
Couples Therapy
in Laguna Beach, California
Couples Therapy: Rebuild Connection, Communication, and Trust
Relationships can bring joy, intimacy, and belonging—but they can also bring conflict, distance, and pain. Many couples find themselves stuck in repeating arguments, feeling misunderstood, or drifting apart. Couples therapy is not about deciding who is “right” or “wrong.” It is about learning to welcome yourself, so that you can welcome and truly connect with your partner.
Why Couples Choose Therapy with Me
My approach to couples therapy is unique because it integrates:
Warmth and Relational Depth – Shaped by my French cultural roots, I create a compassionate space where both partners feel safe and understood.
Logic and Emotion Together – As a former engineer, I excel at helping the partner who is less comfortable with emotions begin to access and express them.
A Global Perspective – Having lived in France, Spain, Denmark, Taiwan, and the U.S. for the past 30 years, I understand how culture shapes relationships and help couples bridge differences with openness.
A Tailored Approach to Your Relationship
Every couple is different. That’s why I draw from a variety of proven approaches and combine them in ways that best serve you:
Cognitive & Behavioral tools (such as the Gottman Method, mindfulness, and stress regulation) to de-escalate conflict and improve communication.
Emotionally Focused and Attachment-based methods (inspired by Sue Johnson and my own integrative work) to rebuild trust, intimacy, and empathy.
Welcoming Self and the Other – At the heart of my work is the belief that to welcome the other, we must first welcome Self. Couples therapy supports both: deepening awareness of yourself and opening to your partner.
What You Can Expect to Gain
Couples therapy can help you:
Break free from destructive cycles of conflict.
Improve communication and mutual understanding.
Rebuild intimacy, trust, and emotional safety.
Strengthen resilience and connection in your relationship.
Take the First Step Toward Change
If you and your partner are feeling stuck, distant, or overwhelmed, you don’t have to navigate it alone. Therapy can help you reconnect and create a relationship that feels more secure, compassionate, and alive.
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My therapeutic approach focuses on fostering self-awareness, kindness, and genuine compassion. I work with couples and emphasize the importance of recognizing underlying emotions—particularly hurt—that often lie beneath surface emotions like anger. This approach encourages clients to take ownership of their vulnerabilities with tenderness rather than assigning blame, thereby cultivating a safer space for emotional sharing and connection. My style is conversational, transparent, and gentle, aiming to model how to embrace one’s humanity without judgment. I highlight the value of trust and self-judgment in therapy, inviting clients to reflect on what feels right for them. Confidentiality and client consent guide the sharing of therapy sessions, ensuring respect for privacy while illustrating therapeutic themes. Overall, the my method emphasizes emotional openness, vulnerability, and the cultivation of relational safety as key elements of healing and growth.
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[00:00] 🧑⚕️ Introduction to therapy style focusing on self-awareness and kindness.
[00:35] 💬 Conversational and transparent therapeutic approach.
[01:03] 💔 Exploring anger as a secondary emotion, often masking hurt.
[01:34] 🤝 Encouraging ownership of emotions with tenderness to foster openness.
[02:07] 🔄 The role of vulnerability in creating safe relational spaces.
[02:30] 🌟 Therapist models transparency to demonstrate handling vulnerabilities.
[03:03] 💖 Therapy’s core goal: welcoming humanity without judgment.
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[00:00] 🧠 Therapeutic Focus on Self-Compassion and Awareness: The therapist highlights that the core of their work revolves around connecting clients to themselves through awareness and kindness. This foundation is crucial because genuine power and compassion arise not from control or judgment but from embracing one’s inner experience with gentleness. This approach aligns with contemporary therapeutic models that emphasize mindfulness and self-compassion as pathways to healing.
[01:03] 💔 Anger as a Secondary Emotion: The therapist points out that anger in couples often serves as a protective layer over deeper feelings of hurt. This insight is significant because it shifts the therapeutic focus away from blame and defensiveness toward understanding and addressing the underlying emotional pain. Recognizing anger as secondary helps couples move beyond conflict and toward emotional repair by acknowledging vulnerability rather than reacting to surface-level hostility.
[01:34] 🤲 Ownership of Emotional Hurt with Tenderness: Encouraging clients to own their emotional pain tenderly rather than accusing others transforms how emotions are expressed and received. This practice reduces defensiveness and creates an environment where both partners feel safe to share honestly. The therapist’s emphasis on tenderness in communication underscores the importance of emotional regulation and empathy in relational dynamics.
[02:07] 🛡️ Creating Safe Spaces for Vulnerability: The therapist discusses the systemic role of both partners in providing safety for vulnerability. This insight reveals that therapy is not just about individual emotions but about relational systems that either facilitate or hinder emotional openness. Safety enables authentic sharing, which is vital for intimacy and healing. Therapeutic work thus involves reshaping relational patterns to support vulnerability rather than suppress it.
[02:30] 👥 Therapist’s Transparency as a Therapeutic Tool: By being transparent and modeling vulnerability, the therapist provides an example for clients on how to engage with their own vulnerabilities. This method can normalize the experience of discomfort and uncertainty in therapy, encouraging clients to embrace their humanity rather than hide it. Transparency from the therapist fosters trust and sets a tone of acceptance and non-judgment.
[03:03] 🌱 Welcoming Humanity Without Judgment: The therapist identifies judgment as the antithesis of healing and highlights the importance of a gentle, non-judgmental stance. This perspective is essential because judgment often inhibits openness and fosters shame, which can block growth. The therapist’s gentle style invites clients to experience therapy as a safe, nurturing space where they can accept themselves fully.
[03:03] 📱 Accessibility and Relational Approach: The therapist mentions providing clients with direct contact information, emphasizing availability and openness outside of sessions. This aspect reflects a relational, client-centered approach that values ongoing support and connection, reinforcing the therapeutic alliance beyond formal sessions. It suggests a commitment to meeting clients’ needs in a flexible, human-centered way.
This therapy approach prioritizes emotional honesty, relational safety, and self-compassion, aiming to transform conflict into connection and vulnerability into strength. My style is warm, transparent, and invitational, creating a therapeutic environment conducive to deep personal and relational growth.
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This is the recording of an actual couples therapy session (extracts)
This video segment presents a compassionate, empathy-centered model of couples therapy that emphasizes soft emotional connection alongside practical life skills. Awareness, vulnerability, and softness are promoted as essential for healing relational wounds caused by miscommunication and unmet deeper needs. The therapy process involves learning from specific incidents, fostering empathy, and shifting communication away from anger towards kindness. Progress is understood as gradual and requires intentional mindset and communication changes to reduce pain and build bridges in relationships.
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[00:00] Introduction to Therapeutic Approach
[00:33] Encouragement to Allow Softness
[01:06] Role of Emotions and Executive Skills
[01:44] Leveraging Empathy
[02:18] Vulnerability and Emotional Softness
[02:55] Deconstructing Specific Incidents
[03:24] Raising Awareness of Emotional Needs
[03:51] Practical Therapy Advice
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[00:00] Emphasis on self-connection, awareness, kindness, and confidentiality in online therapy.
[00:33] Therapist highlights the importance of softness alongside executive functioning.
[01:06] Balancing emotions for love and executive skills for stability.
[01:44] Empathy as an innate human capacity essential to couples therapy.
[02:18] Therapy requires vulnerability and emotional openness to enable empathy.
[02:55] Analyzing communication and inferred meanings to reveal deeper needs.
[03:24] Helping clients recognize sadness and loneliness and express these softly instead of with anger.
[03:51] Emphasizing incremental progress and enhanced problem-solving through empathy in online therapy.
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This is the recording of an actual couples therapy session (extracts)
Therapy involves balancing two cognitive modules: a rational analysis module and an emotional module. While the rational module governs logical thinking and decision-making, especially in work-related contexts, the emotional module is crucial for human relationships. What serves well in professional settings—such as suppressing emotions to “plow through” challenges—may hinder meaningful interpersonal connections if applied indiscriminately. The discussion highlights the importance of integrating emotional awareness into our understanding of rationality, suggesting an expanded concept of rationality that acknowledges human wiring for connection and emotional responses as adaptive and essential. I invite reflection on when and how to engage with emotions, particularly in relationships, to foster compassion and authentic connection rather than detachment. Ultimately, therapy aims to help clients become more comfortable with their emotions and better able to navigate the emotional experiences of themselves and others, thus cultivating genuine power and compassion.ion text goes here
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[00:00] 🎥 Introduction to the therapeutic approach focusing on self-awareness and kindness.
[00:33] 🧠 Explanation of two modules: rational analysis and emotional understanding.
[01:37] 💼 Rationality serves well in work but can hinder human relationships if emotions are ignored.
[02:22] 🔬 Strong research evidence that humans are wired for connection, highlighting the irrationality of emotional suppression in relationships.
[03:45] 🤖 Reframing rationality to include biological and emotional wiring, making emotional responses rational in an expanded sense.
[04:22] 💬 Importance of discernment in knowing when to engage or set aside emotions, especially in intimate relationships.
[05:25] 💡 Therapy’s goal: processing emotions to enhance connection and compassion with self and others.
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[00:00] 🎯 The therapeutic focus on connecting to self through awareness and kindness underscores a holistic approach that values both cognitive and emotional dimensions of human experience. This dual focus is fundamental to fostering genuine power and compassion rather than superficial coping mechanisms.
[00:33] 🧩 The distinction between a rational analysis module and an emotional module reflects contemporary psychological understanding that human cognition is multifaceted. Recognizing these modules helps clients understand when to rely on logic and when to honor emotional experiences. This dual-process model is essential in therapy for balancing executive functioning with emotional intelligence.
[01:37] ⚖️ The therapist’s observation that emotional suppression benefits work performance but harms personal relationships highlights a crucial paradox. In professional contexts, detachment can increase efficiency, yet the same detachment may cause loved ones to feel misunderstood or isolated. This insight stresses the need for context-specific emotional regulation strategies.
[02:22] 🧬 Citing research on human wiring for connection, including the extreme example of solitary confinement as torture, frames emotional needs as fundamentally rational from a survival perspective. This challenges narrow definitions of rationality that dismiss emotion as irrational, advocating instead for a rationality inclusive of emotional and social needs.
[03:45] 🔄 The proposal to expand rationality to incorporate our biological and emotional wiring is a sophisticated reframing that aligns with integrative approaches in neuroscience and psychology. It recognizes that humans are not purely rational agents but organisms with evolved emotional systems that serve adaptive functions. This expanded rationality supports healthier emotional processing and decision-making.
[04:22] 🔍 The therapist’s invitation to develop discernment about when to engage emotions reflects a nuanced therapeutic goal. Rather than rejecting or suppressing emotions, clients are encouraged to become comfortable with emotional awareness and to selectively apply emotional responses depending on relational contexts. This skill is key to relational intelligence.
[05:25] 🌱 The ultimate therapeutic aim to help clients process their own emotions and those of loved ones promotes emotional resilience and empathy. This work fosters authentic connections, reducing loneliness and enhancing compassion, which are critical for mental health and relational satisfaction.
This video provides a meaningful exploration of how therapy can support individuals in integrating reason and emotion, thereby enriching both personal well-being and interpersonal relationships.
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This is the recording of an actual therapy session (extracts)
The speaks about the emotional complexity present in conflicts between couples. There are two distinct sets of vulnerabilities and pains involved in such conflicts. Often, during disagreements, people overlook the fact that both individuals are experiencing pain, which contributes to the tension and misunderstanding. My tone is empathetic, highlighting the importance of recognizing and holding tenderness for these underlying emotional wounds.
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Conflicts in couples are underpinned by two separate but simultaneous experiences of pain.
Awareness of these vulnerabilities is crucial to understanding the dynamics of conflict.
In the heat of conflict, people often forget or fail to acknowledge the mutual pain involved.
Holding tenderness towards both sides’ vulnerabilities can lead to better empathy and resolution.
Implications for Conflict Resolution:Moving beyond surface arguments to address underlying emotional pain.
Cultivating empathy by acknowledging the other’s and one’s own vulnerabilities.
Avoiding blame by understanding that conflict often arises from two people in pain, not just one at fault.
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This is the recording of an actual couples therapy session (extracts)
In this session extracts I emphasize moving away from blame and rationalizing interpersonal conflicts toward acknowledging and sharing personal emotions with tenderness and ownership. The goal is to foster genuine power and compassion within relationships.
Throughout the session, I guides clients to explore their feelings of loneliness, hurt, and rejection, encouraging them to move beyond the typical “you did this” accusations. Instead, clients are invited to identify and express their own pain, fears of not being loved, and feelings of inadequacy. This approach aims to create emotional bridges rather than deepen divides.
I highlight the importance of understanding one’s own emotions and the power that comes with owning those feelings, suggesting that this self-awareness can lead to more creative and compassionate solutions in relationships. The session also touches on the fight-or-flight response in conflicts and the need for tenderness toward one’s own pain to break this cycle. I encourages kindness to oneself, noting that many people have a history of self-criticism that must be addressed as part of healing.
In summary, the therapy promotes emotional honesty, self-compassion, and mutual understanding as foundational steps toward resolving relational distress and fostering genuine connection and love.
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Highlights
[00:00] 🎥 Introduction to therapy approach focusing on self-awareness and kindness.
[01:04] 💬 I invite clients to share emotions rather than justify actions.
[02:08] ❤️ Emphasizing sharing emotions with ownership to foster care, not blame.
[04:04] 🔍 Encouraging clients to connect with their own pain for empowerment.
[05:50] 🧠 Warning against letting analytic minds override emotional awareness.
[06:52] 🥊 Recognizing fight-or-flight responses and the importance of tenderness.
[07:40] 🌱 Practicing kindness toward self and understanding personal pain in conflict.
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[00:33] 🧩 Balancing Multiple Truths: I acknowledges the existence of multiple valid perspectives in a conflict, encouraging clients to hold these truths simultaneously. This approach helps reduce defensiveness by validating the complexity of feelings involved. Recognizing that both partners’ experiences are valid creates a more empathetic foundation for dialogue.
[01:38] 💡 Moving from Blame to Emotional Ownership: Instead of focusing on accusations (“you did this”), I guide clients to articulate their internal emotional experience. This shift reduces antagonism and fosters vulnerability, which is essential for authentic connection. Emotional ownership means taking responsibility for one’s feelings without blaming the other, which opens new relational possibilities.
[04:04] 🔗 Connection to Self as a Path to Empowerment: I emphasize that making contact with one’s own pain is not about suffering but about gaining integrity and empowerment through awareness. This insight reframes emotional pain as an opportunity for growth rather than something to be avoided or suppressed, which can strengthen resilience in relationships.
[05:17] 🧠 Limitations of Over-Analysis in Emotional Contexts: While analytical thinking is a strength, it can sometimes interfere with emotional processing in relationships. I caution that an overly rational approach might obscure genuine emotional needs, leading to misunderstandings or emotional disconnection. Balancing intellect with emotional openness is key to effective therapy.
[06:52] 🥊 Recognizing Fight-or-Flight Responses in Conflict: The session highlights how couples often enter a symbolic “boxing ring,” triggered by survival instincts like fight or flight. Understanding that anger and withdrawal are protective responses to pain can help couples respond with more compassion rather than escalation. This insight promotes a more mindful approach to conflict.
[07:15] 🌿 Creative Potential from Mutual Tenderness: When partners share their pain tenderly and respond with kindness, new solutions and possibilities emerge. I point out that the usual patterns of managing conflict individually limit growth, but emotional openness can foster joint decision-making and creative problem-solving. This insight underscores the transformative power of vulnerability in relationships.
[07:40] 💖 Self-Kindness as a Foundation for Relational Healing: I impart that being gentle with oneself during conflict is crucial because many individuals have internalized harsh self-judgments. Practicing self-compassion can reduce shame and defensiveness, allowing partners to be more emotionally available and responsive to each other. This insight connects self-care directly to relational health.
Overall, the video provides a rich exploration of therapy aimed at deep emotional connection, emphasizing kindness toward self and others as a pathway to healing and authentic partnership. The session models how this process can be facilitated by inviting clients to explore and articulate their inner emotional landscapes rather than getting stuck in blame or rationalization.
About Fabrice
“ My practice is enriched by life experiences and warmth from Europe and Asia. I taught psychotherapy to graduate students and am supervising therapists in-training. I was influenced by my experience of receiving therapy in my late teens, and most profoundly, by my experience of becoming a father.
I view the purpose of therapy as welcoming Self. For self includes at the core vibrancy, courage, and love. This has been my experience with everyone I have worked with thus fas (and with myself as well). To that end, I integrate approaches that help regulate the nervous system, cultivate awareness, and invite empathy toward Self.
Prior to psychotherapy I received graduate education in engineering and business administration, I worked in larges businesses and startups. I also studied international relations. I found meaning in my 40’s when I became a therapist. There is something quite healing in providing what I wished I had received growing up, which is to be heard. ”
Fabrice Paracuellos, Psychotherapist, Clinical Supervisor, Clinical Director,
LMFT114054