Navigating Affairs in Couples Therapy

United States · CE credit & talks · Psychologists

Elevate your couples therapy practice with this vital CE for US psychologists. Understand affairs through a developmental and relational lens, uncovering unmet needs and framing them as opportunities for transformation. Acquire therapist-led strategies for safety, differentiation, and rebuilding trust effectively.

Navigating affairs in couples therapy is complex and emotionally charged, often leaving both clients and therapists feeling disoriented. This talk offers couples therapists a compassionate, relational framework for understanding affairs not as acts of intentional harm, but as meaningful expressions of unmet developmental and relational needs. Drawing on Erik Erikson’s stages of development—attachment, exploration, identity, and competence—affairs are understood as falling into the four corresponding types. From this perspective, affairs represent unconscious attempts to repair or complete unmet childhood tasks and restore a sense of vitality and wholeness. While deeply disruptive, they are not designed to injure a partner, but are self-focused efforts to meet unmet needs.

The presentation then expands into a relational paradigm, viewing relationships as dynamic systems shaped by the energy in the space between partners. Affairs are framed as transformational events that introduce new information and a call for change, with one partner often carrying the voice of transformation and the other embodying stability. Healing involves cooperation rather than polarization, integration rather than projection, and shared responsibility for growth. The talk concludes with guidance for therapists, emphasising the importance of taking the emotional lead, creating safety and stability, pacing the process, managing reactivity, and supporting differentiation, boundary-setting, and the gradual restoration of trust.

Learning objectives:

By the end of this talk, participants will be able to:

 

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