Most couples who reach out to me are not struggling because they lack love; they're struggling because communication feels overwhelming, frightening or repetitive.
People often tell me they don't understand how a conversation that begins gently can so quickly become a moment of panic, withdrawal or escalation. Before they realise it, the conversation has shifted from connection into self-protection.
Many feel stuck in the same argument again and again, confused about why things spiral so quickly or why neither person can say what they really mean.
Research from John Gottman shows that once the nervous system becomes overwhelmed, the parts of the brain responsible for empathy, timing and listening temporarily shut down. Daniel Siegel's work demonstrates that when people feel threatened — emotionally or physically — the language and reasoning centres of the brain go offline.
This means most repetitive conflict is not about the surface topic; it is about fear, longing, attachment needs or emotional meaning that sits underneath the words. My role as a Marriage, Relationship & Couples Counsellor is to help couples slow these moments down so communication becomes calmer, clearer and safer.
How Do I Find a Marriage, Relationship & Couples Counsellor Near Me Who I Can Trust?
When people search "marriage counsellor near me" or "relationship counselling near me," they're often overwhelmed. Some practitioners are highly trained and experienced; others simply use the title "counsellor" despite having no postgraduate qualifications.
Choosing someone who understands the complexity of relationships, conflict, communication and emotional safety can make a profound difference to the outcome.
I'm Linda Thomson, MCouns, MSW, GradDipEntrep — Marriage, Relationship & Couples Counsellor based in Tewantin in the Noosa region, offering in-person and online sessions across the Sunshine Coast, Australia and internationally.
Over three decades, I've worked with communication breakdown, ongoing conflict, emotional distance, infidelity, anxiety, grief, stress and neurodivergent relationship dynamics. My approach is steady, warm and grounded in research on attachment theory, conflict patterns and nervous-system regulation.
"I started telehealth with Linda, feeling overwhelmed by relationship stress and anxiety. I had never seen a counsellor before and assumed I'd have to change everything about myself. I didn't. Linda helped me understand that I wasn't broken — that there was more right with me than wrong — and that the problems weren't as impossible as they felt. Things became clearer, and I finally felt grounded again."
— Client testimonial (shared with permission, de-identified)
Why Do We Keep Having the Same Argument Over and Over Again?
Couples across Noosa, Tewantin and the wider Sunshine Coast often describe the same painful cycle: a minor irritation or comment becomes something much bigger, much faster than either person expects. Learn more about why couples keep arguing about the same things.
Gottman's research shows that when the heart rate rises into "flooding" (usually around 100–110 bpm), perception narrows and listening accuracy drops sharply. People are no longer responding to the words — they're responding to the threat. This is when destructive patterns like criticism and stonewalling take over.
Daniel Siegel's writing on interpersonal neurobiology explains that when someone feels emotionally unsafe, the prefrontal cortex (the part of the brain responsible for patience, insight and time-keeping) temporarily shuts down. In this state, even well-intentioned conversations feel dangerous.
The argument isn't about dishes, tone or timing — it's about feeling alone, unimportant or misunderstood.
In counselling, we slow everything down so you can see the emotional logic underneath the conflict: the longing to feel close, the fear of being dismissed, the panic that comes from not knowing how to get through to each other. Once that deeper meaning becomes visible, arguments soften and shift. You stop fighting each other and start addressing the fear beneath the pattern.
My Partner Struggles with My Family — And I Can't Change My Family. What Do We Do?
This is one of the most common dilemmas couples raise in sessions. Family systems activate identity, belonging, loyalty, culture and old attachment wounds. It's rarely simple.
Gottman's forty-year study highlights that nearly 69% of relationship problems are "perpetual" — they cannot be solved logically because they stem from history, temperament or long-established emotional patterns.
You cannot change your family dynamics, and your partner cannot simply switch off discomfort or hurt. But you can learn to stay connected while navigating the unchangeable.
Sue Johnson's attachment-based research shows that when couples shift from "defend and protect" to "connect and reveal" — saying things like "I want you to feel safe when we're around my family" or "I know you can't change them, but I need to feel protected" — tension eases and the emotional burden lightens.
The goal is not choosing sides. It is standing together while facing what cannot be changed.
Is There Ever a Way to Solve Our Problems Without Fighting All the Time?
Yes — but not because the problems disappear.
Couples who thrive long-term aren't the ones who avoid conflict but the ones who know how to move through it gently, with emotional safety intact. When the nervous system feels settled enough to speak honestly and listen openly, conversations transform.
This is where the micro-skills matter: pacing, tone, timing, breath awareness and the practice of "repair" (Gottman's term for the tiny moves that bring people back into connection).
In therapy, we practise conversations that reduce threat, increase clarity and build emotional steadiness. When the body feels safe, people think more clearly and argue less intensely. The cycles of escalation lose their power, and repair becomes quicker and more natural.
Local Noosa & Tewantin Spaces Before or After Your Session
Many people find it helpful to arrive a few minutes early or to take some time afterwards before stepping back into their day. Research in environmental psychology shows that gentle outdoor environments reduce cortisol, improve cognitive clarity and help the nervous system integrate emotional work.
Noosa Marina (calm water views)
Gympie Terrace (river path)
If you prefer nature, the shaded walking tracks at Noosa Woods offer privacy and calm. For a softer indoor environment, VanillaFood in Noosa Junction is a favourite.
Taking a few minutes in spaces like these helps the body regulate, especially after deeper conversations. Many couples tell me these grounding rituals make a significant difference to how they take the work back into their everyday lives.
Sessions, Fees & Practical Information
In-Person
Unit 11B, Ground Level, Tewantin Plaza, 113 Poinciana Ave, Tewantin QLD 4565
Online
Available Australia-wide and internationally
Contact
Related Services
- Relationship Counselling in Noosa
- Marriage, Relationship & Couples Counselling
- ADHD Couples Counselling
- Individual Counselling
Related Blog Posts
- Why Couples Keep Arguing About the Same Things
Understand the pursuer-withdrawer pattern driving repetitive conflict
- The Four Horsemen: How Conflict Turns Toxic
Recognise criticism, contempt, defensiveness and stonewalling before they damage your relationship
- How Unresolved Feelings Keep Relationships Stuck
Learn why unprocessed emotions resurface during conflict