You’ve built a life brick by brick with family photos lining the hallways. Your career has demanded long hours and steady shoulders, but instead of getting a medal, you are standing at a crossroads. It feels like a fault line actually, where the word divorce has actually been spoken aloud.
You need care in this place. You need confiidence and clarity.
Path A
Keep the status quo, and stay the same course, but with more knowledge of the pain points for each other and a narrative for how you landed in the ER for couples.
Path B
Move towards divorce or separation in a way that leaves you both with more clarity about what happened. This can also be a place where couples try out what is known as a controlled separation.
Path C
Begin an all out effort to restore your marriage to health and find support for the next chapter, which includes no talk of divorce for at least six months, while you work hard to re-establish connection and safety.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Discernment counseling is a brief, structured process designed for couples where one or both partners are uncertain about the future of the relationship. Unlike couples therapy — which works toward improving the relationship — discernment counseling helps you gain enough clarity and confidence to choose a direction: continuing as-is, separating, or committing to a defined period of couples therapy. It is not about fixing anything. It is about helping you understand what you are actually deciding.
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Discernment counseling typically spans one to five sessions. The first session is usually longer (up to two and a half hours) and may be the only one needed for some couples. Sessions involve time together as a couple and time individually with the therapist — so both voices are heard without pressure to perform unity.
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It can be, depending on where you both are. Discernment counseling does not require resolution of the breach — it simply asks whether there is enough willingness on both sides to explore what happened and what the relationship has been. If one or both partners are still in acute pain or shock, we may first discuss whether the timing is right.
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Not equally, and that’s exactly the point. Discernment counseling was designed for “mixed-agenda” couples — often one partner is leaning toward leaving while the other wants to stay and work on the relationship. You don’t have to agree. You just have to be willing to come and be honest.
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No. The therapist’s role is not to save the marriage or facilitate a separation — it is to help each of you understand your own contribution to the relationship’s current state and make a decision that feels grounded rather than reactive. The goal is clarity, not a particular outcome..
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At the close of the process, couples typically land in one of three places: a mutual decision to separate with care and intention, a choice to continue as-is without further therapy (sometimes with more awareness than before), or a commitment to enter a focused period of couples therapy with both partners genuinely on board. Whatever the outcome, the goal is that the decision belongs to you — not to circumstance, pressure, or exhaustion.