Gary Malone Counseling, PLLC

Gary Malone Counseling, PLLC Accepting BCBS, United, Aetna, Cigna, Superior, and TriCare. Virtual sessions available.

Credentialed with various EAP programs (check your employer)

Counseling services for couples, adults, and teens.

Not every emotion needs a microphone.Some feelings just need a snack and 20 minutes to calm down.That realization alone ...
05/18/2026

Not every emotion needs a microphone.

Some feelings just need a snack and 20 minutes to calm down.
That realization alone could save a lot of marriages, friendships, and group texts.

Because not all emotions are created equal.

Some emotions are important signals:
“Something feels off.”
“I feel disconnected.”
“I’m hurt.”
“I’m overwhelmed.”

Those matter.

But some emotions are just your nervous system running a low-battery warning after three bad nights of sleep, too much stress, caffeine, hunger, insecurity, and a text message that simply said: “k.”

Not every feeling is a truth.
Not every frustration is a crisis.
Not every thought deserves immediate expression.

Maturity isn’t becoming emotionless.
It’s learning discernment between:
“I need to address this” and “I need a nap before I create damage.”

Because a surprising amount of conflict starts with exhausted people demanding permanent solutions for temporary emotional states.

You don’t have to suppress emotions.
You just don’t have to hand every single one a megaphone.

Sometimes the healthiest thing you can do is:
eat something,
go for a walk,
sleep on it,
and revisit the conversation when your nervous system isn’t acting like a raccoon holding a knife.

And if you’re married? This matters even more.

A strong marriage isn’t built by two people who never feel reactive.
It’s built by two people who learn not to weaponize every feeling the moment it appears.

Sometimes emotional intelligence looks a lot less like “speaking your truth” and more like eating some ice cream and calming down.

“I do” sounds beautiful at the altar.But “I will” is what actually sustains a marriage.Because the real weight of a vow ...
05/14/2026

“I do” sounds beautiful at the altar.

But “I will” is what actually sustains a marriage.

Because the real weight of a vow isn’t found in two emotional words spoken on one important day.

It’s found in the thousands of ordinary moments that follow.

“I will stay honest when it would be easier to shut down.”
“I will repair instead of defend.”
“I will stay kind even when I’m frustrated.”
“I will tell the truth about what’s happening inside me.”
“I will keep becoming someone safe to love.”

That’s the part nobody claps for.

Because vows were never just describing how you felt on your wedding day.
They were describing who you’d choose to become later.

And honestly, this is why dating matters more than people think.

Most people are dating based on chemistry, attraction, humor, compatibility, and emotional intensity.

And those things matter.

But eventually every relationship runs into stress, disappointment, exhaustion, conflict, boredom, resentment, temptation, selfishness, grief, and unmet expectations.

Which means the real question isn’t:
“Do we love each other right now?”

It’s:
“What happens when loving each other becomes difficult?”

Because marriage will eventually ask both people:
Can you stay aligned with your values when your feelings shift?
Can you stay warm when you’re disappointed?
Can you communicate without punishing?
Can you stay honest without becoming cruel?
Can you repair after failure instead of hiding behind pride?

That’s the difference between “I do” and “I will.”

And honestly?
Even as a marriage therapist… I missed this at times in my own life.

Not because I didn’t understand relationships intellectually.
But because it’s incredibly easy to confuse love with readiness.

Easy to think strong feelings automatically create strong marriages.
Easy to assume commitment alone creates emotional safety.
Easy to say vows without fully understanding what those vows will eventually require from you.

Marriage has a way of exposing the gap between our intentions and our actual emotional capacity.

Not to shame us.
But to reveal us.

Anybody can say “I do” when love feels powerful.

The deeper question is:
Who will you be when loving someone requires patience, humility, restraint, honesty, forgiveness, and effort?

Because marriage doesn’t just reveal how much love you feel.

It reveals whether your character can sustain the vows you made.

And if you want help building the kind of relationship that can actually live out an “I will”… this is the work I do with couples every day.

Most people think marriage change requires both people changing at the same time.And yes…eventually, healthy marriages r...
05/12/2026

Most people think marriage change requires both people changing at the same time.

And yes…eventually, healthy marriages require mutual effort.
But a relationship can absolutely begin changing when one person changes how they show up.

Because marriages are systems.

When one person becomes less defensive…the tone shifts.
When one person stops escalating…�the cycle gets interrupted.
When one person learns to stay calm instead of proving a point…�conversations stop feeling like war.

A lot of couples are stuck in accidental choreography.
One criticizes.�The other withdraws.�One pursues harder.�The other shuts down more.
Over and over.

Most people are waiting for their spouse to go first before becoming softer, calmer, safer, or more accountable.
But somebody has to stop feeding the same pattern.

Now let me be clear…
This does NOT mean tolerating abuse, carrying the entire relationship alone, or becoming emotionally enlightened while your spouse acts like they’re auditioning for a reality show.
That’s not healthy leadership.�That’s survival.

But many marriages stay stuck because both people are standing there emotionally saying: “I’ll change when they change.”

That’s a standoff. Not intimacy.

Sometimes the healthiest thing you can do is become someone who no longer feeds the dysfunction.

You repair faster.�You listen differently.�You regulate before reacting.�You get curious instead of combative.�You take ownership without immediately defending yourself.

And strangely enough…that often changes the emotional climate of the relationship.

Not always.
But more than people think.

Because emotional maturity is contagious.�And so is emotional chaos.

That’s why so much of my work with individuals focuses on helping them strengthen the internal architecture required for healthy partnership: shame resilience, nervous system regulation, differentiation, emotional literacy, attachment awareness, internal boundaries, self-trust, and value congruence.

The healthiest marriages are usually built by two people who stopped asking, “How do I change my spouse?” and started asking, “Who am I becoming inside this relationship?”

Most couples think better communication means explaining themselves more clearly.But a lot of the time, the real issue i...
05/07/2026

Most couples think better communication means explaining themselves more clearly.

But a lot of the time, the real issue is this:
One person is trying to build connection…while the other is unintentionally blocking it.

Building sounds like:

“Help me understand.”
“Tell me more.”
“That makes sense.”
“I can see why you’d feel that way.”
“We’re on the same team.”

Blocking sounds like:

defensiveness
correcting tiny details
shutting down
sarcasm
eye rolling
turning pain into a debate
waiting for your turn to speak instead of listening

And here’s the hard part:
Most people don’t realize they’re blocking.

They think they’re explaining themselves.
Protecting themselves.
Defending logic.
“Just being honest.”

But to their spouse?
It feels like trying to have a conversation with a locked door.

A marriage doesn’t become safe because two people love each other.
It becomes safe because two people learn how to stay emotionally open when things get uncomfortable.

That’s the work.

Not winning.
Not proving your point better.
Not having the perfect comeback three hours later in the shower.

Building means your spouse leaves the conversation feeling more understood, not more alone.

And no, this doesn’t mean agreeing with everything.
You can disagree and still build.
You can hold boundaries and still build.
You can be frustrated and still build.

Because building is less about the topic…
and more about the posture you bring into the room.

A lot of marriages are starving, not for love, but for emotional safety during conflict.

Pay attention to your patterns this week:
When your spouse comes to you…do they experience you as someone building connection?

Or blocking it?

Men, if s*x is the only place you know how to connect,then every “no”/"not right now" will start to feel like disconnect...
05/01/2026

Men, if s*x is the only place you know how to connect,
then every “no”/"not right now" will start to feel like disconnection or rejection.

So you pursue harder.
You initiate more.
You try to create more opportunities.

Not because you’re selfish…
but because you’re trying to get back to connection.

And that’s where things quietly shift.

Because for her, it doesn’t feel like connection anymore.
It feels like expectation.
And expectation, especially around something as vulnerable as s*x,
doesn’t create desire.

It restricts it.

So she starts to feel boxed in.
Like her body isn’t fully hers.
Like she can’t just be… without it leading somewhere.

And when that happens, her nervous system does what it’s supposed to do.

It pulls back.

Not to punish you.
Not because she doesn’t love you.

But because she doesn’t feel free or emotionally safe.

When she starts having s*x just to avoid conflict…
to keep the peace…
or to meet an expectation…

It doesn’t build intimacy.
It builds resentment.

Because now s*x isn’t connection for her.
It’s pressure she’s managing.

So she pulls back even more.
And the cycle tightens.
Over and over again.

This isn’t about one person being right and the other being wrong.
It’s about a pattern that quietly turns something meant to bring you together…
into something that drives you apart.

If you’re a man reading this...
your desire for s*x isn’t the problem.
But if s*x is the only place you know how to feel close,
you’re going to unintentionally create pressure.

And pressure will always kill the very thing you’re trying to build.

If you’re a woman reading this...
your need for emotional safety and freedom isn’t rejection to him.
It’s the foundation of real desire.

The goal isn’t just more s*x.
It’s building a relationship where both people feel safe enough
to actually want it.

Because when connection exists outside the bedroom…
It finally has a chance to come back inside of it.

If this pattern feels familiar, you don’t have to keep guessing your way through it...let’s figure it out.

Most people think “I do” starts on their wedding day.It doesn’t.You’ve been practicing it in every relationship you’ve e...
04/29/2026

Most people think “I do” starts on their wedding day.

It doesn’t.

You’ve been practicing it in every relationship you’ve ever had.

In the way you avoid hard conversations.
In the way you over give just to feel chosen.
In the way you lose your voice to keep the peace.
In the way you shape shift into who you think they want.

That’s your rehearsal.

Because “I do” isn’t just choosing a person.
It’s choosing how you’re going to show up when it’s hard.

Marriage will not change you. It will expose you.

The same patterns you bring into dating
are the ones you’ll bring into marriage.

Just more consistently.
With more at stake.

So if you can’t be honest now…
you won’t suddenly become honest later.

If you abandon yourself to keep someone…
you’ll keep doing it once you have them.

If you need constant reassurance to feel secure…
marriage won’t fix that. It’ll amplify it.

“I do” is a promise you make on your best day
about how you’ll show up on your worst ones.

The real question isn’t, “Who am I going to marry?”

It’s, “Who am I becoming in relationships?”

Because the goal isn’t just finding someone to say “I do” to.

It’s becoming someone who can say it
and still remain grounded, honest, and fully themselves.

And that’s what actually makes marriage work.

Most of my work centers around marriage.But lately, I’ve been having the same conversation over and over again with peop...
04/27/2026

Most of my work centers around marriage.

But lately, I’ve been having the same conversation over and over again with people navigating dating after divorce.

And here’s what I've been sharing recently:

Most people jump back into dating asking one question:
“Do I like them?”

There’s a better question:
“Who do I become when I’m with them?”

If you’re looking for healing and wholeness, you don’t actually need a partner.
You need awareness.

Date to study your reactions.

Notice where you abandon yourself to keep connection.
Notice how quickly you start performing when you feel uncertainty.
Notice how much silence you can tolerate before you reach for reassurance.

Because dating will expose things you can’t see on your own.

It will show you:
– how you handle not being chosen yet
– how you respond when interest feels uneven
– how quickly you trade honesty for approval

Dating isn’t just about compatibility.
It’s one of the deepest mirrors you’ll ever step in front of if you let it be.

But here’s the part people miss:
These same patterns don’t magically disappear once you’re in a relationship.

They follow you into marriage.

The overthinking.
The performing.
The fear of saying the wrong thing.
The urge to secure connection instead of being yourself.

So whether you’re dating or married, the work is the same:

Stay with yourself.
Tell the truth.
Let connection build from who you are,
not who you think you need to be to keep someone.

Because the goal isn’t just finding love.

It’s becoming someone who can love themselves
without abandoning who they are to keep someone else.

Most people don’t know the difference between pain and discomfort.And it’s quietly wrecking their life.They call discomf...
04/22/2026

Most people don’t know the difference between pain and discomfort.

And it’s quietly wrecking their life.

They call discomfort “a problem”
…and avoid the very things that would grow them.

And they call pain “normal”
…and stay in things that are slowly draining them.

Let’s fix that.

Pain is a warning.
Discomfort is an invitation.

Pain says: something is wrong.
Discomfort says: something is new.

Pain breaks you down over time.
Discomfort stretches you over time.

Pain feels like you’re losing yourself.
Discomfort feels like you’re meeting a version of yourself you haven’t developed yet.

Here’s where people get it twisted:

Having a hard conversation?
Discomfort.

Setting a boundary for the first time?
Discomfort.

Sitting in your emotions instead of numbing out?
Discomfort.

Being disrespected repeatedly?
Pain.

Walking on eggshells in your own relationship?
Pain.

Feeling like you have to earn love by performing?
Pain.

Stop treating discomfort like danger.
That’s where growth lives.

And stop tolerating pain like it’s part of the deal.
That’s where people lose themselves.

If you’re trying to build a better marriage, a better life, a better version of you...this matters.

Because one leads to expansion.

The other leads to erosion.

So ask yourself:

If I stay in this…
do I become more of who I want to be?

Or less?

That answer isn’t an exit sign.
It’s a spotlight showing us exactly where the work is.

When your partner is distant, it’s easy to shut down.When they’re short, it’s easy to snap back.When they stop showing u...
04/21/2026

When your partner is distant, it’s easy to shut down.
When they’re short, it’s easy to snap back.
When they stop showing up, it’s easy to do the same.

That’s reaction.

But reaction doesn’t build relationships.

Values do.

There’s a different question available:

Not, “What am I getting right now?”
But, “Who do I want to be in this moment?”

That question will change your marriage faster than any communication tool.

Because it moves you from reacting… to leading.

We’re raised to believe fairness is the goal.Take turns.Keep it even.Treat people how they treat you.Sounds healthy… unt...
04/20/2026

We’re raised to believe fairness is the goal.

Take turns.
Keep it even.
Treat people how they treat you.

Sounds healthy… until you bring that mindset into marriage.

Because “fair” in relationships usually means:
“I’ll give what I’m getting.”

And that turns into:
Distance = Distance
Frustration = Frustration
Silence = Silence

That’s not fairness.

That’s a slow mutual withdrawal where both people feel justified.

If your standard is “I’ll give what I’m getting”… your relationship will only ever be as healthy as its worst moment.

I’ve got three kids.So I've hear “That’s not fair!” about 47 times a week for the last 10+ years.Different snacks. Diffe...
04/17/2026

I’ve got three kids.

So I've hear “That’s not fair!” about 47 times a week for the last 10+ years.

Different snacks. Different bedtimes. Who got more. Who got less. It’s constant.

And honestly… I get it.

We’re raised on fairness.

“Play fair.”
“Take turns.”
“Treat people how they treat you.”

Fairness matters.

Just not in your marriage.

Because what most couples call “fair”… is actually keeping score.

You were short with me, so I’ll be short back.
You didn’t show up for me, so I won’t show up for you.
You stopped trying, so I’m done trying too.

That’s not fairness.

That’s escalation with a moral label on it.

Here’s the hard truth:

If your standard is “I’ll give what I’m getting”… your relationship will only ever be as healthy as its worst moment.

One person pulls back...the other responds...now both are reacting instead of leading.

And nobody’s actually building anything.

What actually changes a relationship isn’t fairness.

It’s leadership.

It’s deciding:

“I’m not going to mirror the worst version of you.
I’m going to stay aligned with who I want to be.”

That doesn’t mean ignoring problems or tolerating disrespect.

It means you stop letting your partner’s behavior dictate your character.

The marriages that last aren’t fair.

They’re built by two people who keep choosing to bring something better into the moment than what they received.

Not perfectly.

But consistently.

Fairness keeps score, but
love builds something better.

Address

Paris, TX
75460

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