Every intimate relationship will experience conflict.
What matters most is not learning how to avoid it, but learning how to repair when connection is strained.
Real intimacy is built in these moments – when partners turn toward each other after hurt, fear, or misunderstanding, and choose reconnection over withdrawal.
This is the work that allows relationships to feel safe, resilient, and emotionally alive.
This understanding is central to Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), developed by Sue Johnson. EFT is an evidence-based, attachment-focused approach to couples therapy that helps partners move out of painful conflict cycles and back into emotional connection.
Conflict Is Not the Enemy of Intimacy
Many couples come to therapy believing that a “good” relationship is one with little or no conflict.
In reality, conflict is inevitable wherever there is closeness.
Differences in needs, nervous systems, histories, and expectations will surface – especially in long-term partnerships.
What damages relationships is not conflict itself, but what happens after conflict:
Over time, unrepaired ruptures can erode trust and create emotional distance, even between partners who deeply love one another.
What Is a Rupture in a Relationship?
A rupture occurs when the emotional bond between partners feels threatened or broken.
Sometimes this looks dramatic – an argument, raised voices, or harsh words.
Other times it’s quiet and subtle: a missed bid for connection, a partner turning away, or feeling emotionally alone while sitting right next to each other.
In EFT, ruptures are understood as attachment alarms.
Beneath the surface reaction is often a deeper fear:
For individuals with relational or developmental trauma, these moments can feel especially intense, activating old survival strategies like shutting down, appeasing, or attacking.
Why Repair Builds Real Intimacy
Avoiding conflict may keep things calm on the surface, but it rarely builds closeness.
Intimacy grows when partners learn that their relationship can survive moments of disconnection.
Repair sends a powerful message:
Research on attachment and EFT consistently shows that couples who learn to repair effectively develop stronger emotional bonds, greater trust, and more lasting relational satisfaction.
The EFT Approach to Rupture and Repair
Emotionally Focused Therapy helps couples understand and shift the negative interaction patterns that keep them stuck.
Repair in EFT is not about problem-solving first – it’s about restoring emotional safety.
The process often includes:
1. Slowing Down the Pattern
Couples learn to recognize their recurring cycle (pursue–withdraw, criticize–defend, shut down–escalate) and pause it with curiosity rather than blame.
2. Accessing Underlying Emotions
Anger, frustration, or numbness often protect more vulnerable emotions like fear, sadness, or longing. EFT creates space for these emotions to be felt safely.
3. Sharing Vulnerably
Repair begins when partners can speak from the heart:
“When you pulled away, I felt alone and scared,”
instead of
“You never care about me.”
4. Responsive Engagement
The other partner practices staying emotionally present, offering reassurance, empathy, and care rather than defensiveness.
5. Reconnection
Moments of eye contact, emotional validation, touch, or tenderness help restore the sense of we’re okay again.
These moments of repair create what EFT calls corrective emotional experiences – new relational memories that reshape how partners experience safety and closeness.
A Moment from the Therapy Room
One of the most common things I hear from couples is, “We keep having the same fight.”
What often shifts everything is realizing that the fight isn’t really about the topic – it’s about the fear of losing connection.
I’ve watched partners soften when they finally hear the vulnerability beneath the anger.
In those moments, something changes.
The conflict stops being about winning or defending, and becomes about reaching for each other.
Repair Doesn’t Have to Be Perfect
Repair is rarely polished or eloquent. Sometimes it sounds like:
Sometimes it’s nonverbal – a gentle touch, a text sent later, a moment of staying instead of withdrawing.
What matters most is the emotional message:
I’m here.
You matter.
We can find our way back.
How Couples Therapy Can Help
If you and your partner feel stuck in cycles of conflict, shutdown, or emotional distance, couples counselling can help you:
At Terra Counselling, we offer trauma-informed, attachment-based couples therapy grounded in Emotionally Focused Therapy, somatic awareness, and relational safety.
Learn More About EFT and Attachment-Based Couples Therapy
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