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.

A couple once sat across from me during their first session and said something I hear pretty often.“We’re hoping counsel...
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.

One of the quiet tragedies I see in marriage is this:Someone becomes so starved for attention from their spouse that the...
03/09/2026

One of the quiet tragedies I see in marriage is this:

Someone becomes so starved for attention from their spouse that the moment anyone else notices them… it feels like oxygen.

A compliment.
A laugh at their joke.
Someone leaning in to listen.

Suddenly their nervous system wakes up.

Not because they’re a bad person.
Not because they were looking to betray their marriage.

But, because being chosen feels like breathing again.

And when someone has been emotionally holding their breath for years… oxygen is powerful.

Now let me be clear about something.

Understanding this dynamic doesn’t excuse betrayal.
And it doesn’t justify poor coping mechanisms or broken boundaries.

People are still responsible for the choices they make.

But if we want to protect marriages, we have to be honest about the conditions that make people vulnerable in the first place.

This is why marriages don’t usually fall apart because someone “wanted an affair.”

They fall apart when two people slowly stop making each other feel chosen… and neither one quite notices when the oxygen disappears.

Not pursued.
Not desired.
Not seen.

Just… roommates running logistics.

But here’s the hopeful part.

Most marriages don’t need a complete overhaul.

They just need oxygen again.

A hand on the back when you walk by.
A genuine “I’m glad I’m married to you.”
A few minutes of curiosity about each other’s day.
A laugh that reminds you you're still friends.

Small moments.
Repeated often.

Because the truth is…

Feeling chosen by your spouse is one of the most powerful forms of love there is.

And it’s something couples can start giving each other again today.

“I hate how selfish he is.”“I hate how critical she can be.”“I hate how he shuts down.”“I hate how she controls everythi...
03/05/2026

“I hate how selfish he is.”
“I hate how critical she can be.”
“I hate how he shuts down.”
“I hate how she controls everything.”

Strong words show up in marriage eventually.

Sometimes in arguments.
Sometimes in therapy.
Sometimes in quiet conversations with friends.

But here’s something most couples eventually discover:

The strongest reactions in marriage are rarely just about the behavior happening in front of you.

They’re about what that behavior touches inside of you.

Sometimes the reaction is about an old wound.

A spouse forgets something important.
The reaction is bigger than the moment.

Not because of the mistake…
but because somewhere along the way your brain learned:

“If people forget about you, you don’t matter.”

Sometimes anger protects grief.

If you stop being angry about what your spouse didn’t give you…
you might have to face the sadness of the marriage you hoped for but didn’t fully get.

And grief is harder than anger.

Anger feels strong.
Grief feels vulnerable.

So many couples stay angry.

Sometimes hatred also protects identity.

If your spouse is always the villain,
you never have to wrestle with your own role in the patterns that developed.

But real growth in marriage usually begins when the question changes.

Instead of only asking:
“Why are they like this?”
Healthy couples eventually ask:
“Why does this affect me so strongly?”

That question changes everything.

Because marriage doesn’t just reveal your partner’s habits.

It exposes your fears.
Your expectations.
Your history.

And the couples who grow are the ones willing to get curious about what their reactions are trying to tell them.

One quiet mistake couples make in marriage is expecting their spouse to be their entire world.Best friend.Confidant.Ente...
03/04/2026

One quiet mistake couples make in marriage is expecting their spouse to be their entire world.

Best friend.
Confidant.
Entertainment.
Emotional support.
Social life.

It sounds romantic.

But in real life, it creates pressure no relationship was designed to carry.

No one person can be everything.

And when a marriage becomes the center of someone’s entire social world, life slowly starts to shrink.

Friends drift away.
Hobbies fade.
Invitations stop coming.
Conversations revolve around work, kids, and responsibilities.

At first it can feel like closeness. Over time, it becomes weight.
Because now the marriage has to carry everything.

Every frustration.
Every lonely moment.
Every need for fun.
Every need for connection.

Even strong relationships struggle under that kind of pressure.
Healthy marriages don’t eliminate friendships outside the relationship.
They make space for them.

Friends allow you to laugh in different ways.
Talk about things your spouse may not care about.
Share interests that don’t exist at home.
Step outside the routines of daily life.

And something interesting happens when people maintain friendships. They often come back into the marriage with more energy.

More stories.
More perspective.
More appreciation for their partner.

Instead of draining the relationship, healthy friendships outside the marriage often strengthen it.

Of course, friendships require healthy boundaries.

They should never become secretive.
They shouldn’t replace the emotional connection inside the marriage.

But when they are open, respectful, and appropriately boundaried, they support both partners.

A healthy marriage isn’t two people disappearing into each other.

It’s two whole people who still have lives, friendships, and interests beyond the relationship.

Then they come back together and share life. That kind of marriage doesn’t shrink the world.

It expands it.

Most disconnected couples can trace it back to one moment: the last time they laughed together. Research shows couples w...
02/26/2026

Most disconnected couples can trace it back to one moment: the last time they laughed together.

Research shows couples who laugh together (shared, unguarded laughter) report higher closeness and satisfaction. But you don’t need a study to feel this. You already know it.

Laughter isn’t about humor.
It’s about safety.

Real laughter only shows up when your nervous system isn’t bracing. When you’re not being evaluated, corrected, or quietly judged. It’s the body saying, I’m safe here.

When laughter fades, it’s rarely because anyone “lost their sense of humor.”
It’s because something underneath changed.

Tension crept in.
Resentment went unspoken.
Sarcasm replaced playfulness.
Being light started to feel risky.

You stop laughing long before you stop loving.

So when couples say, “We just don’t have fun anymore,” I don’t hear boredom. I hear a nervous system that hasn’t exhaled in a long time.

Laughter isn’t the reward of a healthy marriage.
It’s one of the structures that keeps a marriage healthy.

And not all humor heals. Sarcasm, eye-rolling jokes, and “just kidding” comments often mask resentment. That kind of laughter protects, but it doesn’t connect.

If laughter is gone, don’t try to be funnier. Get curious.

Ask:
When did it stop feeling safe to be light here?
What goes unsaid that laughter used to cover?

Because laughter returns when safety returns.

Here’s the real gut-check:
When was the last time you laughed freely with your partner and didn’t feel even a flicker of tension afterward?

If it’s been a while, that’s not failure.
It’s information.

Laughter is data. And when it disappears, something important is asking for attention.

There was a season of my life where I believed the fastest way to grow was to stay relentlessly hard on myself.If I kept...
02/25/2026

There was a season of my life where I believed the fastest way to grow was to stay relentlessly hard on myself.

If I kept replaying my mistakes…
If I stayed heavy with guilt…
If I never let myself off the hook…

Then maybe I was “doing the work.”

But here’s what I’ve learned the hard way:

Constant self-blame isn’t growth.
It’s just shame wearing a productivity mask.

Growth is honest ownership without self-punishment.
It’s looking clearly at what you did, naming it, repairing what you can and then refusing to keep bleeding for it.

I can say, “I made real mistakes,” without turning my entire identity into them.
I can hold responsibility without confusing it with lifelong penance.

Beating yourself up doesn’t make you safer.
It doesn’t make you wiser.
And it doesn’t make anyone trust you more.

It just keeps you stuck in the moment that already passed.

Real growth looks quieter than people expect.
It’s steadier.
Less dramatic.
More embodied.

And often, it’s invisible to the people who need you to stay frozen in who you used to be.

Growth isn’t proven by how much pain you’re willing to carry.
It’s proven by how consistently you show up differently over time.

Most couples will spend tens of thousands of dollars planning a wedding.Many will spend tens of thousands more navigatin...
02/23/2026

Most couples will spend tens of thousands of dollars planning a wedding.
Many will spend tens of thousands more navigating a divorce.

Somewhere in between, they spend almost nothing learning how to actually be married.

We budget for a day.
We don’t budget for a lifetime.

We’ll research venues, photographers, and centerpieces.
But we won’t learn how to:
- repair after conflict
- stay emotionally present under stress
- talk without getting defensive
- listen without preparing a rebuttal
- rebuild trust after hurt

We assume love will carry what skill was meant to hold.

Most marriages don’t fall apart because people didn’t care. They fall apart because no one taught them how to maintain connection once life got heavy.

Think about it:
We pay for gym memberships to stay healthy.
We service our vehicles to avoid breakdowns.
We hire coaches to improve performance.

But when it comes to marriage, we wait until something breaks, then call it a failure instead of what it really is: neglect.

Counseling isn’t expensive.
Waiting until resentment, distance, or betrayal have set in is.

The most costly belief in marriage isn’t “therapy is too much.”
It’s “we’ll figure it out as we go.”

The truth is simple:
What you don’t maintain, you eventually replace or lose.

And marriage is no exception.

“Are you ever going to get over this?”That question shows up in a lot of relationships after betrayal.One partner is try...
02/19/2026

“Are you ever going to get over this?”

That question shows up in a lot of relationships after betrayal.

One partner is trying to name the hurt that still lives in their body.
Not to punish.
Not to keep score.
But to feel understood.

The other partner starts to deflect.
Redirect and ask when this will finally be done.

Here’s the hard truth:
That question is rarely about healing.

It’s about shame.

When someone has a fragile sense of self, their partner’s pain doesn’t land as “I’m hurting.” It lands as “You’re a bad person.”

So instead of responding with tenderness, the nervous system shifts into self-protection.

That’s when we hear:
“I’ve already apologized.”
“How long are we going to talk about this?”
“Why can’t you move on?”

Those aren’t heartless statements.
They’re defensive exits.

But betrayal doesn’t heal through explanations, timelines, or pressure to be done.

What heals is a safe, steady response...especially when the pain shows up again.

Here’s what that actually sounds like:

“I can hear how much this still hurts.”
“It makes sense that this comes back up.”
“I know this pain exists because of what I did.”
“I’m here. You don’t have to carry it alone right now.”

No arguing.
No correcting.
No asking when it will end.

When shame is running the show, empathy disappears.
And when empathy disappears, repair can’t happen.

A relationship cannot heal when one partner needs the other to stop hurting in order to feel okay about themselves.

Low self-esteem doesn’t always look insecure.
Sometimes it looks like impatience, shutdown, or demanding closure.

Healing doesn’t come from moving on.
It comes from staying present, again and again, until the nervous system learns it’s safe.

And that requires more than remorse.

It requires inner security:
The ability to face what you did and remain emotionally available.

If the pain keeps coming up, it isn’t failure.

It’s the moment trust is still asking for your warm, tender presence.

A letter to the spouse who's finally changing...If you’re reading this, you’ve likely reached a difficult awareness:Your...
02/18/2026

A letter to the spouse who's finally changing...

If you’re reading this, you’ve likely reached a difficult awareness:

Your temperament - your anger, reactivity, intensity, or unpredictability - didn’t just create conflict. It shaped whether your partner felt emotionally safe and close to you.

You’re not a bad person. You reading this would convey quite the opposite.
You’re here because something in you learned to meet stress with control, sharpness, withdrawal, or force and the person you love learned how to protect themselves around it.

Now you’re changing.

You’re more regulated.
More intentional.
More consistent.

And still… your partner seems guarded. Distant. Careful.

You may find yourself thinking, “Do they even see the change?”
Or quietly wondering, “What if it’s too late?”

This is where many people give up.

Here’s what matters: Your partner’s nervous system does not run on your timeline.

For a long time, their body learned that closeness could turn unsafe.
That calm might not last.
That connection required vigilance.

So when you change, their system doesn’t immediately relax...it observes.

It might even doubt the authenticity of it.

Not out of punishment.
Not out of ingratitude.
But because safety is experienced, not promised.

A few months of consistency is meaningful. It’s also early.

Trust rebuilds the same way it was eroded...through repetition.

Not speeches.
Not pressure for reassurance.
Not demands for acknowledgment.

But steady presence.
Predictable responses.
Repair without defensiveness.
Ownership without collapse or self-shame.

When you stay regulated without needing your partner to reward you for it, something shifts.

Their guard lowers quietly.
Their body softens before their words do.
And one day, closeness returns, not because you pushed for it, but because their system finally believes it’s safe.

That’s not weakness.
That’s emotional leadership.

And it’s how real repair happens.

There’s an entire book of the Bible that feels awkward for a lot of people to read out loud.Not because it’s confusing.B...
02/16/2026

There’s an entire book of the Bible that feels awkward for a lot of people to read out loud.

Not because it’s confusing.
But because it’s honest.

The 'Song of Songs' in the old testament isn’t a rulebook.
It’s not a warning label.
It’s a love song filled with desire, attraction, bodies, longing, and delight.

“Let him kiss me.”
“You have stolen my heart.”
“Drink your fill of love.”

Those aren't even the best ones and it doesn’t apologize for any of it.

That matters, because I sat with a few couples last week who learned early (via Church) that s*x was dangerous, distracting, or something to keep tightly controlled. Even if it was “allowed” in marriage, it still came wrapped in fear.

So now they’re married and s*x feels tense, heavy, or disconnected. Not because they don’t love their spouse, but because shame followed them into the bedroom.

What’s striking about Song of Songs is that desire isn’t treated as a problem to manage. It’s treated as something mutual and good.

Both voices speak.
Both pursue.
Both want.

No one is scolded for wanting too much.
No one is told to tone it down.
Desire isn’t suspicious, it’s celebrated.

For many couples, s*x quietly became about performance instead of connection.

Do it right.
Do it often enough.
Don’t disappoint God.
Don’t disappoint your spouse.

That pressure drains intimacy.

Song of Songs offers a different picture: s*x as expression, not evaluation.
Not something you earn. Something you share.

If s*x feels difficult now, the question usually isn’t “What’s wrong with us?”
It’s often, “What did we learn to be afraid of?”

Healing s*xual shame takes time. Your body learned fear long before your beliefs changed. Gentleness matters more than effort.

The Bible doesn’t ask couples to tolerate s*x.
It invites them into it...without apology.

Some people don’t hate Valentine’s Day.They hate what it reminds them they’re missing.Maybe it’s connection.Maybe it’s b...
02/13/2026

Some people don’t hate Valentine’s Day.
They hate what it reminds them they’re missing.

Maybe it’s connection.
Maybe it’s being chosen.
Maybe it’s feeling emotionally safe with someone instead of constantly wondering where you stand.

Valentine’s Day has a way of shining a light on the gaps we work hard to ignore the rest of the year. The unspoken needs. The conversations that never quite happen. The loneliness that can exist even when you’re not alone.

And here’s the important part:
Feeling this way doesn’t mean you’re ungrateful.
It doesn’t mean you’re broken.
It doesn’t mean your relationship, or you, are failing.

It means you’re paying attention.

Holidays don’t create problems. They reveal the emotional climate that’s already there. Secure relationships tend to feel calm on days like tomorrow. Strained ones often feel heavy, pressured, or performative. Not because anyone is doing something wrong, but because unmet needs don’t disappear just because there’s chocolate and flowers.

If tomorrow feels hard, try this instead of pushing it away:
Name what you’re actually longing for.
Connection. Consistency. Safety. Being seen.

Those longings aren’t unreasonable. They’re information.

And whether you’re partnered or single, the work isn’t to silence that ache, it’s to listen to it with honesty and kindness.

You don’t need to force gratitude today.
You don’t need to pretend this day feels good.

You just need to be gentle with yourself and let this day inform you, not define you.

“All my husband wants is s*x.”I hear this often.And sometimes… it’s true.There are men who treat intimacy like a transac...
02/11/2026

“All my husband wants is s*x.”

I hear this often.

And sometimes… it’s true.

There are men who treat intimacy like a transaction. Men who want what they want, when they want it, without much concern for their partner’s heart. That’s not strength. That’s adolescence with a beard.

But that’s not most of the husbands I sit across from.

Most of the men I work with are trying. They work hard. They carry pressure quietly. They care about their wives. They may not always communicate it well, but they care deeply about their marriage.

So if it’s not just s*x… what is it?

Many wives know they need to feel connected in order to desire s*x.

Many husbands experience the reverse...they often feel deeply connected through s*x.

Yes, there’s physical pleasure. But underneath that is something more vulnerable:

The desire to feel wanted.
To be chosen.
To be desired by the one person who knows him fully.

By the time a man is married, he has usually endured years of comparison, competition, performance, and rejection. He’s been measured by income, achievement, stability. He’s learned, often quietly, that love must be earned.

S*x, in a healthy marriage, can become one of the few places he doesn’t have to perform to be accepted.

When a husband initiates intimacy, sometimes what he’s really asking is:

“Do you still choose me?”
“Do you still want me?”
“Am I safe with you?”

That’s not adolescent.

That’s vulnerable.

This doesn’t mean a wife owes s*x. It doesn’t excuse pressure or emotional neglect. It simply means that often both spouses want the same thing...closeness, but often approach it from different doors.

When couples learn to see the vulnerability underneath the request, s*x stops being a battleground and starts becoming a bridge.

And when a man can say, “I don’t just want s*x, I want to feel close to you,”

That’s strength.

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Paris, TX
75460

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