Imago Therapy in West Hempstead, NY

Imago Therapy in West Hempstead, NY with Chana Pfeifer, LCSW

Imago therapy was created by Drs. Harville Hendrix & Helen LaKelly Hunt, internationally-respected couples’ therapists, educators, speakers, and New York Times bestselling authors. Together, they’ve written over 10 books with more than 4 million copies sold including, Getting The Love You Want: A Guide for Couples. In addition, Harville has appeared on the Oprah Winfrey television program 17 times!

Chana Pfeifer, LCSW * The Happier Me
Chana Pfeifer with Harville Hendrix

One of the most important components of Imago therapy is that it’s not about being right. The idea behind Imago therapy is that two people can have completely different world views, and it doesn’t mean that one is right and the other is wrong.

The goal in this is not to be right. It’s not proving a point. It’s about actively listening, being heard, validation, and being in tune with our partner.

To assist the transformation of all relationships, Harville & Helen co-created IMAGO RELATIONSHIP THERAPY, which is applicable to couples, families, parents, and professionals who seek to be more effective in their life and relationships.

Learn how to connect through differences and become more present in all of your relationships.

For additional information on Imago Therapy in West Hempstead, contact Chana Pfeifer, LCSW today.

Follow The Happier Me on Facebook.

Do yourself a favor: See a premarital counselor before getting married.

Getting married is a huge step in life. It’s a commitment that should not be taken lightly. And, like any other important decision, it’s best to approach it with as much information and preparation as possible. That’s where seeing a premarital counselor comes in.

Premarital counseling is a type of therapy that can help couples prepare for marriage. It’s an opportunity to identify and work through any potential issues that might arise in the relationship. Counseling can also help couples build a strong foundation for their future together.

If you’re considering getting married, talking with a premarital counselor is a great way to start off on the right foot. It can help you and your partner learn more about each other and identify any areas that need work. Counseling can also provide a space for you to openly discuss your expectations, goals, and fears about marriage.

If you’re not sure if premarital counseling is right for you, here are a few things to consider:

  • Are you and your partner on the same page about your relationship?
  • Do you have concerns or deal-breakers that could affect your marriage?
  • Are you both committed to working through problems together?
  • Do you want to learn more about your partner before getting married?
  • Are you willing to openly discuss sensitive topics with a counselor?

If you answered yes to any of the above questions, premarital counseling could be a good fit for you.

Why premarital counseling is a must before you get married:

It can help you and your partner learn more about each other.

Premarital counseling is a great way to get to know your partner on a deeper level. It’s an opportunity to discuss your hopes, dreams, and fears about marriage. Counseling can also help you learn more about your partner’s communication style and how they handle conflict. This knowledge can be invaluable as you navigate the ups and downs of married life.

It can identify potential areas of conflict.

No relationship is perfect, and all couples will face challenges at some point. Premarital counseling can help you and your partner identify any potential areas of conflict. This knowledge can help you develop strategies for dealing with these issues if they arise in the future.

It can help you build a strong foundation for your marriage.

Premarital counseling is an opportunity to discuss your expectations, goals, and values about marriage. It’s a chance to set the tone for your future together. Counseling can also help you learn how to communicate effectively and resolve conflict in a healthy way. These skills will be essential as you navigate the ups and downs of married life.

Getting married is a big step, and it’s natural to feel some anxiety about the future. Speaking with a premarital counselor can provide peace of mind by helping you & your partner address concerns you have about marriage. Counseling can help you develop realistic expectations about married life. This knowledge can help you approach your marriage with confidence.

If you’re considering getting married, premarital counseling is a great way to start off on the right foot. It can help you and your partner learn more about each other, identify potential areas of conflict, and build a strong foundation for your future together.

If you’re interested in premarital counseling, contact me for more information.

Couples’ Premarital Counseling: Finance

joined paired counseling

Finance can be one of the most difficult topics to discuss, especially when your relationship seems to hang in the balance.

Unfortunately, financial issues and conflicts are one of the leading causes of divorce among married couples. If these issues are considered preemptively, couples can acquire the vision and resilience necessary to navigate murky financial waters in the future.

Premarital counseling can bring the dynamics of finances to a more positive and objective light unshadowed by emotions or personal biases.

Some of the main topics of premarital counseling are closely linked to financial discussions, including personal values, expectations, roles, family planning, communication, and conflict resolution.

One of the most insidious contributors to financial discord is a lack of effective communication between partners.

Money can be closely linked to individual self-worth and related stressors can present barriers to openness. Even if both partners are open and willing to discuss critical issues, it can be challenging to fully articulate one’s viewpoint on such a multifaceted topic.

What one partner may consider a necessity, another may consider an expensive luxury. Some may find savings or budget planning to be of critical importance, while others do not consider it much at all. Differences like this may not cause conflict at the start of a relationship, but over time, these issues can fester and create a larger problem that is difficult to navigate alone.

Having the ability to express one’s inner desires and fears is key to connecting with your partner and the issues at hand.

It is important to understand each other’s financial background, including how socioeconomic factors may have shaped one’s view of money during their lifetime. Fully comprehending the mosaic of cultural beliefs, patterns, and experiences can help the other partner communicate effectively about financial situations and goals.

Discussing differences and expectations is essential to cultivating a healthy conceptualization of spending, saving, working, and budgeting. Designating roles when handling such as taxes, bills, credit, and debt can help to reduce strain and fulfill healthy expectations. This includes emphasizing individual strengths and discovering how each partner can contribute to mutual success.

Providing each partner with the freedom to openly discuss financial habits, expectations, values, and planning is the first step in conquering related conflicts that may arise.

This can foster the unification of dual perspectives to create a harmonious balance of individuality. Counseling can provide a safe space in which to communicate your fears and perspectives while taking a proactive approach to your future as a happy and connected couple.

I am seeing clients in person in my canvas outdoor office or indoor office 6 feet apart, as long as we are symptom free.
 
I’m also available for virtual counseling sessions with couples & individual adults through Zoom, Skype, FaceTime.

For additional information on couples’ premarital counseling, call (516) 592-1107 or email Chana Pfeifer, LCSW today.

Payments can be made via:  Cash, Check, Zelle, Chase QuickPay, American Express, Discover, Mastercard, Visa, Health Savings Account

Marriage problems need fixing, not ignoring.

marriage problemsLearn the skills to sustain a strong, emotionally healthy, and loving marriage.

Marriage rescue for couples facing marriage problems…

When couples first contact me for marriage help, they typically feel distressed and even hopeless about their relationship. If they can look back and remember earlier good times however, that usually signals a marriage that can be saved. In fact, this kind of marriage has potential to become the kind of partnership the couple had hoped for when they said, “I do.”

What transitions couples from desperation about their difficulties to delight in sharing their lives together?

Here’s the 8-step pathway along which I guide my therapy clients, and which you are welcome to take as well:

1. Make a list of all the issues about which you have disagreements, including the issues that you refrain from talking about out of fear that talking might lead to arguing.

Your self-help treatment will be complete when you have found mutually agreeable solutions to all of these issues, and also have learned the skills to resolve new issues as they arise with similarly win-win solutions.

If the list seems interminable because you fight about everything from time of day, to where to live, odds are the problem is less that you are facing some challenging differences, and more that your manner of talking with each other needs a major upgrade.

2. Fix your focus solidly on yourself. Attempts to get your partner to change invite defensiveness. No one likes being told they’re doing things wrong or, far worse, that they are a bad person. Better by far for both of you each to use your energies and intelligence to figure out what YOU could do differently.

Here’s a question that can get you started. What would enable you to stay loving and good-humored even if the frustrating pieces in your spouse’s repertoire never get an upgrade? That’s how to become “self-centered” in the best sense. If both of you are seeking to do your own upgrades, the marriage will blossom.

3. Cut the crap (pardon my language). The point is that negative muck that you give each other is totally unhelpful. It only taints a positive relationship. That means no more criticism, complaints, blame, accusations, anger, sarcasm, mean digs, snide remarks.

No more anger escalations either. Stay in the calm zone. Exit early and often if either of you is beginning to get heated. Learn to calm yourself, and then re-engage cooperatively.

Research psychologist John Gottman has found that marriages generally survive if the ratio of good to bad interactions is 5 to 1. Do you want to barely survive? Or do you want to save the marriage in a way that will make it thrive? If thriving is your goal, aim for 100,000,000:1. That means, don’t sling mud at all. Cut the crap.

4. Learn how to express concerns constructively. A simple way to do that in sensitive conversations is to stick with the following sentence-starter options. In my clinical work I give couples a handout that includes these starter phrases. I encourage them to use the handout frequently, checking how to start each comment that might be sensitive or on topics that they know could be prickly.

I feel (followed by a one-word feeling such as anxious, sad, etc) …

My concern is ………..

I would like to … [note, NEVER use “I would like you to ….”]

How would you feel about that? or, What’s your thoughts on that?

5. Learn how to make decisions cooperatively. I call collaborative decision-making the “win-win waltz.”

Win-win decision-making aims for a plan of action that pleases you both. No more insistence designed to “get your way.” Instead, when you have differences, quietly express your underlying concerns, listen calmly to understand your partner’s concerns, and then create a solution responsive to all the concerns of both of you.

Practice this skill-set on all the issues you listed in step 1. You may be amazed to discover that, even on issues that seemed intractable, you will be able to co-create solutions that will work for both of you.

6. Eliminate the three A’s that ruin marriages.

Affairs, Addictions & Anger are deal-breakers.

They are out-of-bounds in a healthy marriage. Fix the habit or game over.

If you or your spouse has these problems, saving this kind of marriage could be a mistaken goal. Better to end a marriage than to continue a marriage with these hurtful habits.

Better yet is for each of you to figure out what you can do differently in the future. The one with the A-habit needs to figure out how to end it. The partner needs to heal, and also to learn alternatives to tolerating the habit.

Most importantly, especially if you have children who need you to learn how to be more emotionally healthy as individuals and as a couple, is for the two of you both to commit to building a new kind of marriage.

That is, end the old marriage. Build a new one with the same partner. Build a marriage where there are zero affairs, addictions or excessive anger and instead, abounding love and trust.

7. Radically increase the positive energies you give your partner.

Smile more. Touch more. Hug more. More “eye kisses.” More sex. More shared time and shared projects. More appreciation. More dwelling on what you like about your partner.

Respond more often with agreement in response to things your partner says that in the past you might have answered with “But…”.

Listening is loving, especially when you are listening to take in information, not to show what’s wrong with what your partner says or to show that you know more.

Help out more. Give more praise and more gratitude. Do more fun activities together. Laugh and joke more, do new things and go new places together.

The best things in life really are free. And the more positives you give, the more you’ll get!

I wrote above about Gottman’s 5:1 ratio. Increasing the positives is every bit as important as decreasing negatives to hit a 100,000,000:1 ratio.

8. Look back at your parents’ marriage strengths and weaknesses. Decide what you want to do differently.

When people marry they bring along a recording in their head of how their parents treated each other, and also how they were treated by their parents.

These relationships are where folks learn patterns of interacting for intimate relationships. Decide consciously what to keep from your folks and what to do differently.

(source)

To learn more about couples therapy with Chana Pfeifer, click here.