🌸 Choose each other again this Easter

A gentle reset for couples feeling disconnected

Easter isn’t just renewal… it’s reconnection

Easter has a quiet way of inviting reflection.

Not just on life, but on love.

For many couples, this time of year brings a subtle awareness – We’ve drifted a little.

Not in a dramatic, crisis way.
But in the everyday ways that slowly create distance.

Conversations become practical.
Touch becomes less frequent.
And the emotional connection that once felt easy… starts to feel just out of reach.

If that’s you, you’re not alone.

And more importantly, nothing is “wrong” with your relationship.


When good relationships go quiet

One of the most common things we see in our work with couples is this:

💛 You still care deeply about each other
💛 You’re still committed
💛 But something feels missing

It’s not a lack of love.

It’s a lack of intentional connection.

Life gets full. Work, family, responsibilities.
And without realising it, the relationship moves from alive and connected to functional and efficient.

From a psychological perspective, this is completely understandable.

When stress increases, we default to protection rather than connection.

Less vulnerability.
More efficiency.
Fewer moments of real emotional contact.


A small shift that changes everything

This is where Easter offers something powerful.

Not a grand gesture.
Not a dramatic fix.

Just a pause.

A moment to turn toward each other again.

In our own relationship, Chris and I notice this too. Even as psychologists, even as people who teach this work, we still need to practice choosing each other.

Because connection isn’t something you achieve once.

It’s something you return to.


Three simple ways to reconnect this weekend

You don’t need hours of therapy to begin.

Start here:

1. Slow one moment down

Instead of talking while distracted, pause.
Look at each other.
Let one conversation be fully present.

2. Replace fixing with listening

You don’t need to solve your partner’s feelings.
Just hear them.
This alone can soften distance.

3. Reach for a small physical connection

A longer hug.
A hand on the arm.
Sitting closer than usual.

These moments signal safety to the nervous system.

And safety is the foundation of connection.


The truth most couples miss

You don’t have to be in crisis to invest in your relationship.

In fact, the couples who do best are the ones who don’t wait until things fall apart.

They notice the drift early.

And they gently course-correct.


If you’re ready for more than a reset

Sometimes a weekend intention is enough to begin.

And sometimes, you want more structure.
More guidance.
A clearer way forward.

That’s exactly why we run our Getting the Love You Want Couples Workshop in Sydney.

It’s not group therapy.
It’s a private, structured experience where you learn:

✔ How to communicate without escalating
✔ How to understand each other at a deeper level
✔ How to rebuild emotional and physical connection
✔ A clear, practical map you can take home

Thousands of couples worldwide have experienced the power of this work.

And we’ve lived it ourselves.

What is Imago Couples Therapy?


🌿 This Easter, start here

Not with pressure.
Not with perfection.

Just with one simple decision:

Turn toward each other.

Because the relationship you want…
is built in moments like this.


👉 Explore our next couples workshop:
Getting The Love You Want: Sydney Imago Relationship Program

How can couples reconnect emotionally?


Couples can reconnect emotionally by slowing down conversations, listening without trying to fix, increasing small physical connection, and creating intentional time together. Structured support, such as couples workshops or therapy, can deepen and sustain this reconnection.


The “Civilised Roommate” Trap: Why Your Relationship Isn’t Failing -It’s Just Sleepwalking

You didn’t sign up for a life of “parallel play.”

You remember the early days: the electricity, the chats that lasted until 3:00 AM, the feeling that finally, someone truly got you. You were a team. You were alive.

Fast forward to now, and your most frequent conversations revolve around the school run, the mortgage, and whose turn it is to unload the dishwasher.

You’ve become Civilised Roommates. You’re “fine,” but you aren’t connected. You are navigating two different emotional continents under the same roof.

If you feel the drift, understand this: Your relationship isn’t broken. It’s just stuck in a survival loop.

The Guru Secret: Your Partner is Your Greatest Healer

In the 1980s, Dr. Harville Hendrix and Dr. Helen LaKelly Hunt cracked the code of relational longevity with Getting the Love You Want workshop. They discovered a truth that feels like a lightning bolt: We do not pick our partners by accident. Your subconscious mind—the “Old Brain”—is a master matchmaker. It sought out the one person perfectly equipped to trigger your oldest, unhealed wounds.

Why? So you could finally heal them.

That friction you feel? That “annoying” habit your partner has? That’s not a sign you’re with the wrong person. It’s the sound of your relationship trying to evolve. It is growth knocking on the door, disguised as an argument.

The reactivebrain vs the conscious brain in Imago Therapy Getting the Love you want Workshop Chris Paulin psychologist
The reactive brain vs the conscious brain in Philipa and Chris’s Imago Therapy Getting the Love you want Workshop in Sydney

The Science of the “Safety Gap”

When the spark fades, it’s because Safety has left the room. Biologically, when we feel misunderstood or ignored, our nervous system goes into a survival loop. The amygdala—the brain’s alarm system—fires off, and we slip into “fight, flight, or freeze.”

Brain diagram and the limbic system impacts our relationships from an imago perspective
Brain diagram and the limbic system impact our relationships from an imago perspective

In a marriage, this looks like the “Power Struggle.” One partner becomes the chaser (criticising, seeking connection through conflict), while the other becomes the withdrawer (numbing out or avoiding). To change the relationship, we have to change the nervous system. We move from the reactive “Old Brain” to the conscious, compassionate “New Brain.” This is the core of Imago Relationship Therapy.

Enter the “Helper Husband”: A New Model for Connection

At our August 22–23 Intensive in Crows Nest, we don’t just “talk about feelings.” We perform Relational Alchemy. The workshop is co-facilitated by Philipa Thornton (Psychologist & Master Guide) and her “Helper Husband,” Chris Paulin (Consultant Psychologist). This dynamic is our “secret sauce.” Philipa brings the profound clinical wisdom of an Imago expert, while Chris provides a grounded, no-fluff perspective that resonates with partners who might be hesitant about “therapy-speak.”

Chris models the “Helper Husband” role—proving you don’t need to be a “sensitive soul” to be a masterful partner. You just need the right tools and a willing heart. He is the bridge between deep psychology and the reality of being a partner in the real world.


A Weekend of Radical Privacy

We know the biggest barrier to seeking help: the fear of “sharing.” Rest assured, this is a private, sacred experience. * Group sharing is 100% optional. Your deep work is done entirely with your partner. You won’t be “put on the spot.”

  • The Sacred Dialogue: We teach you a structured way to talk—Mirroring, Validation, and Empathy—that bypasses the “Old Brain” defences. It turns a potential two-hour argument into a 10-minute bridge of connection.
  • Healing the Invisible: You will map your individual blueprints, finally understanding why you react the way you do, and how to help your partner feel safe enough to put their guard part down.
ImagoRelationshipConsciousConnection coupe on a couch using iimago dialogue
Imago Dialogue offers real skills for you and your partnership

A Note for Fellow Clinicians

If your clients are stuck in a cycle of reactivity that a 50-minute session can’t break, this intensive is the booster shot they need. They return to your rooms regulated, articulate, and ready for the deep work you do. Refer with confidence to a team that lives the model and respects their therapist.

Meet Your Imago Guides: The Masters of the Heart Map

Philipa Thornton and Chris Paulin aren’t just facilitators; they are a husband-and-wife team who bring a combined 70+ years of psychological expertise to the room.

  • Philipa Thornton: A Master Imago Therapist Guide and Psychologist who specialises in the “Deep Architecture” of the heart. She identifies the “Imago” blueprint and helps you navigate back to a state of capable, conscious connection.
  • Chris Paulin: The “Helper Husband” with 45 years of clinical skin in the game (including his distinguished work with NSW Health). Chris is the grounded anchor who makes the complex simple. He proves that even the most hesitant partner can find their way back to the heart.

A Weekend of Radical Privacy

We know the biggest barrier to seeking help: the fear of “sharing” your business with strangers. Rest assured, this is a private, sacred experience. * Group sharing is 100% optional. Your deep work is done entirely with your partner. You won’t be “put on the spot.”

  • The Sacred Dialogue: We teach you a structured way to talk—Mirroring, Validation, and Empathy—that bypasses the “Old Brain” defences. It turns a potential two-hour argument into a 10-minute bridge of connection.
  • A Sanctuary in Crows Nest: Step out of the “daily admin” and into a space designed for your relationship to breathe again.

Stop Surviving. Start Awakening.

This August, step out of the “Roommate Trap” and back into the Love You Actually Want. A relationship is not something you “find”; it is something you build, day by day, with the right tools and a little bit of grace.


Join the Evolution in Crows Nest

  • Date: 22–23 August 2026
  • Location: Crows Nest Community Centre, Sydney
  • The Vibe: High-end, private, and profoundly transformative.
  • Availability: Strictly limited to 10 couples to ensure the energy stays deep and the focus sharp.

End the stalemate and rediscover the magic.

Chris and I warmly invite you to this wonderful workshop and upgrade your relationship and heal your family.

The Architecture of Connection: 6 Communication Keys to Master Relationship Conflict

By Philipa Thornton | Specialist Imago Relationship Psychologist

Why Your Biggest Arguments Are Actually Your Greatest Opportunities

Conflict is an inevitable ‘guest’ in every intimate relationship. The presence of friction isn’t what predicts a relationship’s demise. No – it’s how we navigate those turbulent waters.

As an Imago psychologist, I often remind couples that conflict is rarely a sign that things are “broken.” More often, it is a flashing neon signal that something vital is trying to be understood, healed, or expressed.

When we feel hurt, unseen, or criticised, our internal “alarm system” tends to take the wheel. We might find ourselves slipping into old, over-learned behaviours—getting a bit “retro” by snapping or, conversely, numbing out and withdrawing entirely. These are our protective parts responses, they usually deepen the disconnect.

The good news? Healthy communication is a high-level skill that can be mastered. By understanding our internal personality parts – our inner crew and applying intentional tools, we can turn moments of tension into a pathway for deeper healing and “Captain-of-the-moment” consciousness.

1. The Power of the Pause: Slowing Down to Reclaim Your ‘Calm Captain’

When our emotions run high, communication becomes fast, reactive, and what psychologists call “flooded.” In this state, our logical brain goes offline, and we are driven by unresolved anxiety or hyper-vigilance. It’s impossible to be a supportive partner when your nervous system thinks it’s being chased by a sabre-toothed tiger!

Slowing things down is the most powerful way to reclaim safety.

  • The Technique: Pause. Breathe – make it a longer outbreath. Speak in shorter sentences.
  • The Result: When you slow the tempo, you allow your “Captain” the part of you suited to the situation. A part that is calm, capable, and appropriate for the “now” to take the helm. A slower pace prevents “hit and run” comments you’ll regret and gives your partner’s nervous system a chance to settle back into the room with you.

2. Vulnerability Over Venting: Speak from Feelings, Not Accusations

Blame is the fastest way to trigger a defensive state in your partner. When we lead with “You always…” or “You never…”, we aren’t inviting a conversation; we’re starting a deposition. From the marital lab of the Gottman clinic, criticism is a predictor of divorce. In the world of elite communication, we call this “Leading with the Need.”

Instead, speak from your own raw experience. Use “I” statements to describe the vulnerability underneath the frustration.

  • Try This: “I felt a bit rejected and quite lonely when I was speaking and the topic changed suddenly.” * Why it Works: This shift moves the conversation away from a courtroom drama and back into the heart. It helps your partner hear the longing or the hurt beneath the complaint, rather than just the “noise” of the attack.
This visualization, titled "Iceberg Model of Meaning," illustrates a concept in psychology and communication that suggests only a small portion of what we perceive is consciously processed, while the vast majority lies beneath the surface. The image uses the metaphor of an iceberg to divide meaning into two main categories: surface meaning and deeper meaning, each influenced by distinct psychological factors.
The Iceberg Model of Meaning. GettyImages.

3. Radical Listening: Understanding is Not Agreement

Many couples listen only to “reload” their next rebuttal. This is a common trap where a normally capable person shows up in the wrong role, the “Prosecutor.”

Real listening in the Imago tradition is about entering your partner’s world, crossing the bridge meeting their unique parts, even if you see the landscape differently.

  • The Mindset Shift: When a person feels genuinely heard, their pulse rate drops and their defences soften.
  • The Golden Rule: Remember, understanding does not mean agreement. It simply means making space for your partner’s reality to exist alongside your own. You’re not conceding the argument; you’re building a bridge.

4. The Mirror Effect: Reflecting to Connect

One of the most transformative tools in relationship work is simple reflection (Mirroring). Before you launch into your “side” of the story, say back what you heard in your own words. I recommend at the start, using your partners exact wording, and then working out the best fit for you both.

  • The Script: “So, if I’m getting this, you felt dismissed and not seen ‘ when I looked at my phone while you were talking? Is that right?” * The Impact: This technique halts the habit of pushing feelings down or avoiding the real issue. It validates your partner’s experience and provides an immediate bridge back to connection. It also gives them the chance to clarify, ensuring you aren’t fighting a ghost of a misunderstanding.

5. Curious Observation: What’s Really Under the Hood?

Most arguments aren’t actually about the dishes, the budget, or the tone of voice. Those are just the stage sets. Underneath the conflict, there is usually a deeper “part” calling out for attention. Is there a feeling of disappointment? Are old childhood patterns repeating themselves?

Curiosity is the antidote to judgment.

  • The Insight: Instead of asking, “Who is right?” ask, “What part is hurting here?” * The Shift: When you view your partner’s reactivity as a temporary state, part with a need, rather than a permanent character flaw, empathy becomes possible. You move from being adversaries to being co-researchers in each other’s happiness.

6. The Art of the Repair: Winning the Relationship, Not the Argument

No couple communicates perfectly 100% of the time. Chris, my husband, and I fight, progress, not perfection. We all slip into reactive states or get a bit “clunky” with our words. What distinguishes a thriving, high-performance relationship is the speed and sincerity of the repair.

  • The Micro-Repair: A gentle touch, a playful wink and smile, or a sincere, “That came out badly—my ‘Calm Captain’ definitely wasn’t at the wheel. Let me try that again.”
  • What’s the The Long-Term Value of the go again? Repair builds a “weather-proof” trust. It reminds both of you that the bond you share is far more important than the point you were trying to prove.

The Path to Conscious Love

Healthy communication isn’t about the total absence of conflict—that’s often just avoidance in disguise! It’s about learning how to stay connected while navigating your differences. By recognising when you’ve lost your way and consciously stepping back into a calm, benchmark state, you transform conflict into a tool for growth. With practice, these tools allow you to show up as the best version of yourself, ready to suit the occasion with the skills

Is it time to move from “Retro” habits to Conscious Connection?

Understanding the 6 communication keys is the blueprint, but building the “Architecture of Connection” happens in the room. If you’re tired of the same old “Vaded” patterns and ready to reclaim your relationship’s “Captain” state, I invite you to a deeper experience.

Join us for the Getting the Love You Want’ Imago Couples specialist weekend program.

It is an immersive, private, and transformative weekend away, designed to turn your conflict into a doorway for healing. No group sharing, just you and your partner, working together, and the tools to build a love that lasts.

Engaged? Taylor & Travis just did it—here’s how to make your “yes” last

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce just announced their engagement 💍—cue the glitter, champagne, and endless playlists. If you’re newly engaged, too, congratulations! It’s a magical time, but let’s be honest: planning a wedding can bring as much stress as sparkle.

That’s where Imago Relationship Therapy gives you tools to laugh more, fight less, and grow a marriage that lasts.

At Marriage Works, we believe love lives in the everyday moments—what we call Love in the Real World. Here’s a playful guide to get started.


Talk so love doesn’t get lost in the planning

Wedding chat can turn tense fast (hello, guest lists 🙃). Imago dialogue slows things down so both of you feel heard:

  1. Mirror: “I hear you saying…”
  2. Validate: “That makes sense or I can understand …”
  3. Empathise: “I imagine you might be feeling…”

Try this tonight: Pick one tiny topic (cake flavour, song choice) and practise the three steps. If you end up laughing—bonus points.


Zero negativity (ZNP) = maximum fun

Stress brings snark. Imago’s Zero Negativity Pact helps keep it kind.
Swap: “You never help!”
For: “Would you be willing to call the florist by Friday?”

Couple cue: If negativity sneaks in, one of you says, “Reset?” and you both start fresh.


Small rituals, big connection

Engagement isn’t just planning—it’s practice for the life ahead. Build mini-rituals now:

  • Daily appreciation: one thing you love about your partner (tiny and specific). E.g. I love you, bring me coffee in the morning, you are so thoughtful.
  • Weekly check-in: 30 minutes on connection, logistics, and dreams. E.g. What wins did we have this week? How can we celebrate?
  • Stretching: do one thing that matters to your partner—even if it’s not your style. (Yes, slow dancing in the kitchen counts 💃🕺.)

Why start before the wedding?

Because wedding stress is like a training ground. If you can practise dialogue, zero negativity, and tiny rituals now, you’ll be better prepared for the everyday joys (and bumps) of married life.


💌 Want more?

  • Join our newsletter Love in the Real World for bite-sized inspiration, real stories, and practical tips to keep your relationship thriving.

Getting the Love You Want: A Psychologist’s Journey Into One of the World’s Most Transformative Relationship Workshops

After decades of working as a psychologist, couples therapist, and trainer, I thought I had seen it all when it came to helping people reconnect. Then I experienced the Getting the Love You Want weekend Imago couples workshop. It was unlike anything I had ever encountered: powerful, practical, and deeply moving, and it changed the way I think about relationships, both in my professional work, and in my marriage.

Grounded in Imago Relationship Theory, and Therapy, this internationally acclaimed program is not only for romantic couples. It is equally powerful for therapists, friends, colleagues, parent–adult child pairs, and adult siblings anyone who wants to communicate more effectively, understand each other more deeply, and build a relationship that lasts.


Where it all Began – A Love Story with Challenges

The Getting the Love You Want workshop was created by Dr Harville Hendrix, and Dr Helen LaKelly Hunt in the late 1980s. Their vision grew from both professional expertise, and personal crisis.

At one point, Helen, and Harville’s marriage was on the brink of collapse. They had even flown to New York to tell their children they were divorcing. Before meeting them, they wandered into a bookstore. That chance moment sparked deep conversations about love, safety, and connection. From that turning point, they developed the concepts and practices that became Imago Relationship Therapy (Hendrix & Hunt, 2017).


Meeting Helen in Las Vegas

A few years ago, I had the privilege of meeting Helen at the Imago International Conference in Las Vegas. She shared that story with me in person, and her openness, humour, and hope struck me. Hearing directly from one of the founders reminded me that Imago is not just a therapy model. It is a lived experience, forged in the fire of real-life relationships.


From Pain to a Global Movement

Since its creation, Imago Relationship Therapy has grown into a worldwide movement helping couples, families, and communities. In recent years, Helen, and Harville have refined their work into the 5Rs framework, a clear roadmap for creating and sustaining safe, connected relationships (Hendrix & Hunt, 2021).


The 5Rs: a Roadmap for Re-Connection

When you attend the workshop, you are guided through five key steps:

  1. Re-Commit – Making a conscious choice to invest in your relationship.
  2. Re-Image – Seeing each other with fresh eyes, free from past assumptions.
  3. Re-Structure – Learning the Intentional Dialogue, a structured way to speak and listen without defensiveness.
  4. Re-Romanticise – Rebuilding joy, appreciation, and playfulness.
  5. Re-Vision – Creating a shared vision for the future you both want.

Each step is practised in real time with your partner, colleague, or family member, so you leave not just inspired but equipped with tools you can use immediately. The bonus of having your personal workshop manual to refer to post-workshop is undeniable.


Common Fears

Many people hesitate before attending, wondering:

  • Will we have to share personal details in front of strangers?
    No. This is not group therapy. All personal work happens privately in your pair.
  • Is group sharing mandatory?
    No. Group sharing is optional and focuses on insights, not private stories.
  • What if we argue?
    The safety and structure of the Intentional Dialogue mean reactive patterns are stopped before they spiral. Our team will be there to assist you. You don’t have to go it alone.

While you work privately, seeing others practise can be inspiring. Many participants say that witnessing another pair’s courage helps them believe change is possible in their relationship.

Each step is practised in real time with your partner, colleague or family member, so you leave not only inspired but also equipped with practical tools you can start using straight away. You will also take home your own workshop manual, a valuable resource you can return to again and again to keep building your connection long after the workshop ends.


Is it Only for Couples?

While many people attend with their romantic partner, the workshop is equally powerful for:

  • Therapists attending with a colleague for professional development
  • Parent, and adult child pairs
  • Adult siblings
  • Friends or business partners wanting a deeper understanding and improved communication

Why this Work Matters to Me

As psychologists, and as a married couple, Chris, and I do not just teach relational skills; we use them. The Getting the Love You Want tools have helped us navigate differences, dramas, disconnects, deepen our understanding, and stay connected through the ups and downs of life.

Attending this weekend workshop with Chris years ago was so powerful, I am now on the journey to becoming a certified Getting the Love You Want Workshop presenter. My goal is to share this life-changing work with couples, families, and colleagues here in Australia soon.


Be the First to Know

If you are curious about the Getting the Love You Want workshop and would like to be the first to hear when I offer it, you can join my mailing list here for updates. I would love to one day meet you and share this wonderful journey with you.


References

Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H. L. (2017). Doing Imago relationship therapy in the space-between: A clinician’s guide. Routledge.


Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H. L. (2019). Getting the love you want: A guide for couples (20th anniversary ed.). St. Martin’s Griffin.


Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H. L. (2021). The space between: The 5Rs of safe and connected relationships. Penguin.


Johnson, S. M. (2019). Attachment theory in practice: Emotionally focused therapy (EFT) with individuals, couples, and families. Guilford Press.


Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The seven principles for making marriage work (2nd ed.). Harmony.


Tatkin, S. (2016). Wired for love: How understanding your partner’s brain and attachment style can help you defuse conflict and build a secure relationship. New Harbinger.

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Getting the Love You Want in August 2026

Hi there, just a quick note that we are running this renowned Imago Couples Workshop in Sydney, Australia.

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