When conflict in a relationship starts to feel like a loop you can’t escape — the same arguments, the same distance, the same hurt — it’s often a sign that something deeper is at play. Emotionally Focused Therapy, or EFT, was developed to address exactly that: the underlying emotional patterns and attachment needs that drive how we connect with, and disconnect from, the people we love most.
Developed in the 1980s by Dr. Sue Johnson and Les Greenberg, EFT is a structured, short-term therapeutic approach grounded in attachment theory, the science of how human beings form and maintain emotional bonds. The core premise is straightforward: most relationship distress and personal struggles stem not from bad communication habits or personality flaws, but from unmet needs for emotional safety and secure connection.
EFT is most widely used with couples, though it is also effectively applied in individual therapy and family settings. Decades of clinical research support its effectiveness, with studies consistently showing that the majority of couples who complete EFT report significant improvement, and that those gains tend to hold over time.
EFT typically unfolds across three broad stages. The first is de-escalation, where the therapist helps partners identify the negative cycle they’re stuck in — the pursuer who pushes for connection and the withdrawer who pulls away, for example — and understand it as a shared problem rather than evidence that one person is the villain. Simply naming the cycle can bring enormous relief.
The second stage focuses on restructuring the emotional bond itself. With the therapist’s guidance, partners are helped to access and express the deeper, more vulnerable emotions beneath their defensive behaviors: the fear, the longing, the grief that often hides behind anger or silence. When one partner can say “I pull away because I’m terrified of not being enough for you” rather than simply shutting down, it opens a door that criticism and defensiveness keep firmly closed.
The third stage is consolidation: integrating new patterns of interaction into daily life and building a shared narrative of how the relationship has grown and changed.
EFT has shown strong results for couples dealing with chronic conflict, emotional distance, betrayal, and the relational fallout of depression, anxiety, or trauma. It is also highly effective for individuals working through grief, low self-worth, or attachment wounds from childhood.
If you’ve ever felt like your emotional reactions are bigger than the moment seems to warrant, or that you keep replaying the same painful dynamic in your relationships, EFT may offer a meaningful path forward.
Book an appointment with licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) and experienced relationship counselor Nancy Travers to start your journey with EFT. At its heart, this therapeutic technique is about one thing: helping people feel safe enough to be truly known by another person. In a world that often rewards self-sufficiency and emotional armor, that is quietly revolutionary work.
Contact Nancy’s Counseling Corner for anxiety counseling, serving the Los Angeles and Orange County areas.
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