Quick Summary
Clients: June (42) & Michael (48)
Background: Michael was the CEO of a successful business. June had dedicated herself to raising their family as a full-time mum.
Challenge: Their marriage was close to separation/divorce after many years of disconnect. Both believed the other person was responsible for the marriage breakdown and their unhappiness.
Time Together: 12 coaching sessions (4 individual sessions each, followed by 4 joint sessions)
Outcome:
- They stopped blaming each other.
- They understood each other’s emotional needs for the first time.
- Fear no longer controlled the relationship.
- They rebuilt a healthier, more balanced relationship based on understanding rather than criticism.
The Situation
When June and Michael first came to see me, both were emotionally exhausted.
June felt completely uncared for and alone. From her perspective, Michael simply didn’t seem to care about how she felt anymore.
Michael had a very different experience.
He felt that nothing he ever did was enough. No matter how hard he worked, how much he provided, or how many promises he made to improve, it never seemed to satisfy June.
Every conversation ended in disappointment.
Every disagreement reinforced the belief that the other person needed to change.
They had become trapped in a cycle of blame.
Like many couples, both were convinced the problem was their partner.
The Hidden Problem
Neither June nor Michael was intentionally trying to damage the relationship.
The real issue was that both were unknowingly allowing fear to dictate how they showed up in the marriage.
Over time they had stopped being themselves.
Instead of bringing out the best in each other, every interaction became an attempt to protect themselves from disappointment, rejection or feeling unappreciated.
The marriage wasn’t being led by love anymore.
It was being led by fear.
Because fear changes behaviour, both had drifted away from the people they originally fell in love with.
Ironically, the harder they tried to fix the relationship, the worse it became.
Why Previous Attempts Failed
Like many couples, they believed the answer was for the other person to change.
June wanted Michael to become more emotionally available, unaware she was making it unsafe for him to do so.
Michael wanted June to appreciate everything he was already doing but his behaviours were pushing her to self protect.
Neither approach could ever solve the real problem.
Both were making predictions about how their partner should behave based on their own emotional world.
The difficulty was that their emotional worlds were completely different neither was aware.
Their expectations never matched reality.
As a result, every attempt to improve the relationship unintentionally created more frustration.
What Changed
Rather than beginning with the marriage, we began with the individual.
June and Michael each completed four individual coaching sessions before we brought them together.
The purpose wasn’t to identify who was right or wrong.
It was to help each of them understand themselves and how their thinking was affecting themselves and their partner.
Through a gentle and supportive process, they began reconnecting with parts of themselves they had slowly lost over the years.
Both completed a Core Needs Profile, helping them understand what genuinely made them feel safe, valued and loved.
For the first time, they also understood how different their partner’s emotional needs were from their own.
This was a another huge breakthrough.
They realised neither of them had been trying to hurt the other.
They simply hadn’t understood each other’s world.
The Process
The coaching focused on helping each person:
- Understand the behaviours they were bringing into the relationship.
- Identify the fears driving those behaviours.
- Recognise destructive patterns they had previously been blind to.
- Reconnect with healthier versions of themselves.
- Learn how to meet each other’s core emotional needs.
One important discovery was that their relationship dynamic had gradually become unbalanced.
June had become increasingly masculine in the way she approached conflict and responsibility.
Michael had become increasingly feminine, leading him to avoiding conflict and losing confidence in his own leadership within the relationship.
Neither recognised this shift, yet together it created a dynamic that left both feeling disconnected and frustrated resulting in a natural decline of their intimacy on all levels.
Once they understood what was happening, they were able to consciously create a healthier balance.
The Turning Point
The breakthrough came when blame disappeared.
Instead of asking:
“Why won’t you change?”
They began asking:
“How am I showing up?”
That single shift of each person taking person responsibility changed everything.
As each person became less driven by fear, they naturally became more capable of meeting the other’s emotional needs.
Instead of defending themselves, they became empowered through curiosity.
Instead of reacting, they began understanding.
The atmosphere in the relationship became calmer almost immediately.
The Outcome
Relationship
The constant cycle of blame stopped.
Both partners felt heard for the first time in years.
Emotional Connection
By understanding each other’s needs, they were able to reconnect emotionally instead of constantly misunderstanding one another.
Confidence
Each rediscovered parts of themselves that had slowly disappeared during years of conflict.
Future
Rather than questioning whether they should separate, they began creating a relationship that felt safe, supportive and hopeful again.
The Biggest Lesson
Most couples believe the solution is getting their partner to change.
In reality, lasting change begins when each person understands how they are showing up in the relationship.
Fear causes us to stop being ourselves.
We stop adding value to one another.
We become defensive, reactive and disconnected.
The more fear takes control, the more even our best intentions push us further apart.
When people reconnect with themselves and truly understand each other’s emotional needs, they naturally begin bringing out the best in one another again.
Could This Be You?
Do you feel like nothing you do is ever enough?
Do you believe your partner simply doesn’t understand you?
Have you reached the point where every conversation ends in blame or frustration?
If so, the problem may not be your relationship.
It may be the patterns both of you have unknowingly developed over time.
Recognising those patterns is often the first step towards rebuilding the marriage.
If this story feels familiar, the next step is understanding the patterns affecting your own relationship. That’s exactly what the Marriage Breakthrough Program is designed to do.
