When a relationship has been painful for a long time, it can become difficult to tell the difference between a relationship that needs support and a relationship that may no longer be able to grow.
You may find yourself asking: Are we incompatible? Have we hurt each other too much? Is it possible to rebuild trust? Am I the only one trying?
In this Secure Relationship Group meeting, Julie explores the conditions that make meaningful relationship improvement possible. The answer is not that couples need to communicate perfectly or stop getting triggered. The more important question is whether both partners are willing and able to participate in the work of creating emotional safety.
Wanting Change Is Important, but It Is Not the Same as Doing the Work
A relationship cannot be sustained by one person’s effort alone. One partner may begin the process by changing how they respond, creating more emotional safety, and stepping out of familiar negative cycles. That can be a powerful start.
Over time, however, both people need to show a growing ability to take responsibility for their reactions, reflect on their patterns, and respond to each other with more care.
Real change may begin quietly. It can look like greater emotional awareness, more patience during difficult conversations, a willingness to name fear or shame, or a shift from seeing your partner as the problem to recognizing the pattern as the problem.
Relationship Work Is Emotional Work
Relationships are attachment systems. This means that communication tools alone are often not enough when fear, shame, anger, or grief take over.
Julie explains why learning to recognize and process deeper emotions is such an important part of creating lasting change. When partners can access what is underneath their reactions, they become more able to communicate clearly, respond to bids for connection, and approach hard conversations without immediately falling into blame, shutdown, or defensiveness.
Is It Incompatibility or Emotional Disconnection?
Sometimes couples assume they are fundamentally incompatible when the deeper issue is chronic emotional disconnection.
Before deciding that a relationship cannot work, it can be helpful to ask: Are we able to reach each other emotionally? Can we talk about our needs safely? Are we seeing meaningful changes over time?
This does not mean every relationship should continue. Safety matters, and situations involving abuse, unmanaged addiction, or untreated concerns may require specialized support. But when both partners are willing and able to do the work, meaningful improvement may still be possible.
Bringing up a hard topic is easier when you understand what you are afraid of, prepare your nervous system, and begin from connection rather than attack. In this session, Julie teaches members how to name their fears, consider their partner’s experience, and make a clear ask without abandoning their own needs.
In this group meeting, Julie walks members through an exercise on how to bring up a hard topic with more clarity, steadiness, and emotional safety.
You will learn how to identify the fears that may be blocking you from starting a difficult conversation, such as fear of rejection, conflict, shame, anger, shutdown, or feeling exposed. Julie also explains why it helps to pause and consider your partner’s inner experience before beginning the conversation, so the topic can be approached from connection rather than threat.
This session includes practical examples of how to validate your partner’s fear or overwhelm while still naming what is not working for you, making a clear ask, and recognizing when unresolved patterns begin to create distance in the relationship.