Couples
Therapy available in person in Round Rock, and virtually anywhere in Texas.
“It's often easy to get into the woods but hard to get out without a map and compass.”
- Sarah Boulet
When love feels more like walking on eggshells than coming home.
Lately, every conversation seems to spiral into the same argument—or worse, silence. You’re talking, but not really hearing each other.
You miss the easy connection you used to have, but now it feels like you’re teammates turned disgruntled roommates.
Maybe there’s resentment, distance, or just exhaustion from trying to make it work. Throwing recovery into the mix—whether from past trauma, addiction, or emotional wounds—can make communication even trickier.
Life after prioritizing your connection…
You’re not arguing about who left the lights on and actually laugh when your partner forgets their lunch… again.
That lightness that’s been missing falls back into place because the negative cycles and patterns are finally out in the open.
You can handle sticky situations—like money stress or a cranky teen—without losing your cool or each other.
You’re laughing like you did in the beginning, and can’t wait for your evening free time together squeezing in an episode of your show. Even on messy, chaotic days, you know how to reconnect, keep your attraction alive, and feel like teammates again.
Why me?
I’m a wife and mother of teens, so I get how messy, confusing, and sometimes hilarious family life and relationships can be.
I use a mix of evidence-based approaches, including Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and Gottman Method strategies, to help couples see each other clearly, break out of the same old patterns, and understand what each other really needs.
We tackle communication roadblocks, emotions, betrayals, and even recovery-related challenges—without judgment, with curiosity, and yes, sometimes with a little humor. I’m on your side, rooting for your relationship, and here to make change stick for the long haul.
Who this type of therapy is for:
→ Couples feeling stuck in the same arguments or patterns over and over.
→ Partners struggling to really understand each other’s needs and feelings.
→ Couples navigating big life changes—parenthood, empty nest, career stress, or recovery challenges.
→ Partners who want to reconnect and feel close again, not just coexist.
→ People ready to do the work to communicate better and feel heard.
→ Couples who want tools to handle conflict without it derailing the relationship.