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Reflect with Juliane – M. Sc. Psychology and Systemic Counsellor
“We just can’t communicate anymore.”
This is one of the first things I hear when couples come to counselling.
Partners tell me:
“We always end up fighting.”
“My partner doesn’t understand me.”
“Every conversation turns into criticism or defensiveness.”
“We never really reconcile.”
“It’s like we’re speaking different languages.”
As couples therapists, we know that negative communication is one of the strongest predictors of relationship distress. At the same time, communication is rarely the core problem. More often, it is the visible symptom of something much deeper—unmet attachment needs, recurring emotional patterns, and stress responses that take over when we feel disconnected from the person we love most.
The encouraging news is that communication is also one of the most powerful tools for healing. When couples begin to truly hear one another, understand what lies beneath the conflict, and create new experiences of emotional safety, relationships can change profoundly.
Most of us believe we are good listeners.
Yet research consistently shows a striking gap between how well people believe they listen and how heard others actually feel. Effective listening involves much more than remaining quiet while someone else is speaking—it requires curiosity, reflection, checking our understanding, and making meaning together (Janusik, 2007; International Listening Association).
One reason communication becomes difficult is that there is always a difference between the message that is sent and the message that is received.
We naturally interpret what we hear through our own experiences, expectations, emotions, and assumptions. Unless we actively check whether we have understood correctly, we often respond not to what our partner meant but to what we believe they meant.
Communication psychologist Friedemann Schulz von Thun describes this beautifully through his Four-Sides Model of Communication (“Four Ears”). According to his model, every message contains four layers:
Imagine one partner saying:
“You’re home late again.”
One partner hears a simple observation.
Another hears criticism.
Another hears disappointment.
Another hears a request for closeness.
Although the same sentence was spoken, entirely different conversations unfold because each person is listening through a different “ear.”
This explains why many couples leave conversations convinced they have communicated clearly while simultaneously feeling deeply misunderstood.
Communication becomes particularly complex in romantic relationships for three important reasons.
Romantic relationships involve a unique level of interdependence.
Partners share everyday responsibilities, organise households, make financial decisions, raise children, plan their future, and build a shared life together.
At the same time, we also rely on our partner emotionally. Many of our deepest attachment needs—such as feeling safe, valued, accepted, loved, and understood—are invested in this one relationship.
That means every difficult conversation carries far greater emotional weight than a disagreement with a colleague or friend.
Couples often believe they are arguing about dishes, money, intimacy, or parenting.
In reality, these conversations usually contain much deeper questions:
Do you see me?
Can I reach you?
Does what I’m saying matter to you?
Do you understand my experience?
Is there still hope for us?
Every difficult conversation becomes an unconscious search for emotional connection.
When those underlying questions remain unanswered, conflict often continues—even after the practical issue has been solved.
Perhaps the most important reason communication becomes so difficult is that our romantic partner is our primary attachment figure.
Whenever we experience distance, criticism, rejection, or emotional disconnection, our nervous system may interpret this as a threat to one of our most fundamental human needs: secure attachment.
Instead of remaining calm, curious, and open, our body shifts into survival mode.
We enter fight, flight, or freeze.
From a neurobiological perspective, our capacity for empathy, curiosity, and reflective thinking decreases as our survival system takes over (Siegel, Porges).
Virginia Satir described four common survival communication styles that emerge under stress:
These are not personality flaws.
They are protective strategies.
Unfortunately, once both partners enter survival mode, communication is no longer a dialogue.
It becomes two nervous systems trying to protect themselves.
Instead of expressing vulnerability, we criticise.
Instead of listening, we defend ourselves.
Instead of reaching for each other, we withdraw.
Over time these interactions develop into recurring negative cycles—the “negative dance” described in Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) by Dr. Sue Johnson.
The problem is no longer either partner.
The problem becomes the cycle itself.
The first step toward healthier communication is recognising that the challenge belongs to both partners—not to one individual.
Instead of asking:
“Who is causing this?”
couples begin asking:
“What happens between us?”
This systemic perspective shifts partners from blaming one another toward working together against the cycle.
Psychologist Polly Young-Eisendrath, whose work on mindful dialogue has influenced couples therapy, highlights three essential principles for healthy conversations:
These principles invite us to understand rather than convince.
Another essential step is recognising when either partner is moving into a stress response.
When criticism, defensiveness, withdrawal, or emotional flooding begin to appear, the goal is not to continue the conversation at all costs.
The goal is to pause.
To regulate.
To reconnect with safety before continuing.
From an attachment perspective, this interruption is crucial.
Emotionally Focused Therapy helps couples create corrective emotional experiences—moments in which partners respond differently than before.
Instead of criticism, they express vulnerability.
Instead of defending themselves, they reveal their fears.
Instead of attacking, they reach for connection.
A partner who previously said,
“You never care about me,”
might instead say,
“I’m scared that I’m losing you.”
These vulnerable conversations allow partners to experience something entirely new:
“When I show you my deepest fears, you stay with me.”
These moments rebuild trust, strengthen emotional security, and gradually transform the entire communication pattern.
Healthy relationships are not relationships without conflict.
They are relationships that know how to repair after conflict.
John Gottman’s research has repeatedly shown that successful couples are distinguished not by avoiding disagreements but by their ability to interrupt negative cycles, repair emotional injuries, and continually turn toward one another.
Similarly, Sue Johnson reminds us that beneath nearly every recurring argument lies a longing for secure emotional connection.
Communication therefore becomes much more than exchanging information.
It becomes the pathway through which couples build trust, create emotional safety, navigate conflict, and deepen intimacy over time.
When partners learn to recognise their stress responses, understand the attachment needs beneath their conflicts, and communicate with curiosity rather than defensiveness, conversations stop becoming battles.
Instead, they become opportunities to rediscover one another.
And perhaps that is the greatest gift healthy communication offers:
Not simply solving problems—but helping two people experience, again and again, that they are truly seen, heard, and safe with each other.
© 2025 OMmatic
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