Gottman Method Couples Therapy in Austin

Daniel Brake, LMFT-S and Dr John Gottman Ph.D (Dr Julie Gottman Ph.D in background)

The feelings of love may come and go over the course of your lifetime together.  The choice to act with love, admiration and respect is one you can make every day.

Grounded in 45 years of research with more than 3000 couples, Gottman Method Couples Therapy is a structured, goal-oriented, and scientifically-based approach for creating positive change in your relationship.

It is the health of a couple’s friendship that determines whether they will continue to grow together, or drift apart. I can help you identify unsuccessful strategies and damaging habits in your interactions and teach you better tools for getting the relationship you want.

What’s your Couple-Type? (coming soon!)

Research identifies five styles of relationship conflict management. Knowing your “Type” can help you understand why your relationship operates as it does. 

Communication & Conflict Management

All relationships have conflict. How you manage those moments of disagreement determines whether they are opportunities to grow closer, or injuries that drive you further apart. Cycles of conflict characterized by criticism, defensiveness, stone-walling, and contempt will eat away at your love and respect for one another. Repeated instances where you feel misunderstood, undervalued, disregarded, or where underlying needs and hurts remain unattended will undermine the foundation of trust between you. 

Has your relationship become hostile?

  • You just can’t talk about certain topics without it turning into a fight.

  • A simple disagreement can escalate out-of-scale to the actual stakes of the conversation. (I bought the wrong mop, why are we talking about divorce?)

  • It feels like your friend goes away in a fight and is replaced by a mean or unloving stranger.

  • When things are going well, they are amazing. When they don’t, it’s awful. 

  • Things are feeling good means: We haven’t had an argument in two weeks!

  • Compromise means keeping your mouth shut and pretending like you’re fine with your partners decision, because it’s just not worth the fight.

If you agreed with three or more of those statements, your relationship is at significant risk of disintegration, and getting stuck in a pattern that feels impossible to change on your own. 

Here’s an article on why that can be so hard to change without help: The Zero-Sum Game: the surprising math behind intractable relationship conflict (coming soon!)

Whether this is a new pattern following an unfortunate event, or something that’s followed you from relationship to relationship, effective conflict management is a skill you can learn. Changing how you communicate can nurture a culture of admiration, appreciation, and compassion. Accepting influence and approaching disagreements as opportunities to build trust and connection can turn distress into harmony. This may require you, or your partner, to learn some anger management skills, or address an underlying condition such as depression.

Rebuilding Connection

Couples routinely describe the best times in their marriage as ones in which they felt the most joy and connection. Whether those were times of freedom and adventure, or of struggle and hardship, their bond was rich.

Conversely, when partners feel burned out and distant in their relationship, the financial security and freedom they’ve gained over the years does little to comfort them.

There are many reasons couples grow apart. Sometimes, it’s conflict undermining their trust and commitment to each other. For others, it’s the daily grind of work, and kids, and family obligations. The connection feels extinguished.

You might be perfect roommates, excellent parents and considerate business partners, but still something is missing.

Luckily, love is not the unpredictable force of nature Hollywood has taught us to expect. When nurtured, joy and connection can grow anew. With work and attention, partners can remember why they fell in love in the first place.

How to Nurture Your Love to Last a Lifetime (coming soon!)

The Gottman Method in Action

Gottman Method Couples Therapy is a directive, and goal-oriented approach. This means that, based on your assessment, I will have a plan of action for every session. These plans are flexible, and incorporate what is happening in your relationship day to day, but always intending to move you forward. You will work through every session, and you will regularly have practices for home.

This process is more than simply teaching you effective communication skills. To see real change, you and your partner will be challenged to think of old patterns in new ways, and to get personal with thoughts and feelings you might have avoided in the past.

That isn’t easy, I know. I respect how difficult it is to take the time and dedicate the resources to this process. I want to make sure that the investment you’re making in your relationship pays out the dividends you want.

Intake & Assessment

An integral part of Gottman Method relationship therapy is the assessment. Based on decades of empirical research, the assessment process will give me an in-depth understanding of the hidden dynamics in your relationship.

Are you hesitant to invest your time and effort in such an intensive process? Don’t be! The assessment is my best tool for efficiently collecting the information I need to design your course of treatment.

With less structured approaches, the counselor explores your relationship and history piecemeal, over the course of multiple sessions. You will start interventions sooner, but with a less complete understanding. In the long run, the assessment process can save you time and money.

Intake and Assessment: $774

  • Initial interview and goal setting (50-minute session)
  • Full Gottman Assessment
  • Individual Interviews (can be a single 100-minute, or two separate 50-minute sessions)
  • Gottman Assessment report, treatment planning, and initial interventions (50-minutes)

Subsequent treatment sessions: 

  • 100-minute $315
  • 50-minute   $165 

 

Couples Therapy Doesn't Always Work

Even with the most motivated clients, there are two situations that don’t respond well to traditional couples therapy. In these special cases, we need a modified approach to get results. If there’s been an affair, or if you (or your partner) are unsure that you want to continue the relationship, consider the options below.

Infidelity Recovery

When trust is broken, it has to be repaired before we address anything else. This requires an asymmetrical approach counter to traditional couples therapy’s neutral balance between partners.

Based on decades of research, and my own clinical experience, I’ve developed a protocol that works quickly to rebuild trust and safety. With a new foundation, you can build a stronger, more vibrant relationship to carry you into the future.

Discernment Counseling

Research has shown that when there is significant ambivalence about the relationship’s future, couples counseling is ineffective.

Marriage therapy is uncomfortable. If you’re not sure you even want to save the marriage, you won’t succeed at those tasks. Discernment counseling first answers the question: do I want to be here? Do I want this to work?

With that answer in had, figuring out how to make it work gets much easier.