RuPaul’s Drag Race ends each episode with the phrase, “ If you can’t love yourself, how the hell are you gonna love somebody else?” While this mantra can be overlooked as just a cute catchphrase, it is a phrase that carries immense wisdom. In relationships, sometimes it is our inner saboteur that prevents us from fully embracing the love we deserve, keeping us in an unhealthy relationship long past its due date. Devoting dedicated time to yourself can be an opportunity to cultivate the love you deserve. One way to do this is by going to individual therapy. Individual therapy for relationship issues can reveal your patterns, habits, or unresolved emotions that impact romantic, family, or work relationships. Through this blog, let’s explore how one-on-one therapy supports healthy, connected relationships, because getting right with yourself helps you find the right relationship for you.
Understanding Relationship Struggles Through Individual Counseling
When we begin a relationship, we experience many great things. There is the excitement of the initial attraction, the exploration of curiosity and interest, building intimacy, and choosing to commit to a relationship in whatever way it looks like. However, how we connect with people is not something that happens magically because we have been struck by Cupid’s arrow, but is shaped and formed by our childhood experiences, attachment styles, or past traumas.
Without any self-reflection, we may find that our relationships are looking similar, with the same triumphs and pitfalls, with little to no idea why. This is evidence we may be stuck in a dynamic that we are encouraging. These patterns can include shutting down when things get hard, clinging when we feel insecure, or falling into conflict that feels familiar but hard to name.
Individual therapy helps us recognize these patterns by reducing our shame, becoming curious about our pattern origins, and helping us rewrite a new pattern. When you start noticing what triggers you, what makes you feel distant, or what causes tension, you give yourself the opportunity to respond with more intention and less confusion.
What Individual Therapy Looks Like for Relationship Issues
Individual therapy for your relationship is not about making your partner the villain and complaining about them; it is about looking at your relationship with curiosity and contributing to it in a way that is loving and authentic. This may involve exploring emotional regulation, boundaries, and core beliefs that shape how you show up in love in therapy.
It can be a space where you learn how to communicate more clearly. No more shutting down. No more spiraling. It can be where you practice responding instead of reacting, or where you name needs you’ve never felt safe enough to say out loud. Individual therapy provides a focused space to process your relationship wounds and regain your footing on your own timeline.
Common Relationship Issues That Benefit from Individual Counseling
- Repeating unhealthy relationship cycles: Every argument, finding yourself always threatening a breakup, and then getting back together like nothing happened.
- Difficulty forming or maintaining connections: Perhaps you’ve noticed that each relationship has an expiration date of 2 months. Maybe it's just hard to feel connected with anyone you go on a date with.
- Jealousy, insecurity, or fear of abandonment: This can look like thinking your partner is cheating when they never have in the past, or being scared they will leave you, so you do anything to please them.
- Navigating breakups, separations, or loss: Any loss is hard; by reflecting on them in counseling, you have a safe space to move on in your own time.
- Healing after emotional or physical infidelity: Because infidelity and cheating can bring so much shame and betrayal.
- Coping with relationship changes during major life transitions (parenthood, caregiving, moving, etc.): Relationships feel the impact of any change in your personal life. Engaging in therapy during a time of crisis can help you maximize the support you receive from your relationship during challenging times.
How Personal Healing Can Transform Your Relationships
When you begin to slow down and self-regulate, your relationships often become more grounded too. You start to feel like you can breathe, pause, and choose how you want to respond. Self-worth is something that you create over time. That may look like starting to gain confidence that you are worthy of new healthy relationships or being able to say “This doesn’t work for me” in an unhealthy relationship without spiraling into guilt or fear. You begin to trust that you deserve to have needs, to acknowledge them, and to have those needs respected and honored. And with each old wound you tend to, you create more room for closeness. The kind of intimacy that lets you be fully seen and still feel like you belong.
When to Consider Individual Therapy for Relationship Issues
- If you feel stuck in the same arguments or relational patterns, Maybe every disagreement turns into a spiral about something deeper, like feeling unappreciated, unseen, or unheard. Even when the topic changes, the emotional cycle stays the same.
- When you want to understand your role in a relationship challenge, You might notice a pattern, like pulling away when someone gets too close, or getting anxious when they take space, but you’re not quite sure why.
- If you're preparing for a healthy new relationship after a painful one: After a breakup or toxic dynamic, it’s normal to carry fear, grief, or even guilt into future connections.
- When you're looking to improve communication, even if your partner won’t attend therapy, sometimes you’re the only one willing to do the work. Therapy can help you practice expressing yourself clearly, setting boundaries with care, and navigating tough conversations without losing your composure.
- If you’re navigating family estrangement, toxic friendships, or work relationships, not all relationship challenges are romantic. Maybe you're dealing with guilt or grief around stepping away from a family member, or feeling emotionally drained by a long-time friendship that no longer feels mutual. Or maybe work feels like a minefield of miscommunication and people-pleasing.
Why Working with a Therapist Can Make a Difference
A therapist offers a nonjudgmental space to explore your role and feelings by not assigning blame, but empowering you to grow. They help you organize your thoughts, make sense of tangled emotions, and reduce that overwhelming fog that can come with relational distress. Together, you can set goals that feel realistic, aligned with who you are, and actually sustainable. And maybe most importantly, you’ll build strategies that fit your history, your voice, and your way of connecting.
Work with Humantold to Strengthen Your Relationships from the Inside Out
At Humantold, we understand that healthy relationships begin with self-awareness. Our compassionate therapists work with individuals who want to feel more connected, empowered, and secure in their relationships. When you are in a relationship challenge or working through past experiences, we can offer tailored support to help you on your journey. Find an approach to therapy and a provider who aligns with your needs and values. You deserve relationships that feel nourishing, and that starts with taking care of yourself.