child doing something you want them to do and acknowledge or notice what they're doing. Catch them doing something good and make sure they know that you can tell and that you appreciate their behavior. They really need to know that you can see when they're stretching themselves to become a better version of who they are.

10. Effective Parenting is Actually Super Hard

As you notice from all the things I've talked about, every single item on this list requires me, the parent, to grow myself up, to become more mature, to become more powerful, to calm myself down, to do all the things I want my child to do—but to an even greater extent.

Powerful and effective parenting requires me to look at my own weaknesses, my own inadequacies, and try to change those parts of myself, which sets a good example for my children and allows them to learn from what I do, and also allows me to interact with them in more effective and more powerful ways.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

David Schnarch’s Best Books

If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by your emotions, like you’re sinking and can’t come up for air, this book is for you. Schnarch explains how emotional regressions—times when we “lose it” emotionally—can disrupt our lives and relationships. He compares these moments to living underwater, where it’s hard to think clearly or feel in control.

Here is a list of my favorite David Schnarch books:

1. Living at the Bottom of the Ocean

What the book is about:

If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by your emotions, like you’re sinking and can’t come up for air, this book is for you. Schnarch explains how emotional regressions—times when we “lose it” emotionally—can disrupt our lives and relationships. He compares these moments to living underwater, where it’s hard to think clearly or feel in control.

Read it if you want to:

Learn practical strategies to recognize and manage emotional meltdowns. From brain-based therapy techniques to exercises like revisualizations and written dialogues, this book provides tools to climb out of emotional depths and thrive.

Read it for free:

This book is available as a free PDF download here.

 

2. Brain Talk

What the book is about:

Have you ever wondered how your brain helps you understand other people’s thoughts and feelings? In Brain Talk, Schnarch explores mind mapping, a fascinating way our brains connect with others. This book shows how mind mapping shapes relationships, impacts our emotional health, and can even become distorted through trauma.

Read it if you want to:

Understand the science behind relationships and human behavior. It’s ideal for repairing emotional wounds, improving communication, and strengthening connections with others.

3. Passionate Marriage

What the book is about:

Building a strong, intimate relationship isn’t easy, but Passionate Marriage makes the journey more accessible. Schnarch introduces the concept of differentiation—the ability to stay true to yourself while being deeply connected to someone else. He shares practical techniques, like “hugging till relaxed” and “eyes-open sex,” to help couples deepen their intimacy and rediscover passion.

Read it if you want to:

Grow as a person and as a partner. Whether you’re facing relationship struggles or simply want to strengthen your bond, this book offers actionable advice for creating a fulfilling, lifelong partnership.

4. Intimacy & Desire

What the book is about:

Desire is a complicated part of any relationship. In Intimacy & Desire, Schnarch dives into why normal, healthy couples often struggle with mismatched levels of sexual desire. He explains how these issues are not signs of failure but opportunities for growth.

Read it if you want to:

Reignite passion in your relationship. This book provides tools like the Four Points of Balance to help individuals and couples grow emotionally and sexually, making it perfect for anyone seeking deeper intimacy.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

What is a Collaborative Alliance?

Dr. David Schnarch listed eight key points that describe a collaborative alliance in chapter 11 of his book Intimacy & Desire. Here they are:

Creating a more collaborative alliance is the key to relationship repair. Dr. David Schnarch lists these eight key points about collaborative alliances in Chapter 11 of his book Intimacy and Desire:

1. First and foremost, collaborative alliances focus on what needs to be done. Listening and speaking up are important in these alliances, but they are based on action, not just feelings.

2. Re-establishing a collaborative alliance with your partner is more important than the fact that your alliance crashed. Relationship repair is paramount, prioritizing the continuation of the marriage over fears of its demise.

3. Pay attention to when you drop your alliance. People are often more aware of when their partner drops the alliance than when they do it themselves. Recognizing and acknowledging when you drop your side of the alliance is the first, most difficult, and most important step in rebuilding it. Understanding your patterns of dropping the alliance can lead to quicker improvement and may reflect past life experiences.

4. How you feel isn’t the main issue. Feeling nervous does not excuse you from upholding your end of the alliance. The key issue is fulfilling your responsibilities. Your feelings may be understandable, but your responsibility to maintain your integrity and do what’s right remains.

5. In a collaborative alliance your responsibilities are unilateral, not mutual or reciprocal. A collaborative alliance means maintaining your end of the agreement even when your partner temporarily drops theirs. Your partner’s bad behavior does not excuse your own, and you should confront them about dropping their responsibility after ensuring you have fulfilled yours. This prevents the relationship from being governed by the lowest common denominator.

6. Collaborative alliances don’t always feel good. They can involve confrontation, challenges, and refusing to accommodate, which can be difficult. A collaborative alliance does not guarantee making your partner feel good, validated, accepted, safe, or secure. Collaborative alliances are defined by function, not feeling. In contrast, collusive alliances center around making people feel certain ways.

7. Collaborative alliances never involve blinding yourself about your partner, yourself, or what’s going on between you. Both partners must remain perceptive and mindful, with mind-mapping playing a crucial role. Don’t try to hide your true self. Asking someone to overlook your shortcomings, or offering to do the same for them, constitutes a collusive alliance.

8. Collaborative alliances test your integrity. Maintaining a good-faith agreement ultimately comes down to preserving your integrity. While it’s easier to abandon the alliance and prioritize your own immediate interests, as you become more differentiated, you prioritize doing what you know is right to maintain inner peace. Alliances formed out of convenience may appear collaborative, but they will crumble under pressure.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

How Relationships Work

Relationship therapy helps you answer three questions:

  • What is going on in your relationship?

  • Why is it happening?

  • How can you make it better?

Every relationship goes through difficult times. With the right tools, you can emerge from these challenges with a more thriving, passionate marriage. 

Our first three sessions will focus on these topics: 

  • effective communication

  • conflict resolution

  • how to feel safe

  • how to create trust

How Relationship Therapy Works

Relationship therapy helps you answer three questions:

  • What is going on in your relationship?

  • Why is it happening?

  • How can you make it better?

Every relationship goes through difficult times. With the right tools, you can emerge from these challenges with a more thriving, passionate marriage. 

Our first three sessions will focus on these topics: 

  • effective communication

  • conflict resolution

  • how to feel safe

  • how to create trust

I work with over one hundred couples every year. Most couples reach their relationship goals in ten sessions or less, but some take longer. Rebuilding your relationship might be the most rewarding thing you have ever done, and I will be with you every step of the way. 

Some thoughts to consider

  • You aren’t more mature than your partner, you’re just immature in different ways.

  • Your relationship will improve when you change your input into the relationship system.

  • Your partner can also change their input into the system, but why wait for them to go first?

  • Your partner knows more about your personal flaws than you do.

  • It’s easier to see your partner’s flaws than your own flaws.

  • Your relationship distress is your responsibility, not your partner’s responsibility.

  • Your partner is not the cause of your distress, and they will not be the solution to your distress.

  • You can only control your own contribution to the relationship system.

  • You can’t control your partner’s behavior, but you can change the environment they are operating in.

  • Most relationships consist of a two people reacting to each other in a never-ending loop.

  • When you stop reacting and start changing, your relationship starts to change.

  • If you wait for your partner to go first, you might be waiting a long time.

  • You can’t break the loop unless you’re willing to accept and manage your own anxiety.

Relationship Dynamics

  • There are three common self-reinforcing relationship dynamics:

    • Victim/manipulator:  one acts helpless while the other acts superior and controlling

    • Victim/rescuer:  one carries responsibility for the other, who acts helpless

    • Pursuer/distancer:  one deals with anxiety by withdrawing, the other deals with anxiety by seeking connection

  • In each case, your own behavior encourages and enables your partner’s behavior.

  • Most relationships incorporate all three dynamics.

  • The further you back into your corner, the easier it is for your partner to stay in their corner.

  • When you leave your corner and come out into the middle of the relationship, it makes it harder for your partner to stay in their corner.

  • You might feel like you have to keep playing your preferred role, but you don’t actually. You can stop at any moment.

  • You probably learned your preferred role in your family of origin.

How to Improve Relationship Communication

  • When you defend yourself, you reinforce the idea that your partner is the one who decides whether or not you’re good enough.

  • Most arguments are just attempts to extract validation from each other.

  • Meaningful communication begins when you stop needing your partner’s agreement and approval.

  • Intense emotions are mostly used to manipulate each other.

  • When you start arguing, say “I’m gettting defensive, I’ll be back in 20 minutes” then go calm yourself down and try again.

  • Ask for what you want and tell your partner what you see. This is called “perception/preference communication.”

  • You haven’t been asking for what you want because you don’t want to give your partner a chance to say no.

  • If you’re saying a lot of words, you’re probably trying to manipulate someone.

  • It takes three words to describe how you feel right now, and eight words to describe how you felt in the past. When you use hundreds of words to “share your feelings” you’re just trying to manipulate your partner.

  • If you don’t feel heard, your partner probably just disagrees with you and you don’t want to deal with that.

  • If you’ve already explained something twice, doing it a third time isn’t going to help.

The Family you Came From

  • Your brain is wired to see your parents as more innocent than they really are, and that makes it easy to see yourself as more innocent than you really are.

  • Your brain was designed to survive childhood, not to thrive in adulthood.

  • If you want to thrive in adulthood, you have to rewire your brain.

  • You don’t get to choose the family you grow up in. Your family’s emotional burden is not your fault, but it is your responsibility.

  • You will pass your family’s emotional burden on to your children unless you deal with it.

  • You can’t see yourself clearly until you can see your parents clearly.

Parenting

  • You aren’t as innocent as you think you are.

  • Children learn from what you do, not from what you say.

  • You are responsible for regulating your emotions and for helping your children regulate their emotions

  • Families are anxiety-management machines.

  • In a low-functioning family, children act as anxiety absorbers.

  • In a high-functioning family, parents act as anxiety absorbers.

  • When you don’t deal with your own anxiety, you pass it on to your family.

  • Family anxiety concentrates in the family member who has the weakest emotional boundaries. This is often the youngest child, or the most vulnerable child.

  • Your child will always operate at fixed percentage of your own maturity. If you want your child to be more mature, you have to become more mature first.

  • You don’t get to blame anything on your children.

Sexual Problems in Committed Relationships

  • There is always a higher-desire partner and a lower-desire partner (HDP/LDP)

  • The LDP controls sex, whether they want to or not.

  • All long-term relationships experience sexual desire problems.

  • Bad sex is high anxiety and low intimacy

  • Good sex is low anxiety and high intimacy

  • You can’t negotiate desire.

  • Things that kill desire:  anxiety, neediness, shame, guilt, immaturity, dishonesty, cowardice, fragility, and using sex for validation.

  • Things that nurture desire:  courage, kindness, honesty, compassion, growing up, and settling down.

  • The HDP and LDP contribute equally to sexual problems.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Anger, Frustration, and Resentment

Anger is your body’s emergency self-help solution. When you’re in real trouble, anger is there to help you protect yourself. Anger is a survival mechanism, designed to save us from the worst situations we ever experience. 

Anger, resentment, and frustration are all the same thing. I’m going to use the word anger here, but feel free to replace it with frustration or resentment if that’s what you usually call it. 

Anger is your body’s emergency self-help solution. When you’re in real trouble, anger is there to help you protect yourself. Anger is a survival mechanism, designed to save us from the worst situations we ever experience. 

Anger only arises when you feel powerless. We get angry a lot because we feel powerless a lot.

When you feel angry, see if you can figure out what’s driving your perception of powerlessness. Next, figure out how much truth there is to that perception. Are you really powerless, or do you just feel that way? 

There are only two ways to feel less angry:  acceptance, and power. If you are truly facing something that is out of your control, your only choice is to accept what is happening. As you accept the reality you are facing, your anger will fade. 

On the other hand, if your perceived powerlessness is an illusion, your anger will fade once you claim your power by taking action. 

In reality, every situation is a combination of these two:  there is always something you can do, and there are also things that are not within your control. The solution to anger is action and acceptance at the same time. 

The reason we resort to anger is that we’re too afraid to take action, and we’re also too afraid to accept what we can’t control. This brings us to a deeper problem:  we get angry because we don’t have enough courage to deal with the problems we face. 

We reach for anger when we run out of courage. Anger and courage are both responses to fear, and anger will always fill in when courage is lacking. 

If you find yourself bound up in anger, frustration, and resentment, courage is the solution. You can develop more courage by acting courageously in small situations, like telling the truth when it would be easier to lie, or not letting your instincts run the show when you know there’s a better way. 

These are the three ways to get less anger in your life:  more courage, more acceptance, and more action. As long as you allow fear to control you, refuse to accept what you cannot change, and fail to take action when appropriate, you will continue to be bound by anger. 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Living at the Bottom of the Ocean

Close your eyes and imagine the coral reef scene from “Finding Nemo.” Picture the fish flitting about, the sun filtering down through the waves, and the bright colors everywhere. 

Now, picture the very different scene at the bottom of the ocean. There is no sunlight, and everything is covered in cold, inky blackness. The fish there have no color, instead they have huge, razor-sharp teeth, and some of them even have lanterns sprouting out of their foreheads. The only rule at the bottom of the ocean is kill or be killed. There is no compassion, courage, or kindness. 

When you get into an argument with your partner, your brain goes to the bottom of the ocean. You become incapable of courage, kindness, and reason; and your brain can think of only one thing:  I have to win. 

What you are experiencing is called a brain regression. Your brain loses its normal functioning ability and goes into survival mode. That would be great if you were actually in a survival situation, but you’re not. 

You started out as a fun, colorful fish at the top of the ocean, and then you became a monster fish at the bottom of the ocean. Your best bet is to swim for the surface. It might help to say to yourself “I’m regressed.” I also like to move my arms like I’m swimming. It sounds ridiculous, but it’s less ridiculous than how I behave when I’m regressed. 

Want to learn more about fixing regression? Read this free PDF book by Dr. David Schnarch.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

The Victim Triangle

The Victim Triangle describes three roles we take on in challenging situations. The three roles are:  

1. Victim

  • Feels oppressed and powerless, can’t solve problems or make decisions

  • Seeks help from rescuers but resists solutions

  • Derives sense of self from feeling persecuted

2. Perpetrator

  • Controlling, blaming, critical, angry, rigid, and superior

  • Derives sense of self from looking down on others

3. Rescuer

  • Feels compelled to take on burdens that belong to others

  • Feels guilty when not helping

  • Derives sense of self from rescuing others

The Victim Triangle describes three roles we take on in challenging situations: 

1. Victim

  • Feels oppressed and powerless, can’t solve problems or make decisions

  • Seeks help from rescuers but resists solutions

  • Derives sense of self from feeling persecuted

2. Perpetrator

  • Controls and manipulates others

  • Derives sense of self from feeling superior

3. Rescuer

  • Feels compelled to take on burdens that belong to others

  • Feels guilty when not helping

  • Derives sense of self from feeling needed

All three roles are dysfunctional, and each role enables the other two. It’s common to combine roles and switch between roles.

When you stay in your corner of the triangle, you make it easy for others to stay in their own corners. When you leave your corner, you make it easier for others to leave their corners.

Moving into the victim corner enables perpetrators and rescuers. Moving into the perpetrator or rescuer corner enables victims. 

Courage, kindness, and personal responsibility help you move to the center of the triangle. You can tell which corner you’re in by observing what other people are doing in your life. If the other person is in the victim corner, you’re in the perpetrator or rescuer corner. If the other person is in the rescuer or perpetrator corner, you’re in the victim corner. 

Your power lies in coming out of your own corner, not trying to make them come out of their corner. 

Leaving the the rescuer corner makes it easier for victims to stop being victims. The same is true for leaving the perpetrator corner. Leaving the victim corner makes it harder for perpetrators to take advantage of you. 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

There’s no Need to Defend Yourself.

One of the first things I talk to couples about when they come into my office for marriage therapy is that you don't need to defend yourself when your partner criticizes you. Why? Because you don't actually need your partner to see you in a positive light all the time. Sounds crazy, right? But understanding this can completely transform your relationship.

One of the first things I talk to couples about when they come into my office for marriage therapy is that you don't need to defend yourself when your partner criticizes you. Why? Because you don't actually need your partner to see you in a positive light all the time. Sounds crazy, right? But understanding this can completely transform your relationship.

The Self-Defense Trap

When your partner accuses you of something, your first instinct is probably to defend yourself. You think, "If I can just explain myself, they'll understand!" But here's the problem: by jumping to your own defense, you're handing your partner the power to judge you.

Think about it. If you're always trying to prove yourself to your partner, you're essentially saying, "Your opinion of me is what matters most." Before you know it, you're stuck in a dynamic where one person is the "judge" and the other is constantly on trial.

What's Really Going On

Ever noticed a tight feeling in your chest when your partner criticizes you? Or maybe a knot in your stomach? That's your body's stress response kicking in. Along with this physical discomfort comes a feeling that you're not okay, and you desperately need your partner to see you positively.

This distress is what drives us to defend ourselves. We think, "If I can just make them understand, this awful feeling will go away." But here's the thing: as adults, we're actually capable of sitting with this discomfort without acting on it.

Feel more, do less

Let's look at a scene that probably feels familiar:

Sarah says, "You never help around the house! I'm always the one doing all the chores!"

Mike, feeling that tightness in his chest, responds, "That's not true! I did the dishes yesterday and took out the trash last week!"

Mike fell into the self-defense trap. He's trying to prove Sarah wrong, reinforcing the idea that Sarah's judgment of him is what matters most.

But what if it went differently?

Sarah says, "You never help around the house! I'm always the one doing the chores!"

Mike, noticing the discomfort but not reacting to it, looks for the truth in what Sarah’s saying. He also realizes that it’s OK if Sarah sees him that way, because he doesn’t actually need her to see him in a positive light. 

See the difference? Mike isn't trying to change Sarah's mind. He's acknowledging her perception without getting defensive. Mike and Sarah will be better off regardless of whether Mike changes his approach to housework. 

Why This Works

When you stop defending yourself, you're sending a powerful message: "I'm secure enough to handle your opinion of me, even if it's negative." When you're not busy crafting your defense, you're free to really listen to your partner's concerns. And that's when real problem-solving can begin.

Embracing Discomfort

The key to this approach is learning to sit with that uncomfortable feeling. When you feel that tightness in your chest or that knot in your stomach, try this:

  1. Name it: "I'm feeling uncomfortable right now."

  2. Remind yourself: "This feeling is normal, and I don't have to act on it."

  3. Listen: Instead of planning your defense, really hear what your partner is saying.

By allowing yourself to experience that discomfort without immediately reacting, you're showing real emotional maturity. You're saying, "I can handle your perspective of me, even if it's not what I'd like it to be."

 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Are you Living in Emotional Poverty?

Every family exists somewhere on a spectrum of financial poverty to extreme wealth. There is a similar spectrum for emotional wealth in families. Like most therapists, I was born into emotional poverty, and have spent many years trying to help my family climb out of that pit. Let’s take a look at what families are like at various levels of emotional wealth:

Every family exists somewhere on a spectrum of financial poverty to extreme wealth. There is a similar spectrum for emotional wealth in families. Like most therapists, I was born into emotional poverty, and have spent many years trying to help my family climb out of that pit. Let’s take a look at what families are like at various levels of emotional wealth:

Low Emotional Wealth

A family living in emotional poverty is full of strong negative emotions:

  • Family members rely heavily on each other to feel good about themselves and struggle to be independent.

  • Family members often feels worried and stressed, which leads to tension and emotional outbursts.

  • There’s a lot of walking on eggshells and being really careful what you say and don’t say.

  • People in the family blame each other for their problems and react quickly without thinking.

  • There's little personal space, so it's hard for family members to separate their own feelings from others'.

  • Often, one family member (like a child) develops problems to cope with all the family stress.

  • Family members stop talking to each other for days, weeks, months, or even years.

This family finds it hard to deal with changes or solve problems. The smallest emergency, or even a trip to disneyland, will lead to arguments and overwhelming emotions. 

Medium Emotional Wealth

A family with medium emotional wealth works better and has more balance.

  • People in this family have a better idea of who they are and don't depend as much on others to feel good about themselves.

  • They still worry sometimes, but not as much as families with less emotional wealth.

  • This family handles stress and changes better. Big events might still upset them, but they bounce back more easily.

  • Family members get along better and can support each other emotionally. They're also more willing to ask others for help when they need it.

This family still has times when they get stressed or react emotionally, but they're better at dealing with challenges. They talk to each other more effectively, solve problems together, and control their emotions better. They're also more accepting of each other's differences and less likely to blame each other when things get tough. 

High Emotional Wealth

A family with high emotional wealth works really well. These families can handle life's challenges with purpose and flexibility.

  • Strong Sense of Self: People in this family know who they are. They think for themselves, make their own decisions, and follow their goals without worrying too much about what others think.

  • Respect for Differences: This family accepts that everyone is different. They encourage each person to be unique and don't try to force their beliefs on others.

  • Emotional Stability: These families don't feel as worried or anxious as families with less emotional wealth. They can control their emotions well, which leads to calmer and happier interactions.

  • Good Communication: This family talks openly and honestly. They share their thoughts and feelings respectfully, even when they disagree, and work together to solve conflicts.

  • Adaptability: These families can adjust well to change. They see challenges as chances to grow and can change their expectations and behaviors when needed.

  • Strong Support: This family has good connections with their extended family and community. They're comfortable asking for help when they need it and also help others.

  • Wise Decisions: This family makes decisions based on what's right, not just on how they feel. They think about the long-term effects of their actions and make choices that match their values.

While this family still faces stress and conflicts, they have the emotional tools to handle difficulties well. Their high level of emotional wealth helps them be strong, grow as individuals, and have a satisfying family life.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

David Schnarch’s Four Points of Balance

  1. Solid Flexible Self: The ability to maintain a clear sense of self while being flexible in relationships.

  2. Quiet Mind-Calm Heart: The capacity to self-soothe and manage anxiety, especially in challenging situations.

  3. Grounded Responding: The ability to stay calm and respond thoughtfully, rather than react impulsively, especially during conflicts.

  4. Meaningful Endurance: The willingness to tolerate discomfort for growth, and to persist in the face of challenges for what matters most.

Dr. David Schnarch's Four Points of Balance describe four quadrants of emotional wealth and independence: You can read more about the four points of balance in Dr. Schnarch’s book Intimacy and Desire.

  1. Solid Flexible Self: The ability to maintain a clear sense of self while being flexible in relationships.

  2. Quiet Mind-Calm Heart: The capacity to self-soothe and manage anxiety, especially in challenging situations.

  3. Grounded Responding: The ability to stay calm and respond thoughtfully, rather than react impulsively, especially during conflicts.

  4. Meaningful Endurance: The willingness to tolerate discomfort for growth, and to persist in the face of challenges for what matters most.

Solid Flexible Self

Think of your sense of self as a tree. The solid part is the trunk - your core values and beliefs. The flexible part is the branches - able to bend with the wind without breaking.

A Solid Flexible Self means knowing who you are and what you stand for, while still being able to adapt to new situations and relationships. It's about having strong boundaries without being rigid.

People with a Solid Flexible Self don't lose themselves in relationships. They can stand their ground when it matters, but they're not stubborn for the sake of it. They're secure enough to be vulnerable.

Quiet Mind-Calm Heart

Imagine your mind as a pond. A Quiet Mind-Calm Heart is like that pond being still. Not frozen, but calm enough to reflect clearly.

This isn't about suppressing emotions. It's about processing them effectively. It's the ability to face challenges without spiraling into anxiety or making rash decisions.

People with a Quiet Mind-Calm Heart can stay composed under pressure. They make decisions based on clear thinking, not panic. They're not easily rattled by life's inevitable ups and downs.

Grounded Responding

Grounded Responding is the pause between stimulus and response. It's the space where wisdom lives.

Instead of reacting immediately to every provocation, Grounded Responding means taking the time to process before responding. It's about choosing your reactions, not being controlled by them.

People who practice Grounded Responding are less likely to say things they regret in the heat of the moment. They're better at handling conflicts and navigating complex social situations.

Meaningful Endurance

Life isn't always comfortable. Growth rarely is. Meaningful Endurance is about tolerating discomfort for the sake of what matters most.

This isn't about enduring abuse or settling for less. It's about pushing through challenges because you understand the value of the end goal. In relationships, it might mean having difficult conversations. In personal growth, it could be sticking with a new habit even when it's hard.

People with Meaningful Endurance don't give up at the first sign of difficulty. They're committed to long-term growth over short-term

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

How to Handle Relationship Distress

When you were a child, someone else was responsible for your emotional and physical safety. As an adult, that responsible person is you. When you try to make your partner responsible for making you feel safe, you’re inserting a parent/child dynamic into an adult relationship. 

Your Child Brain

Your brain is programmed for survival. When you were young, survival meant maintaining a close, emotional connection to your parents or caregivers. You were mostly helpless on your own, so your brain was focused on making sure someone was going to be there to take care of you. You probably had a primary caregiver — one person who did the most to make sure you were going to be OK. That person became your primary attachment figure, and as your brain developed, it adapted to do whatever was necessary to maintain a close, emotional connection with that person. 

Your Adult Brain

In an adult relationship, your partner becomes your new primary attachment figure. Your brain activates all of the emotional programming that helped you survive childhood. That programming is bad for adult relationships, but your brain doesn’t know that. 

When you experience distress in your relationship, that distress has more to do with childhood attachment patterns than it does with the realities of your adult relationship. Your unpleasant feelings are real, and they are emotional flashbacks to childhood. 

Your Body’s Antenna

If I walk barefoot on pavement on a hot day, I will feel pain in my feet. That pain is a warning signal, letting me know that I need to change something if I want to prevent tissue damage. 

Your body uses similar signals to prevent relationship damage. When you sense a disturbance in your relationship, you probably feel some kind of pain or discomfort in your throat, chest, or stomach. For example, I feel a pain or tightness in my chest when my wife is upset at me. This pain is my body’s way alerting me that I need to pay attention to my primary emotional relationship. 

When I was a child, paying attention to my primary emotional relationship was just as important as not walking on hot asphalt because my survival was at risk if I didn’t get the care I needed. 

As an adult, I don’t rely on anyone else to take care of me, but my brain hasn’t adjusted to this new reality. My body responds to an upset wife the same way it responded to an upset mother four decades ago. I still get that same dull ache in my chest, and it feels like a survival-level problem. 

A Note about Physical Safety

If you are in a relationship with someone who threatens you physically, it is your responsibility as an adult to do something about that. That might mean calling a friend, calling the police, or seeing support from community resources. If you have to leave your relationship to preserve your physical safety, please do that. 

Feeling Safe and Being Safe

When you were a child, someone else was responsible for your emotional and physical safety. As an adult, that responsible person is you. When you try to make your partner responsible for making you feel safe, you’re inserting a parent/child dynamic into an adult relationship. 

As an adult, you can be safe even if your partner is needy, angry, or withdrawn. It’s normal to not feel safe when that happens, but that feeling is not an accurate reflection of reality. 

How to Handle Relationship Distress

When you feel relationship distress, ask yourself three questions:

  1. How safe do I feel?

  2. How safe am I?

  3. What do I feel in my body?

The first question helps accept the fact that you don’t feel safe. The second question helps you notice the difference between how safe you feel and how safe you are. The third question brings your attention to your body, where your physical distress is telling you that you aren’t safe (even though you really are).

The best way to handle relationship distress is to focus your attention on the physical sensation that accompanies the distress. This physical sensation (usually in the throat, chest, or stomach) is your body’s way of telling you to pay more attention to your primary emotional relationship. It feels like a survival-level problem, because when you were a child it was a survival-level problem. 

As an adult, your relationship is not the cause of your distress, and it will not be the solution to your distress. Your instinct tells you to take some kind of action to make the distress go away, but you’re better off just letting it stay. Your brain will interpret as a survival-level problem, but that interpretation is based on childhood vulnerability, not adult independence. 

Narration, Emotion, and Sensation

The three levels of consciousness are narration, emotion, and sensation. When you focus on what you’re feeling in your body, you drop down from narration and emotion into what’s actually happening:  sensation. 

By focusing on sensation, you move past the stories and interpretations your mind is making up. What is most real is that you are feeling something in your body. If you had to feel that uncomfortable sensation for twenty minutes, could you do it? Could you feel it for an hour? A day? As you move through his exercise, you start to understand that the sensation itself isn’t as troubling as the interpretation you gave it. 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Crucible Therapy vs Gottman Therapy

I became a Crucible therapist because it saved my own marriage. I believe Crucible Therapy is the best choice for couples who want to overcome relationship problems and create a stronger, more loving marriage. At the same time, I believe that the person of the therapist is more important than the therapeutic method. Your progress depends more on how mature and capable your therapist is than on their training or technique.

Gottman Therapy: The Traditional Approach

The Gottman Method, developed by Dr. John Gottman and Dr. Julie Gottman, is what most people expect from couples therapy. It's based on extensive research, observing thousands of couples interact. From this, they developed a set of principles and techniques:

  • Predict relationship outcomes based on observable behaviors.

  • Teach concrete skills to improve relationship quality.

  • Focus on managing ongoing problems rather than solving them all.

  • Emphasize positive interactions and emotional connection.

Crucible Therapy: The Radical Approach

Crucible Therapy, developed by Dr. David Schnarch, takes a different approach. It's not about making your relationship comfortable; it's about growth. Here are the key principles of Crucible Therapy:

  • Relationship problems are opportunities for personal development.

  • Real change comes from facing difficult truths head-on.

  • Emotional maturity means self-regulation, not co-regulation.

  • Sexuality is central to personal growth and relationship development.

It’s a tougher path. Many people instinctively recoil when first encountering these ideas. We're often trained to avoid discomfort, seek validation, and blame others for our problems. Crucible Therapy asks us to do the opposite.

Comfort vs Change

The problem with the comfortable approach is that it often doesn't address the root issues. It's like putting a band-aid on a wound that needs surgery: you might feel better for a while, but the underlying problem remains. 

Consider a couple that constantly argues. The Gottman Method might teach them communication techniques to argue more constructively, which is useful, but it doesn't address why they're arguing in the first place, nor does it push them to grow as individuals.

Crucible Therapy digs deeper. It asks: What personal insecurities are driving these arguments? How can each person take responsibility for their emotional reactions? How can they use conflict as an opportunity for personal growth?

The Power of Discomfort

One of the most powerful ideas in Crucible Therapy is differentiation—the ability to maintain your sense of self while staying emotionally connected to others. It's about standing firm in who you are, even when those close to you disagree or disapprove.

This is difficult. It goes against our instinct to seek approval and avoid conflict. But it's also incredibly liberating. When you can stay true to yourself while staying connected to others, you achieve a level of maturity and resilience that transforms not just your relationship, but your entire life.

Why I’m a Crucible Therapist

I became a Crucible therapist because it saved my own marriage. I believe Crucible Therapy is the best choice for couples who want to overcome relationship problems and create a stronger, more loving marriage. At the same time, I believe that the person of the therapist is more important than the therapeutic method. Your progress depends more on how mature and capable your therapist is than on their training or technique.

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Crucible Therapy vs Emotionally-Focused Therapy (EFT)

In summary:  EFT focuses on the ways in which we act like children in adult relationships, while Crucible therapy focuses on how to grow up and actually learn how to love each other. Crucible may sound harsh in comparison, but the actual practice of Crucible therapy is full of love and compassion. 

This article compares Dr. David Schnarch's Crucible Therapy with Dr. Sue Johnson's Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT). While both aim to improve relationships, they differ significantly in their core philosophies and methods.

The Crucible: Forging Individuality

Schnarch's Crucible Therapy views relationship struggles as opportunities for personal growth. Its key characteristics include:

  • Focus on self-differentiation: The therapy encourages individuals to develop a strong sense of self within the relationship.

  • Embracing discomfort: Conflict and emotional discomfort are seen as catalysts for growth.

  • Individual responsibility: Each partner is pushed to confront their own issues and insecurities.

  • "Emotional muscle": The goal is to build resilience and the capacity to handle relationship challenges.

  • Confrontational approach: The therapy doesn't shy away from direct, sometimes uncomfortable, confrontations.

The Heart: Nurturing Emotional Bonds

In contrast, Johnson's Emotionally Focused Therapy emphasizes emotional connection. Its key features are:

  • Attachment focus: EFT is rooted in attachment theory, viewing relationship distress as a result of insecure bonding.

  • Emotion-centric: The therapy prioritizes identifying and expressing deeper, vulnerable feelings.

  • Creating safety: EFT aims to establish a secure emotional environment for partners.

  • Changing interaction patterns: The focus is on recognizing and altering destructive communication cycles.

  • Mutual support: Partners are encouraged to be responsive and accessible to each other's emotional needs.

What’s the Difference?

The fundamental difference between these approaches lies in their view of the path to a better relationship:

  • Individual vs. Couple: Crucible Therapy emphasizes individual growth as the key to relationship improvement, while EFT focuses on nurturing the emotional bond between partners.

  • Conflict vs. Safety: Schnarch sees conflict as a tool for growth, whereas Johnson aims to create emotional safety.

  • Self-reliance vs. Interdependence: Crucible Therapy pushes for self-differentiation and emotional self-soothing, while EFT encourages partners to turn to each other for support.

  • Cognitive vs. Emotional: Schnarch's approach often involves more cognitive work and insight, while Johnson's is more focused on emotional experiences and expression.

  • Challenge vs. Nurture: Crucible Therapy challenges individuals to grow through discomfort, while EFT nurtures the relationship through increased emotional responsiveness.

In summary:  EFT focuses on the ways in which we act like children in adult relationships, while Crucible therapy focuses on how to grow up and actually learn how to love each other. Crucible may sound harsh in comparison, but the actual practice of Crucible therapy is full of love and compassion. 

My wife and worked with an EFT therapist for over a year, without seeing any results in our marriage. We have seen much more positive change in our marriage as a result of working with Crucible-trained therapist. 

I began my own Crucible training as soon as I became a licensed therapist. Crucible training has made me a better therapist, a better, husband, and a better father. 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

How Crucible Counseling Works

David Schnarch’s Crucible Therapy for couples is much less popular than the Gottman Method or Sue Johnson’s Emotionally Focused Therapy. Schnarch’s approach to treating couples requires the therapist to go through a grueling course of personal growth and development that enables them to help couples change their relationships. Traditional methods of counseling focus on teaching skills, while Crucible therapy focuses on creating deep, lasting change in individuals, couples, and families. 

David Schnarch’s Crucible Therapy for couples is much less popular than the Gottman Method or Sue Johnson’s Emotionally Focused Therapy. Schnarch’s approach to treating couples requires the therapist to go through a grueling course of personal growth and development that enables them to help couples change their relationships. Traditional methods of counseling focus on teaching skills, while Crucible therapy focuses on creating deep, lasting change in individuals, couples, and families. 

Schnarch taught that the “person of the therapist” is the critical factor that makes most marriage therapy ineffective. Not only do many therapists lack understanding of the fundamental dynamics of marriage, but they also lack the ability to stand strong in the face of deception and manipulation, so they fall prey to the same defensive tactics that are creating problems in the marriage they are trying to treat. 

When Schnarch trained therapists, he focused on helping them overcome the same personal weaknesses they would be helping their clients with. Rather than teaching skills, he focused on increasing each therapist’s differentiation of self — the ability to enter into a close relationship with another person without letting go of their own integrity. Before he died in 2020, Schnarch appointed a small group of clinicians to carry on his work after he was gone. These therapists continue the work of Crucible Therapy by training a new generation of healers. 

Unlike Gottman and EFT, Crucible Therapy focuses on dealing with what’s happening in the actual therapy session. Cruicible therapists learn to identify and confront deception and manipulation as it happens in session, instead of trying to figure out what might be happenign in the marriage outside of the therapy office. This requires the therapist to be able to handle the pressure of confronting clients on their behavior right now, and it also requires the therapist to be able to see and understand how manipulation works. 

Therapists have wounds from childhood just like everyone else, and these wounds contribute to difficulties in the therapy office. When Schanrch trained other therapists, he focused on helping them grow out of their own defensive mechanisms so they could offer more courage and kindness to their clients. 

Crucible Counseling requires the therapist talks straight to the clients, demonstrating what it looks like to be honest and brave without resorting to anger and defensiveness. Clients learn how to confront themselves and each other by watching their therapist work through actual situations that occur in therapy. 

Schnarch called marriage a “people-growing machine” because when you refuse to grow up, your marriage suffers and you suffer the consequences. If we were all willing to just have cats and live alone, we would never have to undergo the kind of personal growth that is needed to create and maintain a long-term romantic relationship. 

Read More
James Christensen James Christensen

Dr. David Schnarch’s Approach to Improving Sexual Relationships

Schnarch argues that the real issue isn't the difference in desire itself, but how couples handle it. Most people, he says, are emotionally fused with their partners. They depend on their partner for validation, for a sense of self-worth, for emotional regulation. This fusion creates a paradox: the closer you are to someone, the more threatening any difference becomes.

Dr. David Schnarch, a renowned psychologist and sex therapist, spent decades challenging this conventional wisdom on how to improve committed sexual relationships. His approach, outlined in books like "Passionate Marriage" and "Intimacy and Desire," is counterintuitive, often uncomfortable, but profoundly effective. It's the kind of idea that, once you understand it, makes you wonder how you ever thought differently.

The Myth of Sexual Compatibility

The popular narrative goes something like this: You meet someone, you're attracted to each other, you have great sex. As the relationship progresses, you start to experience differences in sexual desire. These differences create tension, arguments, and a sense that something is wrong with the relationship.

The typical advice at this point is to compromise: if one partner wants sex twice a week and the other wants it twice a month, aim for once a week. Problem solved, right?

Wrong, says Schnarch. This approach might create a temporary peace, but it doesn't address the underlying issues. It's like putting a band-aid on a broken bone.

The Real Problem: Emotional Fusion

Schnarch argues that the real issue isn't the difference in desire itself, but how couples handle it. Most people, he says, are emotionally fused with their partners. They depend on their partner for validation, for a sense of self-worth, for emotional regulation. This fusion creates a paradox: the closer you are to someone, the more threatening any difference becomes.

In a fused relationship, a difference in sexual desire isn't just about sex. It becomes a referendum on the relationship itself. If my partner doesn't want sex as often as I do, does that mean they don't love me? Am I not attractive enough? Is our relationship doomed?

This fusion creates a pressure cooker environment where honest communication becomes nearly impossible. Partners walk on eggshells, afraid to express their true desires for fear of hurting or alienating their loved one.

The Solution: Differentiation

Schnarch's proposed solution is differentiation of self: the ability to maintain your sense of self while staying in close connection with a partner. It's about becoming more of who you are, not less.

This might sound simple, but it's incredibly challenging in practice. It requires facing your own insecurities, confronting your fears, and being willing to risk the relationship for the sake of authenticity.

In the context of sexual desire, differentiation might look like this: Instead of compromising on frequency, each partner takes responsibility for their own desire. The higher-desire partner learns to self-soothe when rejected, to find value in themselves outside of sexual validation. The lower-desire partner learns to initiate sex from a place of genuine desire, not obligation.

The Crucible of Intimacy

Schnarch describes committed relationships as a crucible - a container that can withstand intense heat and pressure. The differences in sexual desire, far from being a problem to be solved, are actually the heat that forges stronger individuals and stronger relationships.

This process is not comfortable. It often involves confronting deep-seated issues, childhood traumas, and core insecurities. But it's through this discomfort that real growth occurs.

As partners differentiate, something paradoxical happens: the more separate they become as individuals, the more intimate they can be as a couple. They're no longer dependent on each other for emotional regulation, so they can truly see and appreciate each other as separate beings.

The Rewards of Differentiation

The payoff for this difficult work is immense. Couples who go through this process often report not just better sex, but a deeper, more meaningful connection. They develop a capacity for what Schnarch calls “wall-socket sex: - sexual experiences where partners are fully present, fully seen, and fully accepted.

Moreover, the skills developed through this process - the ability to self-soothe, to maintain a sense of self in the face of difference, to stay present during discomfort - have applications far beyond the bedroom. They lead to more authentic relationships with friends and family, more confidence in professional settings, and a greater sense of overall life satisfaction.

The Broader Implications

Schnarch's ideas have implications far beyond sex therapy. They challenge our cultural narratives about relationships, about personal growth, about what it means to truly love someone.

In a world that often equates love with fusion, that tells us to find our "other half" or our "soulmate," Schnarch's approach is radical. It suggests that the highest form of love isn't losing yourself in another person, but fully becoming yourself alongside them.

Read More