Your source for Practical Tips, FREE Resources, and Solid Tools for improving your life and relationships.
This space is created to support you with tips, tools, and healing resources to help you create authentic and joyful lives. My goal is to provide free guidance for you and your loved ones during exciting and challenging seasons of life.
Take a look, ask questions, and feel free to share your favorites with friends and loved ones. I hope you enjoy it! Let’s connect!
Love & Light,
When I think of the ideal relationship—the kind of connection that feels like more than a partnership, something deeper, more fulfilling, and truly motivating—it isn’t just about finding someone to walk through life with. It’s about discovering a relationship that feels like home, that brings out the best in you and makes you want to be a better person every day. A connection that isn’t just supportive but inspiring, a relationship that makes you feel alive.
Now, imagine this: waking up each morning beside someone who, with every look, every touch, every word, seems to say, “I love you more every single day.” What would it be like to experience that, to feel that depth of love and connection as something real, something you can trust? Picture this person not as a dream, but as part of your everyday reality—someone who, just by being there, shifts your whole way of seeing the world.
Before these thoughts settle, let’s pause....
People often come to me with questions like:
Sound familiar? If you’ve ever asked yourself these questions, you’re not alone. I get it. I’ve been there, and I’ll let you in on a little secret: I struggled too.
The Confession: I’ve Been Where You Are
Let me tell you something—I’ve been there. I know exactly what it feels like to be stuck in that frustrating, painful space where nothing seems to work. People assume that because I’m a therapist, I must have it all figured out when it comes to relationships. But let me make a confession: that wasn’t always the case.
You see,...
As a relationship expert, I often get asked, “What’s the biggest red flag I should look out for?”
Most people expect the answer to be something clear-cut: inconsistent communication, avoidance of commitment, or toxic behavior patterns. But what if I told you that the biggest red flag is often something much more subtle and deeply rooted, something we’ve been trained to ignore?
The truth is, the biggest red flag in a relationship isn’t just about what your partner is or isn’t doing—it’s about what your own body is telling you.
(Want to know more about other common red flags? Check out 9 Relationship Red Flags You Should Never Ignore.)
Ignoring these subtle signals can create toxic relationship patterns that prevent you from experiencing authentic connection. Let’s explore how listening to your body can guide you toward healthier, more fulfilling relationships.
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Do you have an anxious, avoidant, or disorganized attachment style? If you do, how does your attachment style make you feel?
(If you’re not sure what kind of attachment style you have, you can learn more about the 4 main attachment styles right here.)
Your attachment style influences how you approach and navigate relationships, especially in terms of emotional bonding, intimacy, and conflict.
This means that it can shape the type of romantic partner, family member, friend, and parent you are to those you love.
So if you know that you have an insecure attachment style, you might think that you’re doomed to have unhealthy relationships and continuously struggle to feel safe, satisfied, and happy in them.
But do you know what, my dear?
Just because you developed an anxious, avoidant, or disorganized attachment style as a kid doesn’t mean that you have to have this attachment style forever.
Because there are steps that you can take to develop a more secure attachment...
Being in a relationship with someone who won’t change isn’t easy.
If you’ve ever experienced it, you know that it can be exhausting, frustrating, and painful. It can also make you feel sad—for what your loved one used to be like or could be like, for the lost potential of your relationship, and for what you’re not getting from them.
But do you know what makes it even harder?
Feeling stuck and confused about how to navigate the relationship.
My ex-husband had a drug addiction, and we ended up falling into a codependent relationship as a result.
This would have been a challenging situation under the best of circumstances. But it was even harder for me because there were some things that I didn’t know at the time about how to navigate challenging relationships in a healthy way.
For example, I didn’t know that when I was around my ex, I was better off focusing on what I COULD control than on what I couldn’t. (Read my previous post to learn...
Did you catch what I shared in my previous blog post—the one about how to set healthy boundaries with your parents?
In that post, I shared that for a long time, I didn’t know that my relationship with my parents lacked healthy boundaries. And I didn’t understand that the relationship and my own well-being were suffering as a result.
I’ve also shared with you before that it’s important to know the signs that your relationship with your parents lacks healthy boundaries. Because it’s only once you realize that these boundaries are missing that you can work toward putting them in place and enjoying a healthier and less stressful relationship.
But here’s what some of you might be thinking:
My parents do give me unsolicited advice or call me out of the blue all the time. Up until this point, though, I haven’t really set any boundaries with them about it because it seemed easier to just put up with it. But now I have a romantic partner. He...
As a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, I’ve done A LOT of couples therapy over the years. So you might expect me to say that if you want to reduce conflict in your relationship, feel more heard by your partner, or enjoy a deeper connection with them, you BOTH need to work on your relationship.
But do you want to know something?
I have many clients who really want to change something in their relationship. But they come to my office alone. Why? Because for one reason or another, their partner doesn’t want to work on the relationship.
When these clients start working with me, there’s something I see in all of them: doubt. They doubt whether the time, energy, and money that they’re investing will be worth it if their partner isn’t working on the relationship with them.
That’s why they’re usually pretty surprised (I would even go as far as to say “shocked” in some cases) when they start seeing BIG changes in their relationship...
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