You can feel it happen before the fight fully starts.
A question comes out sharper than intended. A pause feels like rejection. One of you keeps trying to explain, fix, or get an answer. The other shuts down, gets defensive, or tries to get out of the conversation.
Then somehow, within a few minutes, you are back in the same painful place.
Maybe the topic was small. Maybe it was something you had talked about a hundred times before. Either way, the conversation moves faster than either of you can slow down.
Couples therapy with Elka Cubacub, LCSW gives you a place to slow down, understand what is happening beneath the surface, and move from reactivity to choice, together.
Schedule a 15 Minute Zoom Discovery CallIn person sessions in Phoenix. Telehealth available in Arizona and Illinois.
Most couples are not just fighting about the dishes.
Or the tone. Or the text that went unanswered.
Or who always does "this" and who never does "that."
Those things matter. They hurt, and they can build up over time.
But often, the visible argument is only part of what is happening.
Underneath it, one partner may feel criticized, alone, unwanted, or not good enough. The other may feel overwhelmed, blamed, dismissed, or like nothing they do is ever right.
So one of you reaches harder to be heard, and the other reaches harder to get out of the pressure.
That is the cycle.
And relationship distress is not random. It follows patterns that can be understood and shifted.
Couples therapy helps you understand that cycle as it happens, so you can catch it sooner, repair faster, and talk about hard things without turning each other into the enemy.
Schedule a 15 Minute Zoom Discovery CallCouples therapy is not about deciding who is right or wrong. It is about learning how to repair, even when you disagree.
Some couples come in because the same painful conversation keeps repeating. Others come in because a particular issue has become gridlocked.
It may be money, parenting, intimacy, religion, politics, family boundaries, where to live, or how responsibilities are divided.
Sometimes the issue looks practical on the surface, but underneath it carries much deeper meaning.
One person may feel, “In order to be with you, I need to give up something fundamental of myself.”
When a conversation starts to feel that loaded, it becomes harder to listen. Each person is no longer only responding to the topic. They are also responding to what the topic seems to say about their needs, values, safety, belonging, or place in the relationship.
Therapy helps you look beneath the surface at the values, emotions, and past experiences that fuel the pattern. As those become easier to name, the pattern can become more flexible.
The goal is not for one person to disappear into the other. The goal is to make more room for both of you to share who you are.
In therapy, you are not just talking about the argument after it happened. You are learning to recognize the pattern underneath it.
You may work on noticing the early signs that a conversation is starting to escalate, understanding what each partner is protecting against, and naming what is happening without attacking or blaming.
You may practice asking for closeness, honesty, or reassurance in a clearer way. You may also work on taking space without disappearing from the relationship, staying present when your partner says something hard to hear, and repairing faster after tension.
The work is practical. It connects directly to the conversations you are trying to have at home, in the car, over dinner, after work, over text, or right before bed when both of you are already tired.
Over time, many couples notice changes in how they communicate, repair after conflict, and reconnect. Tension does not disappear completely, but it becomes easier to navigate, and you feel more like you are on the same team.
You do not need to explain your relationship perfectly before reaching out.
You can start with the thing that keeps happening.
The same argument. The shutdown. The defensiveness. The feeling that you cannot bring something up without it going badly. The moment when one of you feels alone, and the other feels attacked.
That is enough to begin.
The discovery call is a brief first step. It gives you a chance to talk about what has been happening, ask basic questions, and see whether couples therapy with Elka feels like the right next step.
Elka works with couples who feel caught in painful communication patterns and want a steadier way to talk through difficult things.
Her approach is grounded, direct, and collaborative. Sessions focus on what happens between you in real conversations, rather than only focusing on what each person thinks the other person needs to change.
Together, you will look at the cycle you get pulled into, the emotions underneath it, and the small shifts that can help you relate to each other with more clarity and less escalation.
Elka offers in person couples therapy in Phoenix and telehealth for clients in Arizona and Illinois. She also supports couples navigating communication issues, anxiety, mood concerns, stress, and relationship strain.
Pick a time for a brief call to discuss what has been happening and what support you are looking for.
You do not need to explain everything perfectly. It is enough to start with the pattern you keep running into and what you hope could feel different.
The discovery call is a chance to ask questions, talk through logistics, and decide whether couples therapy with Elka makes sense for your relationship.
If it feels like the right next step, you can schedule an in person session in Phoenix or a telehealth session if you are located in Arizona or Illinois.
It is helpful when both partners can attend, but it is okay if only one of you is ready to reach out. You can still start the conversation.
Yes. In person sessions are available in Phoenix.
Yes. Telehealth is available for clients located in Arizona and Illinois.
No. The discovery call is a brief conversation to understand what you are looking for, answer basic questions, and see whether it makes sense to move forward.
That is a normal place to begin. You do not need to know whether therapy is the answer before you reach out. The first step is simply talking through what has been happening.
That is a valid reason to get support. Couples therapy is not only for relationships in crisis. It can also help when the same issues keep coming up, and you want to work on them before they become harder to repair.
You can still begin with a discovery call. Many couples start from a place where one partner feels more ready than the other. The call can help you understand what the process would look like and whether it feels like a reasonable next step.
If the same fight keeps coming back, there is usually a pattern underneath it.
The discovery call is a brief first step to talk through what has been happening, ask basic questions, and see whether couples therapy with Elka feels like the right next step.
In person in Phoenix. Telehealth available in Arizona and Illinois.