Gary Malone Counseling, PLLC

Gary Malone Counseling, PLLC Accepting BCBS, United, Aetna, Cigna, Superior, and TriCare. Virtual sessions available.

Credentialed with various EAP programs (check your employer)

Counseling services for couples, adults, and teens.

Staying married isn’t proof of success.Choosing to divorce isn’t proof of failure.It's often taught that staying married...
01/20/2026

Staying married isn’t proof of success.
Choosing to divorce isn’t proof of failure.

It's often taught that staying married means you’re winning...no matter how tense, lonely, or depleted the relationship becomes. As if endurance alone equals love.

It doesn’t.

A relationship can stay intact and still do real damage.

And if kids are involved they'll feel it.

They may not understand the details, but they feel the heaviness.
The silence.
The walking on eggshells.
The way connection slowly disappears.

A home filled with tension teaches kids things they never asked to learn:
That love feels stressful.
That conflict doesn’t get repaired.
That staying quiet is safer than being honest.

This isn’t a case for divorce.
And it’s not a case against marriage.

It’s a reminder that quality matters more than appearances.

Healthy relationships feel steady.
They feel safe.
They don’t require emotional survival.

And here’s where my work comes in:

I believe deeply in marriage. I believe in repair. I believe people can change.

But change only happens when both people are willing to show up. To own their patterns, tell the truth, and do the uncomfortable work of growth.

Not when one person carries everything.
Not when accountability is one-sided.

When two people commit to growth together, relationships can heal in powerful ways.

And when they don’t?
Pretending won’t save it.

Healthy love doesn’t demand endurance.
It creates safety.

There’s a quote I keep coming back to:“Whatever you didn’t get in childhood, you’ll demand in your relationship.Whatever...
01/19/2026

There’s a quote I keep coming back to:

“Whatever you didn’t get in childhood, you’ll demand in your relationship.
Whatever hurt you in childhood, you’ll see everywhere in your partner.”

And it’s uncomfortably accurate.

If you didn’t feel emotionally safe growing up, you’ll crave reassurance now.
If you had to grow up fast, you’ll resent carrying everything.
If love felt inconsistent, you’ll scan for signs it’s about to disappear.

So when your partner gets quiet…
Forgets something…
Doesn’t respond the way you hoped…

Your nervous system doesn’t say, “This is probably nothing.”
It says, “Here we go again.”

And that’s when we start demanding instead of asking.
Protecting instead of connecting.
Reacting instead of slowing down.

Here’s the part most people miss:

Your partner isn’t causing your wound.
They’re just close enough to activate it.

That doesn’t mean your pain isn’t real.
It means your relationship is showing you where healing still needs to happen.

The goal isn’t to find someone who never triggers you.
That person doesn’t exist.

The goal is learning how to notice your patterns, calm your nervous system, and ask for connection without turning it into a fight.

That’s where real growth happens.
That’s where relationships start to feel safe again.

Most breakups don’t start with moving boxes.They start with silence.It happens quietly.The laugh fades.“Tell me about yo...
01/16/2026

Most breakups don’t start with moving boxes.
They start with silence.

It happens quietly.
The laugh fades.
“Tell me about your day” becomes “fine.”
The hand that used to reach for you stays put.

Then one day, someone leaves and everyone acts shocked.

But the truth?
The relationship ended emotionally a long time ago.

People don’t usually check out all at once.
They leak out slowly.

They stay because it’s complicated.
Because of money.
Kids.
Faith.
History.
Fear.

So instead of leaving, they conserve energy.
They stop asking.
Stop risking.
Stop reaching.

Not because they don’t care.
Because caring started to hurt.

Here’s what the emotional exit usually looks like:

• Small disappointments pile up
• Hard conversations move inside your head
• You start building a life around the relationship instead of with it
• The partnership becomes functional, not intimate

You’re not enemies.
You’re roommates with shared responsibilities.

And if you’re wondering, “How did we get here?”
That’s the right question.

Not: “Who’s the villain?”
But: “When did we stop being safe with each other?”

The emotional exit isn’t cruelty.
It’s a survival move.

But if it goes unnamed, it becomes permanent.

Because when someone finally leaves physically,
they’re usually just making official what’s already been true for a while.

How do you keep this from happening (or stop it if it already is)?

You don’t fix emotional drift with grand gestures.
You fix it by interrupting the silence as quickly as possible.

That looks like:
• Naming disappointment before it hardens into distance
• Making small, consistent bids for connection and noticing if they land
• Talking about what’s hard without keeping score
• Repairing quickly instead of stacking resentments
• Creating emotional safety, not just a functional household

If things already feel quiet, numb, or transactional don’t wait until you’re roommates filing paperwork.

Distance doesn’t mean it’s over.
But unspoken distance does.

If you recognize this pattern in your marriage, or you’re afraid you’re already living in Stage 4 or 5, I’d genuinely love to help you slow it down, reverse it, or at least get clarity before it’s too late.

You don’t need more effort.
You need better direction.

Here’s the problem with the love-language conversation:It makes love sound like a technique.Say the right words.Touch th...
01/15/2026

Here’s the problem with the love-language conversation:
It makes love sound like a technique.

Say the right words.
Touch the right way.
Buy the gift.
Do the act.

Check the box. Feel loved.

But real love isn’t measured by how well you perform when things are easy.

It’s also measured on bad days.

In the book...
Patience isn’t a love language.
Emotional steadiness isn’t a love language.
Being safe to live with isn’t a love language.

And yet that’s the core of love.

You can speak someone’s “language” perfectly and still be:

Reactive
Moody
Unpredictable
Hard to be around when stressed

And if your partner has to manage your moods, soften their words, or brace for your reactions, no love language will save that relationship.

Love isn’t about learning a better script.
It’s about becoming a steadier person.

Because the deepest form of love isn’t how you express affection,
It’s whether your partner can relax around you.

That’s the work.

Most people assume that if there’s love in a relationship, the rest will work itself out. If you care enough, try hard e...
01/13/2026

Most people assume that if there’s love in a relationship, the rest will work itself out. If you care enough, try hard enough, want it bad enough, things will fall into place.

It’s not how relationships actually work.

One of the biggest problems couples run into is confusing love with safety. They’re related, but they’re not the same thing, and mixing them up creates a lot of heartache.

Love is the attraction, connection, chemistry, and desire.
Safety decides closeness.

Safety is what you feel when you don’t have to watch every word, when you’re not walking on eggshells, when a disagreement doesn’t feel like it might blow everything up. A couple can love each other deeply and still not feel safe together. When that happens, the relationship starts to wear people down.

When safety is missing, people get defensive.
They pull away or cling tighter.
They read into texts, tone, and timing.
They try to fix things instead of listening.
Small problems turn into big ones not because people don’t care, but because they don’t feel secure.

Love makes you care.
Safety makes it possible to stay connected when things get hard.

Safety isn’t about always feeling good.
It’s about knowing what to expect. It’s built over time when words and actions line up, when apologies turn into changed behavior, when conversations don’t feel like traps, and when someone proves they’re steady, not just passionate.

You don’t create safety by saying the right things.
You create it by being consistent.

Real safety allows honest conversations, slower pacing, room to breathe, and differences without punishment.

Love matters.
It always will.

But a better question than “Do we love each other?” is
“Do we feel safe with each other when things aren’t going well?”

Love can exist in chaos. Safety can’t.

And when safety is present, love doesn’t have to be dramatic or intense to prove itself. It gets to be solid.

Most people aren’t looking for fireworks.
They’re looking for peace.
They want to come home and exhale.
They want a relationship that isn’t one more thing they have to manage.

Love might be what starts a relationship, but safety is what keeps it standing.

If you’ve tried marriage counseling and walked away thinking,“We talked a lot… but nothing really changed,”you’re not br...
01/08/2026

If you’ve tried marriage counseling and walked away thinking,
“We talked a lot… but nothing really changed,”
you’re not broken and your marriage isn’t hopeless.

Most couples don’t fail marriage counseling.
Marriage counseling often fails couples.

Not because therapists don’t care.
Not because couples don’t try.
But because the model itself misses the real problem.

Most marriage counseling focuses on:
- communication skills
- conflict techniques
- emotional insight

And don't get me wrong, those things matter.
But, better communication doesn’t fix a marriage that doesn’t feel emotionally safe.

When fear is running the relationship,
better words just become better weapons.

Couples leave sessions knowing what to say…
but still can’t say it when it matters.

A common belief in therapy is:
“If people understand why they react the way they do, they’ll change.”

But, insight without emotional regulation does very little.

You can know:
- your attachment style
- your childhood wounds
- your triggers

…and still shut down, lash out, or withdraw at 10:47 p.m. when your nervous system is overwhelmed. Understanding the story doesn’t help if your body still thinks it’s under threat.

Another reason marriage counseling stalls is something most people won’t say out loud...it can accidentally turns into a courtroom.

Who’s right.
Who’s wrong.
Whose feelings matter more.

Now the therapist becomes a referee, and the couple starts:
- performing
- persuading
- keeping score

That doesn’t build connection. It builds quiet resentment. Neutrality might sound fair, but neutrality doesn’t create safety.

Often marriages don’t break down because couples don’t communicate.
They break down because fear is running the system.

Fear of:
- rejection
- abandonment
- conflict
- not being enough
- being controlled
- being vulnerable

Fear hijacks logic.
Fear narrows perspective.
Fear makes good people protect instead of connect.

And fear does not respond to techniques. It responds to felt safety.

This is where my work looks different, not because it’s better, but because it’s honest about what creates lasting change.

Before teaching couples how to talk, I focus on whether they can stay present at all.

Can you:
- tolerate discomfort without shutting down?
- stay grounded when emotions rise?
- remain steady instead of reactive?

Calm people don’t need scripts. Regulated people communicate naturally.

I help couples understand what’s happening inside their body during conflict.

Why they:
- freeze
- pursue
- explode
- disappear

Once people feel safer inside themselves, they stop needing their partner to manage their emotions for them. That’s when real change begins.

I’m not interested in deciding who’s right.

I’m interested in helping each person:
- take ownership
- build emotional strength
- stop outsourcing responsibility

No villains.
No victims.
Just adults learning how to lead themselves in relationship.

This is one of the most misunderstood truths about marriage:
Love without capacity is chaos.

Two people can love each other deeply and still lack the emotional capacity to stay connected under stress.

Marriage doesn’t fall apart because love disappears. It falls apart because the system collapses under pressure.

So the work isn’t about compatibility.
It’s about capacity.

This approach is not for couples looking for:
- quick fixes
- a referee
- someone to change their spouse

It is for couples willing to:
- look inward
- tolerate discomfort
- take responsibility
- grow emotionally

That work isn’t flashy. But it’s effective.

Marriage doesn’t heal because you say the right things.
It heals when fear stops running the relationship.

When two people feel steady enough to stay present, safe enough to be honest,
and strong enough to stop protecting themselves from each other...

everything changes.

Not because the marriage was broken.
But because the foundation finally got strong enough to hold it.

This is the email I wish every couple would read before walking into their first therapy session._______________________...
12/22/2025

This is the email I wish every couple would read before walking into their first therapy session.
_____________________________

Hi, there.

Before we meet for your first session, I want to offer a little clarity about how this work goes best and how to get the most out of your time together in therapy.

Couples therapy is not about deciding who’s right, who’s wrong, or who messed things up more. If you show up hoping I will referee, take sides, or finally make your partner “get it,” you’ll likely leave frustrated.

That’s not because therapy doesn’t work.
It’s because repair and growth require two willing participants, not one prosecutor and one defendant.

Here’s what does help before session one:

• Come curious, not armed.
• Be honest about what you want, even if you’re unsure whether that means staying together or figuring out what’s next.
• Be open to looking at your part in the patterns you’re stuck in, even if your partner has caused real hurt.
• Understand that discomfort isn’t failure, it’s often the doorway to change.

Therapy works best when curiosity is louder than defensiveness.

You don’t need the right words.
You don’t need a perfect plan.
You don’t need to agree on everything before you arrive.

What you do need is a willingness to slow down, tell the truth, and stay present when things feel tender or challenging.

Before our first session, I encourage each of you to reflect on these questions privately:

What do I hope will be different as a result of therapy?
Where do I know I get defensive, shut down, or shift blame?
What conversations are we avoiding that we need help having safely?
Am I open to learning something about myself even if it’s uncomfortable?

There are no “right” answers here.
This isn’t about being good or bad at relationships.

It’s about whether you’re willing to be honest enough for something new to become possible.

I look forward to meeting you both and walking with you through this process.

Warmly,
Gary

Most fights don’t end because someone wins.They end because someone decides the relationship matters more than being rig...
12/16/2025

Most fights don’t end because someone wins.
They end because someone decides the relationship matters more than being right.

Marriage doesn’t fall apart over the big blowups.
It erodes in the quiet moments where pride stays louder than connection.

So if you need the last word, if everything in you wants to land one more point, clarify one more detail, or make sure they fully understand how wrong they were...
try choosing one of these instead.

Not because the issue doesn’t matter.
But because the bond matters more.

“I Love You”

This isn’t a conversation-stopper.
It’s a nervous-system reset.

“I love you” says:
We’re still on the same team, even when this is hard.

It tells your partner, you don’t have to earn your way back into safety.
And that alone lowers defenses faster than any perfectly worded argument ever could.

“I’m Sorry”

Not the polished, legal-defense apology.
The real one.

The kind that says:
I can see where I hurt you, and I care.

You don’t have to agree with their entire perspective to own your impact.
Repair begins the moment shame steps aside and humility walks in.

“Thank You”

This one is wildly underrated.

“Thank you” says:
I noticed your effort.
I don’t take you for granted.
You didn’t have to show up that way and you did.

Gratitude softens resentment faster than logic ever will.

“I Like Your Butt”

Listen.
This is not a joke...this is strategy.

Desire matters in marriage.
Playfulness matters.
Being seen as more than a co-manager of life logistics matters.

Sometimes what a tense moment really needs is a reminder:
You’re still attractive to me.
We’re still us.

Also, let’s be honest, it’s hard to stay in fight mode when someone compliments your butt. The point isn’t the phrase, it’s the posture.

These words work because they communicate:
Safety over superiority
Connection over control
Desire over distance

Healthy marriages aren’t built by people who always say the right thing.
They’re built by people who know when to stop talking and start choosing closeness.

So next time you feel that urge to win, to explain, defend, or outlast...say one of these instead.

Let the last word protect the relationship.

Even if it’s about their butt.

What actually makes repair possible in a marriage isn’t perfection...it’s the ability to hear where you messed up withou...
12/11/2025

What actually makes repair possible in a marriage isn’t perfection...it’s the ability to hear where you messed up without collapsing into shame.

When one partner says, “That hurt me,” the relationship depends on the other person having enough internal stability to stay present instead of spiraling.

Most marriages don’t fall apart because of one big mistake. They fall apart because one or both partners don’t have a grounded enough sense of self to tolerate honest conversations.

If your internal belief is “I’m only lovable when I’m right, calm, impressive, or needed,” then any feedback feels like an existential threat.

And from that place, only a few things show up:
defensiveness
blame-shifting
shutting down
counterattacking
or intellectualizing the hurt instead of feeling it

The real work is building the capacity to feel guilt without slipping into shame.

Guilt says, “I did something wrong.”
Shame says, “I am something wrong.”

When shame hijacks every conflict, connection dies.

But when someone can stay grounded, hear hard truth, and not lose their sense of worth...

That’s the gateway to accountability.
That’s what makes repair possible.
And that’s what sustains a marriage long-term.

If your spouse can’t tell you, “Hey, that hurt me,” without you blowing up, shutting down, or turning it into a debate… ...
12/10/2025

If your spouse can’t tell you, “Hey, that hurt me,” without you blowing up, shutting down, or turning it into a debate… nothing gets better.

A strong marriage needs two people who can:

take a deep breath,
not get defensive,
not make it all about their character,
and just listen.

It’s the ability to hear where you messed up without acting like you’re worthless or like they’re attacking you. That’s what makes repair possible.

Most marriages don’t fail because of big mess-ups, they fail because one or both partners aren't showing up grounded enough to handle honest conversations.

To hear, “Hey… that hurt me,” a person needs a stable sense of worth that is not annihilated by imperfection.

If the internal belief is “I’m only lovable when I’m right, impressive, calm, or needed,” then feedback = existential threat.

This leads to:
defensiveness,
blame-shifting,
shutdown,
counterattack,
or intellectualizing the hurt.

The capacity to feel guilt without collapsing into shame is paramount to growth.

Guilt says: “I did something wrong.”
Shame says: “I am something wrong.”

Marriage collapses when shame hijacks every conflict.

Shame resilience is the gateway to accountability, repair, and longterm marital health.

Most men can fix a tractor, a busted faucet, or a Saturday project…But when it comes to fixing tension in their marriage...
12/02/2025

Most men can fix a tractor, a busted faucet, or a Saturday project…
But when it comes to fixing tension in their marriage?
That’s where even the strongest guys feel lost.

Because you can’t tighten a bolt on hurt feelings.
You can’t duct-tape miscommunication.
And you sure can’t out-stubborn your way into intimacy.

What does work is emotional leadership, the kind that steadies the whole house without anyone having to raise their voice.

• He stays steady instead of defensive.
• He gets curious instead of proving he’s right.
• He walks toward the problem, not away from it.
• He asks, “Help me understand what you needed,” instead of “Why are you mad at me again?”

When a man leads with calm curiosity, the whole “crew” (his wife, his home, his kids) settles.
Not because he fixes everything, but because he brings steady energy into the room.

If you want to learn how to build that kind of steadiness, I help men do exactly that every day.

You still love your partner. You’d never leave.But you don’t actually like each other anymore.You’re sharing a house, a ...
11/28/2025

You still love your partner. You’d never leave.
But you don’t actually like each other anymore.

You’re sharing a house, a bed, a routine…
but not a friendship.

No laughter.
No curiosity.
No “I can’t wait to tell you this.”
Just two good people coexisting.

This isn’t a lack of love.
It’s a lack of connection.

Life got busy.
Conversations turned into logistics.
Small hurts piled up.
Both of you stopped reaching out.

And slowly… the friendship faded.

That’s the part no one prepares you for:
The quiet loneliness inside a committed relationship.

This can be rebuilt if both people want it.

Research is clear: Friendship is the foundation of a healthy/fulfilling marriage.

Emotional bids matter.
Curiosity matters.
Daily micro-connection matters.
Intentional repair matters.

Rebuilding doesn’t mean starting over.
It means rebuilding the bridge you’ve stopped walking across.

First, name the problem out loud—without blame.
Clear out old resentment.
Restore curiosity.
Learn how to talking again (not just manage life).
Re-learn each other’s inner world.
Do things together that aren’t chores or schedules.
Practice generosity instead of scorekeeping.
Create small moments of warmth again.

It’s not about grand gestures.
It’s about getting the friendship back.

Most couples can’t repair this alone—not because they’re broken, but because the patterns are too familiar.

Couples counseling gives you:
- A neutral place to say the things you’ve stopped saying.
- Tools to rebuild emotional connection.
- A way to break out of “roommate mode”.
- Guidance to repair resentment safely.
- A structured plan to rebuild friendship, not just put out fires.

My job is to help couples...
Talk again.
Hear each other again.
Laugh again.
Become friends again.

Rebuilding your friendship transforms everything:
- Communication becomes easier
- Intimacy grows
- Conflict softens
- You stop feeling alone
- The relationship becomes something you enjoy, not just maintain

You don’t have to settle for parallel lives.
And you don’t have to choose between staying stuck or blowing everything up.

There is a middle path:
Rebuild the friendship. Rebuild the connection. Rebuild the “us.”

If this hits home and you want help getting back what you’ve lost, reach out.

I help couples rediscover their friendship, repair what’s gotten buried, and rebuild a relationship they actually like living in.

Address

Paris, TX
75460

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Gary Malone Counseling, PLLC posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram