Couples Therapy in Grand Rapids, MI

Couples Therapy in Grand Rapids for Lasting Connection: When You're Stuck in a Dance That's Destroying You Both

Picture of Rachel Duhon, Ph.D., LPC, CCTP, Certified Brainspotting Consultant

Rachel Duhon, Ph.D., LPC, CCTP, Certified Brainspotting Consultant

There's an unspoken choreography to your relationship, and it's slowly tearing you apart.
It's a dance of pursuit and distance, of demand and withdraw, of intensity and avoidance. One of you reaches, trying to bridge a gap that feels impossibly wide. The other retreats, seeking safety in silence or distraction. You both know the steps by heart. You've been dancing this way for years.

And you're both exhausted.

For one of you, the world feels like a constant state of pressure.
You are the vigilant one. The one who feels the shifts in emotional energy before anyone else. You track micro-expressions, you analyze tones of voice, you carry the constant, humming anxiety that if you let your guard down for even a second, everything will fall apart. You learned this role long ago. Your nervous system was trained to be a first responder, and now, you can't turn off the alarm. You see your partner's withdrawal not as a need for space, but as a confirmation of your deepest fear: that you are ultimately alone and must handle everything yourself.

For the other, the world feels like a constant state of threat.
You are the one who feels cornered. The one for whom emotional intensity feels like a physical attack. When your partner approaches with their needs, their fears, their urgency, you don't hear love—you hear pressure. You feel a tightening in your chest, an overwhelming urge to flee. Your own history taught you that the safest way to survive was to be small, to be quiet, to disappear. You don't mean to hurt your partner by withdrawing; you're trying to protect yourself from being engulfed, from losing yourself completely in their needs. The message your body hears is “I failed”.

You are both trapped by these brilliant survival strategies that once kept you safe.
The hypervigilant one needs connection to feel safe, but this intensity pushes the other away. The avoidant one needs space to feel safe, but their distance confirms the other's fears of abandonment.

You're caught in a painful, self-reinforcing loop. It's not a failure of love. It's a failure of your nervous systems to find a shared sense of safety.

This is a Developmental Impasse

Relationships are meant to be a journey of mutual evolution. But right now, you're locked in a developmental gridlock. One of you is pushing for growth, for emotional intimacy, for "more." The other is digging in, defending the status quo, clinging to the familiar because the unknown feels terrifying.

You're not just fighting about the dishes, parenting strategies, the bills or the lack of sex. You're fighting about the fundamental definition of safety.
For one of you, safety is connection, presence, and shared responsibility.
For the other, safety is autonomy, space, and emotional distance.

You cannot win this argument. You're both right. And you're both losing.

The Cost of the Dance

The pursuer feels a profound, bone-deep loneliness. They are starving for presence, for reciprocity, for a partner who will meet them in the messy middle of life. Their strength has become a burden, their capability is a lonely island.

The avoider feels a persistent, suffocating pressure. They are drowning in expectations, in the silent demands they feel emanating from their partner. Their need for space is pathologized, their desire for peace seen as a character flaw.

You are both grieving a connection you can't seem to reach.
You look at each other and see the source of your pain. The pursuer sees a selfish, abandoning partner. The avoider sees a needy, controlling one. You don't see the terrified, wounded children you both once were, who are still running the show from deep inside your nervous systems.

This is not a communication problem you can solve with date nights.
This is not a love problem you can solve with grand gestures.
This is a nervous system problem that requires a new kind of map.

A Relational Approach to Healing Together: The Couples Developmental Model

The Couples Developmental Model understands that you're not broken; you're stuck. It provides a framework for seeing your dynamic not as a series of hurts, but as a developmental pattern that can be understood and transformed.

In our work together, we don't take sides. We don't assign blame. We hold the complexity and the pain of both of your experiences with compassion.

We explore:

  • How your individual survival strategies created this painful relational dance

  • Why your nervous systems perceive safety and danger in such opposite ways

  • How to identify the moment the pattern begins and find a new way to respond

  • How to create a shared definition of safety that honors both of your needs

  • How to move from a parent-child dynamic to a true partnership of equals

This is for you if:

  • You feel trapped in a painful cycle of pursuit and distance

  • You love each other but are starting to resent each other

  • You've tried everything, and nothing creates lasting change

  • You're both exhausted from the constant emotional tug-of-war

  • You're ready to understand the deeper patterns driving your conflict

  • You're desperate for a connection that feels like a sanctuary, not a battleground

You don't have to choose between your relationship and yourself.
Healing doesn't mean the pursuer has to stop needing connection. It means learning that their safety doesn't have to depend solely on their partner.
Healing doesn't mean the avoidant has to stop needing space. It means learning that they can hold onto themselves even in the face of another's emotions.

Your relationship is asking you to evolve.
It's asking the pursuer to find their own inner anchor, to soothe their own alarm system. It's asking the avoidant to find their voice, to stay present even when it's uncomfortable. It's asking both of you to become the secure, regulated adults you needed then, so you can be the true partners you crave now.

It's time to stop the dance.
It's time to lay down the old roles. It's time to face each other, not as adversaries, but as two wounded souls who found each other and are ready, finally, to find a new way to be together.

I’d love to help you on this journey. Click here to schedule your free 10- minute phone consultation for complex trauma counseling in Grand Rapids. My other specialties include link, link, and link.

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When safety meets connection, your relationship becomes a sanctuary, not a battleground.