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.

When your partner is distant, it’s easy to shut down.When they’re short, it’s easy to snap back.When they stop showing u...
04/21/2026

When your partner is distant, it’s easy to shut down.
When they’re short, it’s easy to snap back.
When they stop showing up, it’s easy to do the same.

That’s reaction.

But reaction doesn’t build relationships.

Values do.

There’s a different question available:

Not, “What am I getting right now?”
But, “Who do I want to be in this moment?”

That question will change your marriage faster than any communication tool.

Because it moves you from reacting… to leading.

We’re raised to believe fairness is the goal.Take turns.Keep it even.Treat people how they treat you.Sounds healthy… unt...
04/20/2026

We’re raised to believe fairness is the goal.

Take turns.
Keep it even.
Treat people how they treat you.

Sounds healthy… until you bring that mindset into marriage.

Because “fair” in relationships usually means:
“I’ll give what I’m getting.”

And that turns into:
Distance = Distance
Frustration = Frustration
Silence = Silence

That’s not fairness.

That’s a slow mutual withdrawal where both people feel justified.

If your standard is “I’ll give what I’m getting”… your relationship will only ever be as healthy as its worst moment.

I’ve got three kids.So I've hear “That’s not fair!” about 47 times a week for the last 10+ years.Different snacks. Diffe...
04/17/2026

I’ve got three kids.

So I've hear “That’s not fair!” about 47 times a week for the last 10+ years.

Different snacks. Different bedtimes. Who got more. Who got less. It’s constant.

And honestly… I get it.

We’re raised on fairness.

“Play fair.”
“Take turns.”
“Treat people how they treat you.”

Fairness matters.

Just not in your marriage.

Because what most couples call “fair”… is actually keeping score.

You were short with me, so I’ll be short back.
You didn’t show up for me, so I won’t show up for you.
You stopped trying, so I’m done trying too.

That’s not fairness.

That’s escalation with a moral label on it.

Here’s the hard truth:

If your standard is “I’ll give what I’m getting”… your relationship will only ever be as healthy as its worst moment.

One person pulls back...the other responds...now both are reacting instead of leading.

And nobody’s actually building anything.

What actually changes a relationship isn’t fairness.

It’s leadership.

It’s deciding:

“I’m not going to mirror the worst version of you.
I’m going to stay aligned with who I want to be.”

That doesn’t mean ignoring problems or tolerating disrespect.

It means you stop letting your partner’s behavior dictate your character.

The marriages that last aren’t fair.

They’re built by two people who keep choosing to bring something better into the moment than what they received.

Not perfectly.

But consistently.

Fairness keeps score, but
love builds something better.

“In order to fall asleep we must first act like we are sleeping.”You don’t have to wait until you feel sleepy.You lay do...
04/16/2026

“In order to fall asleep we must first act like we are sleeping.”

You don’t have to wait until you feel sleepy.

You lay down.
You close your eyes.
You get still.

Your behavior leads and your body follows.

Marriage isn’t that different at times.

A lot of people wait to feel:
understood
appreciated
connected

…before they show warmth, patience, or presence.

But if you only show up well when you feel good,
your marriage will always feel inconsistent.

Because feelings shift.

Frustration comes.
Disconnection comes.

The question isn’t just:
“What do I feel right now?”

It’s:
“Who do I want to be in this moment?”
“What values do I want to stay aligned with…
that actually create the marriage I want?”

And when both spouses live this way…
the relationship stops reacting and starts becoming something solid.

One of the most frustrating moments I hear when working with couples is when someone is genuinely trying… and the other ...
04/13/2026

One of the most frustrating moments I hear when working with couples is when someone is genuinely trying… and the other person still doesn’t feel okay.

“I’m showing up. I’m communicating. I’m doing things differently… so why doesn’t it feel better yet?”

Because change doesn’t happen all at once. It happens in layers.

Most people expect change to start with a shift in mindset. But in relationships, it usually starts with behavior. You begin showing up differently. You say things you didn’t say before. You interrupt patterns that used to run on autopilot.

At first, it can feel forced. Awkward. Even unnatural.

Then comes the emotional layer. Maybe the conversation didn’t turn into a fight this time. Maybe there was a moment of connection. But it still doesn’t feel fully safe yet. There’s hesitation. Guardedness. A sense of, “I see the effort… but I’m not there yet.”

This is where a lot of couples get stuck.

Because one person is thinking, “What more do you want from me?”
And the other is thinking, “I’m trying to feel it, but I’m not there yet.”

Neither is wrong. They’re just in different layers of the process.

Over time, if the behavior stays consistent, something deeper begins to shift. The meaning changes. The belief changes.

“Maybe this is real.”
“Maybe this isn’t temporary.”
“Maybe I can trust this version of you.”

That’s when change actually starts to stick.

Not when you understand it.
Not when you talk about it.
But when you’ve experienced it enough to believe it.

You can change your behavior in a week.
But it can take months for your partner to experience you differently.

That doesn’t mean it’s not working.
It means you’re early in the process.

Don’t quit in Layer 2 just because it doesn’t feel like Layer 4 yet.

I meant to post this on Easter…But whether you’re religious or not,there’s something in that story that’s hard to ignore...
04/10/2026

I meant to post this on Easter…

But whether you’re religious or not,
there’s something in that story that’s hard to ignore:

When things got painful, confusing, and uncertain…

most people left.

A few stayed.

Jesus was executed by the Roman Empire, a system that made examples out of people.

Crucifixion wasn’t just death.
It was humiliation.
A warning.

“Don’t follow him.”

And in that moment…

Most people disappeared.

Not because they didn’t care.
But because fear makes people leave.

But the women stayed.

Mary Magdalene didn’t run.
A few others didn’t distance themselves when things got painful and unclear.

They stayed present in it.

And that kind of presence…
that’s love.

In relationships, we don’t normally face crosses like that.

But we do face moments where:

nothing is getting resolved
the conversations feel stuck
the connection feels distant

And most people don’t leave physically…

They leave emotionally.

They shut down.
They protect themselves.
They stop showing up.

And sometimes that comes from real hurt.

But love...the kind that actually builds something...
looks like staying present in the tension.

Not fixing.
Not forcing.
Just not disappearing.

To the spouses who keep showing up…

Who stay engaged in hard conversations
Who sit in discomfort instead of shutting down
Who remain present when it would be easier to check out

That matters more than you think.

That is strength.

But staying doesn’t mean carrying the whole relationship.

If only one person is staying…
that’s not love building.

That’s burnout.

Real connection is built when both people
have the capacity to stay.

Because love without capacity is chaos.

And what we’re actually looking for
is someone who stays…

even when it’s unclear, uncomfortable, and unfinished.

Not just someone who endures the hard moments…

But someone who builds with you in them.

Who leans in.
Who takes ownership.
Who helps create something steady, safe, and real…

Together.

You’re not being misunderstood…you’re being interpreted.Read that again.Because most couples don’t realize this is what’...
04/06/2026

You’re not being misunderstood…
you’re being interpreted.

Read that again.

Because most couples don’t realize this is what’s actually happening in their relationship.

It’s not that your spouse isn’t listening.
It’s not that they’re trying to twist your words.

It’s that they’re hearing you through a filter that already exists.

A filter built from past arguments.
From unresolved hurt.
From moments where they didn’t feel safe with you.

So when you say,
“I was just asking a question,”
They hear,
“Here comes criticism.”

When you say,
“I need some space,”
They hear,
“I’m being pushed away.”

And now you’re stuck in the same cycle:
You keep trying to clarify your intent…
They keep reacting to your impact.

And both of you feel crazy.

Here’s the shift most couples never make:
If your spouse consistently interprets you in a negative way, the answer isn’t to try harder or explain it better.

It’s to get more curious.

Curious about what they heard.
Curious about what it felt like on their side.
Curious about the pattern your relationship has created together.

Because curiosity slows the fight down…
and creates space for understanding to actually happen.

In marriage, intent doesn’t create connection.

Understanding does.

And understanding isn’t built on what you said…

It’s built on what your partner actually felt safe enough to hear.

This is the work I do with couples every day.

Most relationships don't explode, they fade in slow motion.When nothing actually changes after “I’m sorry,” your partner...
04/01/2026

Most relationships don't explode, they fade in slow motion.

When nothing actually changes after “I’m sorry,” your partner stops feeling safe and starts pulling back.

Not out of spite… but because their body has learned what to expect.

And over time, distance replaces connection without either of you fully realizing it’s happening.

If this feels familiar, you don’t have to stay stuck in it.

This is the work I do with couples every day...helping you break the pattern and actually rebuild something different.

Most people don’t leave because of one bad night.They leave because nothing ever changes after it.At some point, your pa...
03/31/2026

Most people don’t leave because of one bad night.

They leave because nothing ever changes after it.

At some point, your partner stops reacting…
and starts adapting.

That’s the shift most people miss.

No more arguing.
No more pushing.
No more trying to get through to you.

Just quiet adjustment.

And by the time it’s calm on the surface,
they’re already halfway gone.

If you’re stuck in a cycle like this, the question isn’t
“how do we communicate better?”

It’s...what actually changes after the conversation?

That’s the work.

Apologies don’t rebuild trust.Changed behavior does.Most couples aren’t stuck because they don’t care.They’re stuck beca...
03/30/2026

Apologies don’t rebuild trust.
Changed behavior does.

Most couples aren’t stuck because they don’t care.
They’re stuck because they’ve confused words with repair.

“I’m sorry” matters. It should be said. It should be felt.
But if nothing actually shifts after it… your partner’s nervous system doesn’t register safety.

It registers a pattern.

And patterns speak louder than intention ever will.

If I say “I’m sorry” but show up the exact same way next week…
I didn’t repair anything.

I just bought more time.

That’s the part people don’t want to look at.
Because it forces a harder question:

Am I actually changing… or am I just trying to keep the relationship from falling apart?

Healthy relationships don’t require perfection.
They don’t require getting it right every time.

But they do require evidence.

Evidence that you’re paying attention.
Evidence that you’re interrupting the old pattern.
Evidence that your partner isn’t crazy for wanting something different.

Because trust isn’t rebuilt through promises.

It’s rebuilt through repetition… of something new.

Silence feels like peace…but it’s usually just unspoken tension with good PR.If it’s not being said, it’s still being fe...
03/27/2026

Silence feels like peace…
but it’s usually just unspoken tension with good PR.

If it’s not being said, it’s still being felt.
And over time, that weight doesn’t disappear, it builds.

What you avoid now
becomes what breaks you later.

Say it. Gently. Honestly. Early.

Silence isn’t neutral.It’s a slow decision to let distance grow while pretending things are fine.Most couples don’t fall...
03/26/2026

Silence isn’t neutral.
It’s a slow decision to let distance grow while pretending things are fine.

Most couples don’t fall apart because they talk too much…
they fall apart because they stop saying what actually matters.

Honesty might feel risky.
But avoidance is what actually costs you the relationship.

This is the work I do with couples every day.

Address

Paris, TX
75460

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