04/13/2026
One of the most frustrating moments I hear when working with couples is when someone is genuinely trying… and the other person still doesn’t feel okay.
“I’m showing up. I’m communicating. I’m doing things differently… so why doesn’t it feel better yet?”
Because change doesn’t happen all at once. It happens in layers.
Most people expect change to start with a shift in mindset. But in relationships, it usually starts with behavior. You begin showing up differently. You say things you didn’t say before. You interrupt patterns that used to run on autopilot.
At first, it can feel forced. Awkward. Even unnatural.
Then comes the emotional layer. Maybe the conversation didn’t turn into a fight this time. Maybe there was a moment of connection. But it still doesn’t feel fully safe yet. There’s hesitation. Guardedness. A sense of, “I see the effort… but I’m not there yet.”
This is where a lot of couples get stuck.
Because one person is thinking, “What more do you want from me?”
And the other is thinking, “I’m trying to feel it, but I’m not there yet.”
Neither is wrong. They’re just in different layers of the process.
Over time, if the behavior stays consistent, something deeper begins to shift. The meaning changes. The belief changes.
“Maybe this is real.”
“Maybe this isn’t temporary.”
“Maybe I can trust this version of you.”
That’s when change actually starts to stick.
Not when you understand it.
Not when you talk about it.
But when you’ve experienced it enough to believe it.
You can change your behavior in a week.
But it can take months for your partner to experience you differently.
That doesn’t mean it’s not working.
It means you’re early in the process.
Don’t quit in Layer 2 just because it doesn’t feel like Layer 4 yet.