Couples Conflict

Online therapy across Washington State.

A structured, relational approach to understanding the patterns that keep you stuck.

Every couple argues — but when conflict becomes repetitive, confusing, or emotionally draining, it stops being about the surface issue and starts being about the pattern underneath.

You may love each other deeply, yet still find yourselves in the same loop: one person pursues, the other withdraws; one escalates, the other shuts down; both end up feeling misunderstood and alone.

If you’re here, it’s because the way you’re fighting isn’t working anymore — and you’re ready for something different.

How Conflict Shows Up In Relationships

Conflict rarely starts with the “big” things. It usually begins with small moments that build over time. You might notice:

  • arguments that escalate quickly

  • conversations that go nowhere

  • feeling unheard or dismissed

  • shutting down to avoid making things worse

  • reacting strongly to small misunderstandings

  • feeling like you’re having the same fight over and over

  • tension that lingers long after the conflict ends

These patterns aren’t random — they’re predictable responses to stress, fear, and unmet needs.

What You’ve Been Carrying

When conflict becomes the norm, both partners end up carrying more than they can name.

If you’re the one who pushes for connection: You may feel alone in the relationship, desperate for clarity, and exhausted from trying to get your partner to engage.

If you’re the one who pulls away: You may feel overwhelmed, misunderstood, or afraid that anything you say will make things worse.

Both positions make sense. Both are protective. And both deserve understanding.

A sunset view over mountain silhouettes, with text overlay titled: 'What's Really Going On Beneath the Arguments.

What’s Really Going On Beneath the Arguments

Most couples think they’re fighting about chores, tone, timing, or communication styles. But underneath the surface, conflict is usually driven by:

  • fear of not mattering

  • fear of failing

  • fear of being misunderstood

  • fear of being too much or not enough

  • old relational wounds

  • nervous system overwhelm

  • protective strategies that once worked but no longer fit

When we understand the emotional logic behind your reactions, the conflict starts to make sense — and becomes easier to change.

What We Explore Together

In therapy, we slow down the moments where things go sideways so we can understand what’s actually happening between you.

Together, we explore:

  • the pattern you fall into during conflict

  • the roles each of you take on under stress

  • the emotions and needs underneath your reactions

  • the moments where communication breaks down

  • how your nervous systems respond to tension

  • what each of you needs to feel safe enough to stay engaged

This is structured, steady work — and I guide the process so neither partner has to carry the whole weight.

How I Support Each Partner

For the partner who escalates or pursues: I help you understand the urgency you feel, name what you’re actually needing, and communicate without overwhelming your partner or abandoning yourself.

For the partner who withdraws or shuts down: I help you understand your overwhelm, stay present without feeling attacked, and express your internal experience in a way that builds connection instead of distance.

Both partners have valid perspectives — and both deserve tools that help them stay connected during hard moments.

What Changes Over Time

As we work together, couples often begin to experience:

  • fewer escalations

  • less shutdown

  • clearer communication

  • more emotional safety

  • a deeper understanding of each other’s inner world

  • conflict that feels productive instead of destructive

  • a sense of partnership instead of opposition

Conflict doesn’t disappear — but it becomes something you can navigate together instead of something that tears you apart.

When You’re Ready

You don’t have to keep having the same fight. You don’t have to keep guessing what your partner needs. You don’t have to keep feeling alone in your relationship.

When you’re ready, we can map out a path toward clarity, steadiness, and connection — together.

Jennifer Weinmann, LMFT, providing trauma-informed therapy in Washington state.