When Should You See a Marriage Counselor in Tucson?

TL;DR — Key Takeaways

→ Most couples wait six years between when problems begin and when they seek help. The damage compounds in those years.

→ You do not need a crisis to begin. Recurring arguments, silence, lost trust, or feeling like roommates are all reasons enough.

→ Marriage coaching is skills based and forward focused. Three out of four couples want instructions, not explanations.

→ Tucson carries particular pressures. Military families at Davis-Monthan and first responder families face strains the research documents clearly.

→ Help works. Per the AAMFT, over three-fourths of couples in therapy report meaningful improvement. Earlier is better.

We rarely ask whether it is time to see a dentist. We feel the ache, and we make the call.

Marriage is different.

We tell ourselves the ache will pass. We wait. We hope the next month will be softer than the last.

I am Paul Zohav. I hold an M.Ed. in Counseling from the University of Virginia, and over 30 years I have coached more than 3,000 couples here in Tucson and worldwide. I want to offer you a clear answer to a question many couples in our city carry quietly:

When is it time?

The honest answer is that most of us wait too long. Research from the Gottman Institute found that couples wait an average of six years from the time problems begin until they seek help. Six years is a long time for resentment to settle in.

I invite you to consider that the better question is not whether things are bad enough yet. The better question is what you get to build if you begin now.

01 — The Same Argument Keeps Repeating

Does one fight in your home wear the same clothes every time? Different words, same wound.

This is one of the clearest signs.

Dr. John Gottman found that roughly two-thirds of marital conflict is perpetual. These are not problems to be solved once. They are differences to be managed with skill over a lifetime. When a couple has no skill for managing them, the same argument returns, and each return leaves a mark.

Gottman’s research identified four patterns that predict divorce with striking accuracy: criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling. Of these, contempt is the single greatest predictor of divorce. Contempt is criticism that has hardened into disdain.

Here is what I teach instead.

We replace reactive language. We retire “you always” and “you never” and “you should”. In their place we practice “It seems…”, “I notice…”, and “Help me understand…” This is not softness. It is precision.

I offer that the repeating argument is a symptom, not a cause. Then the relevant question becomes: a symptom of what?

That is the work. Begin it before the pattern hardens.

02 — The Conversations Have Stopped

There is a quiet that is peace, and a quiet that is distance. We know the difference.

When a couple stops talking about anything beyond logistics, the groceries, the carpool, the bills, something important is starving.

Gottman’s “magic ratio” found that stable marriages maintain at least five positive interactions for every negative one, while couples heading toward divorce fall closer to a one-to-one ratio. Affection, humor, small repairs, and turning toward each other are not extras. They are the structure that holds a marriage up.

Most people listen in order to rebut. They wait for their turn.

I teach listening for meaning, which means understanding the emotional reality beneath the words before responding to them.

Paired with this is what I call the “Yes-And” skill. Before you add your own perspective, you acknowledge some truth in what your partner feels. This single move changes the temperature of a conversation.

If the conversation in your home has gone quiet, that silence is information. Do not wait for it to become permanent.

03 — Trust Has Been Broken

When trust is broken, is there a path forward?

I am asked this in my Tucson office more than almost any other question.

Infidelity touches a significant share of marriages. Drawing on General Social Survey data, roughly 20% of married men and 13% of married women report physical infidelity, placing it in about one in five marriages. The pain is real, and so is the possibility of repair.

A widely cited AAMFT survey reported that 74% of couples who underwent therapy after infidelity were able to recover and rebuild their relationship.

I offer that infidelity is a symptom, not a cause. Then the relevant question is: a symptom of what?

Betrayal is rarely about the other person. It is about an unmet need, a long silence, a connection that thinned out before it broke.

My work in infidelity recovery rests on emotional safety and structured apologies. A real apology does not begin with intent. It begins with understanding the emotional impact on the other person.

I choose apology not to make me feel less but to make us more.

Only from that ground can trust be rebuilt.

04 — You Feel More Like Roommates Than Partners

You share an address. Do you still share a life?

Many couples arrive at my practice not in open conflict but in a slow drift. The children, the careers, the mortgage. They have become competent partners in a household and strangers in a marriage.

Pew Research Center found that 58% of married adults say things are going very well in their marriage, against 41% of cohabiting adults. Married adults more often feel closer to their spouse than to any other adult. That closeness is not automatic. It is tended, or it fades.

This drift carries real risk later in life.

Sociologists at Bowling Green State University coined the term “gray divorce” for divorce after age 50. The rate doubled among persons aged 50 and older between 1990 and 2010. Divorce among those 65 and older roughly tripled, rising to about 15.2% by 2022. By 2019, more than one in three U.S. divorces involved someone 50 or older, and the median marriage at first gray divorce had lasted 29 years. Decades of drift end many long marriages.

Here I teach the “We” Framework. We shift from “me versus you” to “us versus the problem.” The drift is the problem. The two of you are the team.

If you have moved in together, or your children have recently moved out, this is precisely the moment to review and renew your marriage for the next 20 years.

05 — One of You Is Considering Leaving

Have you begun to imagine your life apart? Quietly, privately, in the car?

When one partner is seriously considering leaving, motivation becomes the deciding factor.

The effectiveness of coaching is directly tied to the willingness of the two people in the room. I say this plainly because it is true. Waiting until both people have given up makes the work far harder.

This is also where I gently correct a fear. Many believe coaching takes years. It does not have to. According to the AAMFT, marital and couples therapy averages about 11.5 sessions, fewer than the 13 sessions of average individual treatment and fewer than most people expect.

If you are at the edge, do not let pride or exhaustion make the decision for you.

Do this now. Do not wait.

06 — The Children Are Absorbing What Is Unspoken

Children rarely understand the content of our conflict. They absorb its climate.

A home where parents communicate with contempt, or with a silence full of tension, teaches children that this is what love looks like. They carry that lesson forward.

I have sat with many parents in Tucson who came for their marriage and stayed for their family.

This connects to what I call the Fourth R. We teach our children reading, writing, and arithmetic. We rarely teach them relating. Relational skill is a missing life skill, and our children learn it first by watching us.

When the strain in a marriage begins to reach the children, the work often expands to include parent and teen communication. The aim is the same throughout the home: communication with honor and respect.

Children rarely understand the content of our conflict. They absorb its climate.

A home where parents communicate with contempt, or with a silence full of tension, teaches children that this is what love looks like. They carry that lesson forward.

I have sat with many parents in Tucson who came for their marriage and stayed for their family.

This connects to what I call the Fourth R. We teach our children reading, writing, and arithmetic. We rarely teach them relating. Relational skill is a missing life skill, and our children learn it first by watching us.

When the strain in a marriage begins to reach the children, the work often expands to include parent and teen communication. The aim is the same throughout the home: communication with honor and respect.

07 — The Children Are Absorbing What Is Unspoken

Some marriages carry weights that others do not.

Davis-Monthan Air Force Base anchors a large military community in Tucson. By the base’s own count, Davis-Monthan supports 11,000 Airmen and 46,000 personnel. Military marriages face documented strains. Studies tie repeated and lengthy deployments, frequent relocations, and reintegration stress to elevated divorce risk.

There is strong evidence that skills help. In a randomized controlled trial of the PREP for Strong Bonds program delivered to Army couples by chaplains, couples who received the program had roughly one-third the divorce rate of the control group one year later.

Skills, taught well, change outcomes. I offer military couples therapy built on that conviction.

First responder families carry their own load. Law enforcement, border patrol, corrections, and firefighter families across southern Arizona, including the communities around Sierra Vista, live with shift work, hypervigilance, and exposure that does not stay at work.

A study by Desert Waters Correctional Outreach, surveying 3,599 corrections workers, found the prevalence of PTSD symptoms in the prior 30 days was 27% for the entire sample, rising to 31% among security personnel, higher than the general population and higher than other first responders.

As a former domestic abuse counselor and a professional chaplain for some 25 years in hospital and hospice settings, I have sat with people in their hardest hours. That background shapes how I sit with couples now.

My work with first responder families honors the specific reality of that service.

08 — You Are About to Marry

Not every reason to see a marriage coach is a problem. The wisest couples come before the wedding.

Research from the University of Denver found that couples who participated in premarital education had a 31% lower divorce rate, along with higher satisfaction, higher commitment, and lower conflict.

Building skill before the strain arrives is among the soundest investments two people can make.

My premarital coaching introduces the four relationship pillars:

  1. Effective communication
  2. Love languages
  3. Personality dynamics
  4. Childhood imprints

We surface patterns that otherwise run beneath awareness for years. Couples leave with scripts they can use the same day.

If you are engaged, I invite you to begin here.

09 — How Coaching Differs From Traditional Therapy

Why coaching rather than therapy? Here is the distinction I draw.

Three out of four couples are looking for instructions, not explanations.

My program emphasizes skills. The how, not only the why.

Traditional therapy often looks backward to understand origins, and that work has real value. Marriage coaching is practical and forward focused. We name what is so in your marriage today, and we build the specific skills that change it, starting in the first session.

Much of communication trouble is, at root, a nervous system matter. We learn emotional regulation before communication, because no skill survives a flooded mind.

Then we practice the “Get To” reframe, shifting from chronic obligation to conscious gratitude. We do not say we have to talk tonight. We get to.

Evidence-based couples approaches show strong results. Emotionally Focused Therapy, recognized by the American Psychological Association, helps 70 to 75% of couples move from distress to recovery, with about 90% showing significant improvement.

10 — What to Expect Working With Paul

The path is clear and short by design.

Step 1.  It begins with a free 30-minute discovery call. We talk about what is so in your marriage, and we decide together whether this is a good fit. There is no pressure on that call.

Step 2.  My core program is five 90-minute sessions. In that focused arc, couples and families learn and adopt the skills, insights, and best practices for a resilient, loving marriage.

Step 3.  Cost-effective, short-term, and convenient. I work with couples in person across the Tucson area, including Oro Valley, Marana, Sahuarita, and Green Valley, and worldwide via Zoom or Skype.

My counseling is non-religious and welcoming of every couple.

I have been recognized as one of the Best Marriage Counselors in Tucson for 2024, as a Marquis Who’s Who Top Healthcare Professionals 2024 Honored Listee, and as the number one rated marriage counselor in Tucson by Three Best Rated, scoring 117 of 120 inspection points. I am the author of Marriage and Communication: Recipes for Life!, available on Amazon.

“Paul made the connections… almost like a tailor he sewed us back together again.

Both of us are better at communicating, we don’t have vicious fights, and we know we can work through our feelings.”

— Verified Client Review

Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ

Q1.  How do I know if it is really time for marriage counseling?

If you are asking the question, it is time. Recurring arguments, silence, broken trust, or the feeling of living as roommates are all sufficient. You do not need a crisis. Remember the six-year average. The couples who come early have the most to work with.


Q2.  What if my partner refuses to come?

Begin anyway. One partner who learns new skills changes the dynamic between two people. Often the reluctant partner joins once they see the first shifts at home. I work with individuals as well as couples.


Q3.  Is coaching the same as therapy?

No. Coaching is skills based and forward focused. I give direct, practical guidance, because three out of four couples want instructions, not explanations. I am a marriage and communication coach with an M.Ed., not a licensed therapist, and I am clear about that distinction.


Q4.  How many sessions will we need?

My core program is five 90-minute sessions. Marital work tends to be brief by nature; the AAMFT puts the couples average near 11.5 sessions. Many couples find the structure is enough to establish skills they keep using for years.


Q5.  Does insurance cover this?

Coaching is not covered by insurance. Health savings accounts may apply in some cases. Klarna is available at checkout so you can spread the cost over time.


Q6.  Can coaching help after infidelity?

Yes. Trust can be rebuilt when both partners are willing. I work in infidelity recovery through emotional safety and structured apology. I make no guarantees, because no honest coach can. I do offer a clear, proven path.

Q7.  Do you serve clients outside Tucson?

Yes. I serve couples worldwide via Zoom and Skype, in addition to in-person sessions across southern Arizona, including Oro Valley, Marana, Sahuarita, Sierra Vista, and Nogales.

Book a Session with Paul →

Ready to feel real change in just a few sessions?

Paul works with couples worldwide via Zoom. His structured, skills-first approach has helped over 3,000 couples find their footing.

Book a Session with Paul →

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