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Questions to Ask Yourself Before Starting Relationship Therapy

Not sure if relationship therapy in Rancho Cucamonga, CA is right for you? These questions to ask before therapy help you gain clarity, readiness, and direction.

Starting relationship therapy can feel like a big step.

Sometimes people reach out after a major rupture — an affair, a blow-up fight, the word “divorce” being said out loud for the first time.
Other times it’s quieter than that. A slow drifting apart. Feeling more like roommates than partners. A subtle loneliness that sneaks in even when you’re sitting right next to each other on the couch.

Whatever brings you here, one thing I’ve noticed over the years is this:

Self-reflection strengthens therapy outcomes.

In almost every phone consultation I have, the conversation starts with some version of this question:

What do you want to get out of therapy?

How will you know it’s working?
What tangible changes would tell you things are improving?
What would feel different in your body, your home, your relationship?

The therapeutic relationship absolutely helps deepen self-awareness. That’s part of the work. But it’s incredibly helpful to come in with at least a little clarity about what kind of support you’re looking for.

If you’re considering therapy, here are some questions to ask before therapy begins — gentle prompts to help you look inward and get honest with yourself.

Questions About Yourself

Before we focus on your partner or the relationship dynamic, start here.

With you.

Because you’re the one thing you actually have control over.

What patterns keep repeating in my relationships?
Do you tend to pursue when your partner withdraws? Shut down when conflict starts? Over-function? People-please? Feel “too much” or “not enough”?
If the same arguments keep happening with different people, there’s usually something deeper asking to be understood.

If you want a deeper look into how patterns form and what they mean in relationships, this guide can give helpful context:
👉 Relationship Therapy: A Complete Guide to Healing Patterns, Communication, and Connection.

What am I afraid will happen if things don’t change?
Sometimes fear is the clearest motivator.
Are you afraid of divorce? Of settling? Of becoming resentful? Of losing yourself?
Naming the fear often clarifies what really matters.

How do I typically respond when I feel hurt?
Do you get louder… or quieter?
Do you criticize… or disappear?
Do you try harder… or give up?
Your protective strategies probably made sense at some point in your life. Therapy helps you understand where they came from — and whether they’re still serving you.

Questions About Your Relationship

Once you’ve looked inward, widen the lens.

What do I want more of?
More laughter? More physical touch? More teamwork? More emotional safety?
It’s easy to talk about what’s wrong. It’s harder (and more helpful) to get specific about what you want instead.

What feels missing?
Connection? Trust? Respect? Fun?
Sometimes couples aren’t fighting constantly — they just feel numb or distant. That absence matters too.

If you resonate with that “roommate” feeling, that’s an important thing to name before therapy — and it’s a theme we explore in depth in some of my other writing.

Where do we get stuck?
Every couple has a pattern.

I often call it a dance.

The beginning looks the same.
The middle looks the same.
And somehow the ending is always the same too.

Maybe one of you brings something up, the other gets defensive, voices get louder, someone shuts down, and you both go to bed disconnected.

Different topic. Same dance.

What does your dance look like?

Naming the pattern is the first step toward changing it.

Questions About Readiness

This section is the one people skip.

And honestly, it’s the most important.

Therapy isn’t about proving who’s right.

Coming to therapy hoping the therapist will side with you is a recipe for frustration.
Coming in hoping the therapist will punish your partner for what they’ve done isn’t effective either.

Real change asks something harder.

Am I willing to look inward?

Because at some point, the focus will gently turn back to you.

Am I open to changing my reactions?
Even if your partner doesn’t change right away?

Am I open to looking at my past — my family of origin, old wounds, or previous traumas — that might be shaping how I show up today?

Our current relationships often activate very old stories.

Therapy helps untangle them.

Am I ready to commit to healing?

Meaning real time and energy.

Most meaningful therapy isn’t quick.
A realistic timeframe for change is often six months to a year of consistent work.

Not because you’re broken — but because nervous systems, habits, and attachment patterns take time to shift.

A Gentle Next Step

If you’re asking yourself these questions, you’re probably already closer to ready than you think.

You don’t have to have everything figured out before starting.

But a little self-reflection goes a long way.

If you’d like space to talk through your answers, I’m always happy to explore that with you during a consultation. We can look at what’s feeling stuck, what you want to feel different, and what kind of support might fit best for you and your relationship.

No pressure — just clarity.

Sometimes that first conversation is simply about understanding what you need.


Alicia Taverner, LMFT, is the owner of Rancho Counseling and has been helping couples and individuals heal relationship patterns since 2008. She specializes in intensive, brain-based therapy—including Brainspotting and Ketamine-Assisted Therapy—for infidelity recovery, trauma, anxiety, and relationship crossroads. Alicia helps clients move beyond talking and into real change.
Ready to create a relationship you actually want to come home to? Book a consultation.
License #50414

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Relationship Therapy vs. Couples Counseling: What Is the Difference and Which Do You Need?

Relationship therapy vs couples counseling—learn the difference, who each is for, and how to decide what kind of support your relationship needs right now.

If you’ve been searching for support for your relationship, you’ve probably come across the terms relationship therapy and couples counseling—often used as if they mean the same thing. At a glance, they do sound interchangeable. Both focus on relationships, communication, and emotional connection.

But when you look a little closer, there is one important difference that can dramatically shape your healing process.

In couples counseling, the relationship itself is the client. The focus is on the dynamic between two people who are showing up together to work on shared challenges.

In relationship therapy, the client can be one person. The focus expands beyond a single partnership and looks at how you show up across all of your relationships—romantic, familial, and even professional. This distinction matters, especially if you feel stuck, alone in the work, or unsure where to start.

Relationship therapy can be facilitated with just one person and focuses on how you show up across all of your relationships. If you’re newer to this concept, I explore it more deeply in The Ultimate Guide to Relationship Therapy, where I walk through what it is, who it’s for, and how it creates lasting change.

Let’s break it down.

What Relationship Therapy Focuses On

Relationship therapy is deeply rooted in understanding you—your patterns, your nervous system, and the experiences that shaped how you relate to others.

Individual Patterns

You may want to change the dynamics in your romantic relationship, but if your partner isn’t ready (or willing) to do the work alongside you, that doesn’t mean you’re powerless. Showing up to therapy on your own can create meaningful, lasting shifts.

When you change how you respond—how you communicate, regulate emotions, and set boundaries—those changes naturally carry into the relationship. Even when only one person does the work, the system often begins to shift.

If you’re showing up on your own and feeling like all the responsibility is falling on you, you’re not alone. I wrote more about this experience in Feeling Like You’re the Only One Trying, and how relationship therapy can still create meaningful shifts—even when your partner isn’t changing yet.

Attachment Wounds

Most of the reactive responses people struggle with in relationships aren’t random—they’re rooted in attachment wounds. These are the early experiences that taught you whether closeness felt safe, whether your needs would be met, or whether love came with conditions.

Relationship therapy helps you understand your attachment wounds and gives you the support needed to heal them. As those wounds soften, you’re able to show up with more clarity, steadiness, and emotional safety in all of your relationships.

Nervous System Responses

Attachment wounds live in the nervous system, not just in thoughts. That’s why reactions can feel automatic and overwhelming—your body is responding before your mind catches up.

Over time, your relationship with your therapist often mirrors other relationships in your life. If control has been a way to protect yourself from being hurt, you may try to control the therapeutic process. If you tend to withdraw when things feel vulnerable, that pattern may show up too. These moments become powerful opportunities for awareness and healing.

Empowering Internal Shifts

One of the most underestimated truths about relationships is this: when one person changes, the entire dynamic changes.

If you no longer escalate when something painful is brought to your attention, your partner is less likely to become defensive or reactive. When you step out of the familiar back-and-forth, the system loses momentum—and space for something new opens.

What Couples Counseling Focuses On

Couples counseling is most effective when both partners are committed to showing up and working together.

Present-Day Conflict

Couples counseling often starts with what’s happening now—the arguments, the ruptures, the moments that keep repeating. The goal isn’t to assign blame but to slow things down enough to understand what’s really happening beneath the surface.

Communication Systems and Shared Patterns

In couples work, we look closely at the pattern the two of you are engaging in together.

For example, one partner may respond from an attachment wound by becoming overly controlling in an attempt to feel safe. That behavior can trigger the other partner’s attachment wound around autonomy or feeling dominated. Suddenly, both people are flooded, reactive, and locked in a familiar argument.

Couples counseling doesn’t just focus on what you’re fighting about—it explores where the reactions are coming from. By working with each partner’s internal experience, couples can move toward understanding, emotional safety, and less reactivity over time.

Which One Do You Need?

The right choice often depends on your current reality. Here are a few common scenarios:

  • You feel like you’re the only one trying
    Relationship therapy allows you to begin healing without waiting for your partner to be ready.

  • You want to understand why patterns keep repeating
    If you’re committed to deeper self-understanding and long-term change, relationship therapy offers that depth.

  • You want change even if your partner won’t attend
    You don’t have to stay stuck just because your partner isn’t in therapy.

  • You need support navigating conflict together
    If both of you are willing and motivated, couples counseling can help you slow down, understand each other, and rebuild connection.

If you’re still unsure which approach makes the most sense for your situation, I break this down in more detail in Relationship Therapy vs Couples Counseling, including how to choose when you feel stuck, overwhelmed, or unsure what step comes next.

When Intensives Might Be Better Than Weekly Sessions

For some people, weekly therapy works well. For others—especially those dealing with high-conflict dynamics, long-standing patterns, or relationship crises—it can feel painfully slow.

Intensives offer extended, uninterrupted time to:

  • Get beneath surface-level arguments

  • Regulate nervous systems more effectively

  • Address attachment wounds in real time

  • Create tangible shifts that don’t get lost between sessions

Instead of reopening wounds each week without enough time to integrate, intensives allow for deeper momentum and meaningful progress.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Whether you’re feeling alone in the work or hoping to heal together, you don’t have to keep repeating the same cycles.

If you’re wondering whether relationship therapy vs couples counseling—or an intensive format—would be the best fit for you, I invite you to schedule a consultation. Together, we can explore what support will meet you where you are and help you move toward the change you’re ready for.

👉 Book a consultation and begin the work your relationship is asking for.

If you’d like a deeper understanding of how this work unfolds over time, you may also find The Ultimate Guide to Relationship Therapy helpful as you consider what kind of support feels right for you.

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