03/11/2026
A couple once sat across from me during their first session and said something I hear pretty often.
“We’re hoping counseling can save our marriage.”
They said it sincerely.
They weren’t being dramatic.
They were just tired.
Years of frustration had piled up between them. Conversations turned into arguments. Arguments turned into silence. And eventually they reached the place most couples reach before calling a therapist...the quiet fear that maybe the relationship isn’t going to make it.
They were hoping counseling could fix it.
But here’s the truth most people don’t realize:
Marriage counseling can’t save your relationship.
I say that as someone who does marriage counseling for a living.
Therapy can be incredibly helpful. But it’s not a repair shop for struggling marriages. And when couples believe the counselor is supposed to fix things, they often miss where the real work has to happen.
Here are a few things marriage counseling can’t do.
1. Counseling can’t make someone care.
If one partner is emotionally checked out or unwilling to look at themselves, therapy can’t manufacture effort.
2. Counseling can’t undo years of resentment overnight.
Sometimes couples arrive after a decade of disconnection expecting a few sessions to restore what slowly eroded over time.
3. Counseling can’t force honesty.
Real change requires two people willing to be truthful about what they feel, what they need, and how they’ve contributed to the problem.
4. Counseling can’t replace curiosity.
When couples become locked into blame, “you’re the problem”, it becomes almost impossible to understand each other.
5. Counseling can’t save a marriage by itself.
Therapy isn’t the solution. It’s a place where two people can slow down long enough to understand what’s actually happening between them.
And when that happens, something important shifts.
Defensiveness softens.
Blame gives way to curiosity.
And couples start to see each other differently.
From there, real change becomes possible.
Not because counseling saved the marriage.
But because two people decided they were willing to.