Counseling & Therapy for Individuals, Couples, & Families in Little Rock, AR. Find out when therapy is indicated, Becky's … Learn More
Appointment Availability Week of May 18th
Please see below for Dr. Becky’s upcoming appointment availability.
Monday, May 18th: 8:30 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday, May 19th: 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday, May 20th: 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Thursday, May 21st: 12:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Friday, May 22nd: 2:00 p.m.
Saturday appointments available by request only.
See you then!
Appointment Availability Week of May 11th
Here are upcoming availabilities for Dr. Becky:
Monday, May 11th: 9:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday, May 12th: Not available.
Wednesday, May 13th: 3:30 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Thursday, May 14th: 10:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Friday, May 15th: Not available.
See you soon, have a great weekend!
Is your marriage dying? Know in 3 minutes using this diagnostic tool.
One of my friends once said that every divorced person she knew could identify a moment in time when they knew their marriage was over; I was intrigued, checked around, and friends who’d divorced agreed; “My husband was always unmotivated, he’d lost his third job, it was many months later and he was barely looking for another one,” said Josie. “So as I was driving off to work one day, saw him walk out on the front porch in his bathrobe, stretch his arms out, yawn, pick up the paper and stroll back in the house. That’s when I knew I’d had enough.”
Fran couldn’t wait to share: “He knew I couldn’t stand how he didn’t value me, and how cheap he was, and he used a damn coupon in a restaurant while we were in a bad spot and trying to work things out,” she said. “In one act he showed me he didn’t get it and never would.”
Sure enough, when my turn came a few years later I was also able to identify a similar moment of clarity. That divorce in 1993 so blew my mind that it ignited a ferocious need for understanding and knowledge that still exists to this day. I simply could not understand how I could go from loving someone so much to wanting to get away from him so intensely in 8 short years. What happened? How could it have been prevented?
I read every book I could find. Went to therapy, workshops, and seminars and became sort of a local relationship guru in San Antonio, where I lived at the time, writing and speaking about how to make wise relationship decisions and prevent divorce.
All of that helped, but it wasn’t until graduate school (2001-2006) that I began (seriously) researching the subject and found that similar to the four stages of cancer, marriages that end deteriorate in four distinctive and predictable stages, and once a marriage moves from stage one to two, it will ultimately die if nothing is done about it.*
Why hadn’t anyone told me that?
The madness is that couples could easily avoid the deterioration process by being aware of the stages and getting help as soon as they realize their relationship is in trouble.
This sounds easy, but one of the crazier things about this phenomenon of human behavior is that once a person becomes unhappy in the relationship, he or she usually keeps it to him or herself and processes it alone in an internal conversation until the secret is finally revealed in one devastating conversation.
So, here are the four stages that will allow you to immediately diagnose your marriage. Stages, that if they became common knowledge, could change the whole relational world.
Caution: What you find out my scare you, and if it does, perhaps it will motivate you to get off your butt and take your marital problems seriously. Getting the help that you need is always a good thing.
The Four Stages of a Dying Marriage:
1. Disillusionment. You become aware, “Uh oh, I may be unhappy in this relationship. I’ll just sit with it and see if it’s serious or just a phase.”
2. Erosion. You conclude, “It IS serious. This could lead to divorce … Oh wait, I am NOT going to divorce because (place your many reasons here). I’ll just have to accept it and keep going.” Your partner may begin to notice signs of your unhappiness via snide or sarcastic remarks or passive aggressive behaviors.
3. Detachment. “My discontentment is getting worse! I will find a way to survive and find some happiness for myself by detaching and involving myself in activities that take me away from him/her like (put your activity here … it may be an affair, going back to work or school, travel, working out, etc). Your discontentment may become obvious to outsiders as now you are likely to exhibit it around others.
4. Point of no return, also known as “The Straw.” (You know, the one that breaks the camel’s back, the one my friend described years ago?) It’s the moment of clarity that one day arrives … we don’t know when or how or whether it will be over something big or small, but it will happen … When your partner says or does one last thing that causes all fog to lift and a personal declaration of, “You know what? I won’t be married to someone who would do (or say) something like that!” In that moment the decision to let the marriage die is made, and the brutal truth is often revealed to the spouse then or very soon after.
Many individuals decide to divorce at this point, or if not a legal divorce, they become emotionally divorced. Far too many couples make it to this point, and far too many are on their way.
Treating relationship issues seriously and dealing with them quickly and directly could change the rate of divorce in the United States drastically, and that is my personal goal. I suggest bringing up issues with your partner as soon as you realize you are in stage two as a good place to start, and not being afraid of going to therapy and asking for help as another crucial piece.
*I researched and wrote my 2006 dissertation on how people in long-term marriages decide to divorce. The four stages were what I found during the course of the research.
Scholar Diane Vaughan, Ph.D., also described stages of marital deterioration in her 1986 research-based book, “Uncoupling.”