By DR ROB DOBRENSKI
During a recent session, a couple who had been married for about five years decided to end their relationship. The wife told the husband very matter-of-factly, saying that “they had simply grown apart and couldn’t stop fighting.”
Neither he nor I were surprised given they had spent almost a year working on their relationship with no improvement in their ability to resolve conflicts or even increase their interest in spending time together. And, although the reality of the words ‘I want a divorce’ initially made him very anxious and distressed, he agreed that they were no longer happy together and didn’t see the point in continuing as well.
Couples in therapy split up more often than you might think. Couples therapy has a horrible track record for two reasons: one is that the couple usually waits far too long to seek help, long after arguments have gotten out of hand and the dyad has drifted in directions that can’t be saved.
When I first encountered a couple who I worked with who then decided to get divorced, I thought I had failed as a therapist. My supervisor, a Psychologist in her late 60′s, pointed out that I was being naïve, not only about the notion that “therapy can fix everything,” but also that “every marriage isn’t meant to go the distance.”
“Sometimes all you can do is give your blessing to a couple that it’s time to move on,” she said. “There’s no shame in that and it’s your professional obligation to do so.” Some might view this as a controversial take on marital therapy, especially Christian counselors, but the reality is it’s unethical to try to force a square peg into a round hole. If people are miserable together, the shrink’s position is to help them separate and live happier lives apart.