Not therapy per se, but a dispute resolution with a therapeutic outcome

When the going gets tough with our partner, one of us might want to try counselling but quite possibly our significant other will shrink away from anything that could be seen as therapy. Creating yet  another disagreement.

What happens when you know you love your partner but circumstances seem to be conspiring against you? All that dredging up from the past, all those insults that make you feel as small as an ant but which cause you to roar like a lion with the terrible unfairness of it all. And now you are being asked to lay it all bare under a psychological microscope wielded by a stranger who might just take sides, who might not see your point of view and who might gang up and blame you?

Some of the top reasons offered for not wanting to try counselling include: a fear of being blamed for the problem; a belief that couples should be able to sort out their own problems;a denial of the magnitude of the issue e.g. I don’t think it’s so bad so it must be you who needs help’;it costs too much-and it’s not going to do any good anyway.

So for some, the idea of fronting up to counselling – and fearing feeling exposed and vulnerable- can be about as attractive as pulling teeth. And when things are rugged, isn’t there often a feeling of being misrepresented by the person we are supposed to be closest to? That very person who is supposed to have our back is not only misreading us, but also they suddenly want us to come and talk about it all – to lay it all bare, to be put under the spotlight.

If the idea of “getting help” has you or your partner wanting to run for the hills – with ringing accusations being shouted out behind you about how you don’t care, and how you lack courage and so on – then here is a process which could – and often does – transform your relationship. Therapeutic mediation. A counsellor who understands mediation, a mediator who understands therapy.

Mediation is a process of Getting to Yes  – as the aptly titled book by American authors, Fisher and Ury explain. Agreements can be negotiated without giving in. Think about it  – you are already a negotiator. Just today you have probably negotiated a raft of issue from the mechanic’s quote to what you are prepared to cover in a work presentation, to getting your child off Mine Craft and into bed.

Our natural ability to negotiate has always made the world go round. Negotiation is a basic means of getting what you want from others and giving to them, back and forth. Finding a balance. Giving up something to get something. And when that ‘something’ is a return to a loving stability with your partner, then the process of seeking a win: win outcome makes a lot of sense.  And the good news is that professional mediations result in at least 85% of agreements, according to reports from the American Arbitration Association.

Conflict with a loved one hurts because it matters – and both the person who wants to go to counselling and the person who does not, are trying to find a way to make the problems go away. A good mediator understands this. All the work will focus on just this central shared interest – how to make the problems leave.

Good mediation will not focus on positions, nor concentrate on feelings – and it is never about taking sides – it’s about finding the common ground and, moving from black and white to the middle zone of grey.  The stuff of democracy.  The stuff of evolution.

Most of us have reached a tipping point by the time we arrive at the first appointment. Looking for peace, and tired of conflict, mediation can be the tool that lets you be heard by your partner and which has you listening –both feats miraculously suddenly manageable after all.

The contagious moment of movement out of impasse is the sweet spot -the reward for seeing the other’s point of view and having them see yours.

And this brief process of mediation will guide you both to developing your own written agreement. There is no greater investment in a contract than being one of the two architects. And whether it is a business contract or a love contract, a brief written agreement of the way forward makes the world feel a whole lot fairer. And reminds you how to sort it next time problems arise

It is too difficult to be sentries at the post, guarding our own interests, when our hearts desire is to be swimming in a warm bath of attachment and love.

So next time you feel you can’t bear the same arguments that just keep happening and getting in the way of your love, have a look at practitioners who use a mediation process. A process that is not therapy per se, but a dispute resolution with a therapeutic outcome.

I see many, many couples who are so glad they tried this process which meets even seemingly incompatible needs for help.

You and your partner might well be very happy that you decided to give it a go.