We have a strange relationship with prevention. We'll spend money on gym memberships, dental check-ups, car services, and annual physicals — all things designed to keep a problem from becoming a crisis. Then we'll wait until our relationship is actively falling apart before we do a single intentional thing about it.
Nobody gets couples therapy when things are good. Which is exactly backward.
Quick Answer
Couples therapy is one of the most effective interventions that exists — for couples in crisis. But it's designed for repair, not maintenance. Most of the skills therapy teaches (communication patterns, conflict repair, recognizing emotional bids) are learnable outside crisis, for less cost, before you need emergency care. The couples who thrive aren't the ones who avoided problems — they're the ones who didn't wait for the ambulance.
Key Facts
- The Gottman Institute's research shows that couples wait an average of six years after problems begin before seeking help. Six years.
- Most relationship deterioration isn't a single event. It's an accumulation of small unrepaired moments — criticism, contempt, defensiveness, stonewalling — that compound over time.
- Couples therapy has strong evidence for effectiveness, particularly for improving communication and reducing distress. It's genuinely good medicine.
- The same skills therapy teaches — how to approach conflict, how to repair, how to stay curious rather than defensive — can be practised preventively, before patterns become entrenched.
- Prevention is significantly easier than repair: a pattern in year two is much easier to address than the same pattern in year eight.
The six-year problem
Six years is a long time to live with something before addressing it. In most other areas of life, we don't operate this way. You don't wait until your teeth are falling out to see a dentist. You don't run your car until the engine seizes.
But in relationships, there's a specific reason people wait: the threshold for "bad enough to get help" is set by whether things feel like a crisis. Not whether they're getting worse. Not whether a pattern has been going on for years. Whether it feels, right now, like an emergency.
This means people get help at exactly the hardest time — when both partners are most defended, most hurt, most convinced the other person is the problem, and when the patterns are most deeply established.
Compare that with addressing the same things in year two, when they're recognizable but not yet calcified. Same skills required. Fraction of the work.
The ambulance is essential when you've already crashed. The gym is what keeps you from crashing.
What the gym looks like
The gym metaphor is useful because it's honest about what's being asked. You don't go to the gym once and stay fit. You go regularly, not because anything is wrong, but because maintenance is how things stay good.
The relationship equivalent is a regular practice — not intensive, not dramatic, just consistent. Weekly check-ins. Conversations that aren't about logistics. A habit of asking how the other person is doing under the surface, not just with the week.
Research consistently shows that the couples who stay close over time aren't the ones with unusually good luck or unusually low conflict. They're the ones with small, regular practices. They turn toward each other habitually. They repair quickly when something goes wrong, rather than letting it calcify into resentment.
These habits are learnable. They're not mysterious. And they're dramatically easier to build before you're in distress.
Try it: Set aside 20 minutes this week — not for problem-solving, just for being curious about each other. One question each: "What's been on your mind that I don't know about?" That's the gym. Not glamorous, genuinely effective.
When therapy is the right call
This is not an argument against therapy. Couples therapy is one of the most effective psychological interventions that exists, and it's underused, not overused.
If there has been a betrayal of trust. If the same conflict has been going on for years with no resolution. If one or both of you is dealing with mental health issues that are affecting the relationship. If there's any kind of coercion, abuse, or safety concern. If the relationship feels genuinely stuck in a way that internal effort hasn't shifted — that's what therapy is for. It's a trained human who can see what you can't see, hold the space for both of you, and work with patterns that self-help can't reach.
The ambulance is the right thing when you've been in an accident. Nobody is arguing otherwise.
The argument is that you don't have to wait until you need one.
What happens in the gap
Between "everything is fine" and "we need emergency help," there's a lot of territory most couples leave unattended. The drift happens there. The small resentments that don't quite get repaired. The conversations that were always going to happen and never did. The ways each person quietly adjusts to keep the peace, accumulating over years until neither of you quite knows how you got here.
Maintenance doesn't prevent all of this — some conflict and difficulty is just the nature of two people building a life. But it dramatically changes how quickly you notice drift, how fast you repair, and how willing both people are to stay curious about each other rather than defend their positions.
The couples who look, from the outside, like they have it figured out aren't magical. They're consistent.
Try it: Look back over the last month. How many conversations did you have about your relationship — not logistics, not problems, just genuine connection and curiosity about each other? That number tells you a lot about where you are on the gym-to-ambulance scale. A weekly check-in structure can make this easier to sustain.
The cost argument
Couples therapy in person often runs $150–250+ per session. That's a significant cost, and for many couples, the waitlist (and the logistics of getting there together) adds to the friction. Online platforms like BetterHelp and Regain bring the price down, but it's still a recurring cost designed for a treatment model, not a maintenance one.
The irony is that the couples who would most benefit from prevention are the ones who feel like they don't need to spend money on their relationship because nothing is currently wrong. And then six years later, the problems are harder, the patterns are deeper, and the cost — financial and emotional — is much higher.
The gym is cheaper than the ambulance. Prevention is cheaper than repair. This is true in relationships as in everything else.
FAQ
How do I convince my partner to work on the relationship if they think everything is fine?
You probably don't, and that's okay. Starting solo — doing the reflection work yourself, understanding your own patterns, becoming slightly more intentional in your own behaviour — is a real and legitimate starting point. Many couples find the partner follows once they see the change, not because they were convinced. Starting the work on your own is more powerful than it sounds.
If things are fine, am I looking for problems by doing relationship work?
No — you're building the skills and habits that make problems easier to navigate when they inevitably arrive. The question isn't whether difficulties will come; they will. The question is whether you'll have the tools to handle them.
What's the minimum viable maintenance practice?
Honestly? A real conversation once a week that isn't about logistics. Not a debrief or a problem-solving session — just genuine curiosity about each other. Twenty minutes. That single habit, sustained, does more than most couples realize.
We've tried check-ins and they always turn into a fight. What's wrong?
Usually structure. Unstructured check-ins default to "here's everything I've been upset about," which triggers defensiveness. Starting with appreciation — genuinely naming something you valued about the other person this week — changes the emotional tone before anything difficult comes up. The Gottman check-in method has specific guidance on sequence.
The ambulance will be there when you need it. That's not the question.
The question is whether you want to wait until you need it — or build something now, while the building is easy.
The Growing Us coach is designed for exactly this: the regular practice between the big moments. Start with the free Vibe Check to see where your relationship is growing and where it needs tending.