Couples
We Need To Ask Better Questions Of Each Other: 10 Questions To Ask Elementary-Aged Children
Elementary-Aged Kids Aren’t Usually Asked Deeper Questions: It’s Time We Start. Parents and other adults often ask questions of elementary-aged children quickly like a laundry list to address physical and immediate emotional needs. Adults don’t usually ask kids questions in exploration, but as a way to gather concrete data about socialization or academics. Kids aren’t typically asked what they’re…
Mar 12, 2020We Need To Ask Better Questions Of Each Other: 7 Questions To Ask Young Adults Who Recently Graduated College
After College, Young Adults Are In Transition: Asking Better Questions Can Help . Continuing my series on how to ask better questions in our relationships, young adults who have recently graduated college are at a transitional moment in which asking deeper questions of them can be particularly helpful. Post-college graduation is one of the most unknown, exciting, sad, scary, wonderful and lonely…
Mar 05, 2020We Need To Ask Better Questions Of Each Other: 9 Questions To Ask A Partner
Better Questions Create Closer, Continually Evolving Relationships. In general, we suck at asking questions to the people around us, particularly once we feel comfortable in our relationships. We assume we know them and that we don’t need to ask these intimate, sometimes uncomfortable questions any longer. However, asking deeper questions (questions beyond the simple daily “How are you?”, “What…
Feb 27, 2020Off-Limit Feelings For Men And Women Are Often Different: Therapy Should Be Too
Feelings And Actions That Are Forbidden For Men And Women Are Different. In a recent New York Times Op-Ed, author Holly Whitaker explores her experience with substance use recovery that was notably not done using an AA program. She writes that the current tenets and values of AA were derived from a patriarchal antidote to (white, heterosexual) male privilege with its founders believing that, as…
Feb 20, 2020You Don't Hit Rock Bottom: You Declare It
Hitting Rock Bottom Is Too Passive. Rock bottom is often used in the context of alcoholism or drug abuse. However, it can be true with regard to staying in a bad relationship or abusive work environment, avoiding getting more childcare or tolerating painful emotions without help.The most common phrase concerning rock bottom is “hitting rock bottom.” This language, though, can be unhelpful because…
Feb 13, 2020Tribeca Therapy Quoted In Two Articles On Couples And Relationships In Business Insider
Business Insider recently featured Tribeca Therapy in two articles, drawing on our practice’s expertise in couples therapy and relationship therapy. Talking with our Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist, the articles focus in particular on codependency in relationships and how to discuss challenging issues between partners, including difficulties living together, and lack of sex and…
Feb 06, 2020Matt Lundquist and Kelly Scott Quoted In Two Relationship Advice Columns In Business Insider
This past month, both our Founder and Clinical Director Matt Lundquist and Senior Therapist Kelly Scott were quoted in two Business Insider advice columns on relationships and dating. The articles are a part of Insider’s resident sex and relationships reporter Julia Naftulin’s ongoing column that answers readers’ questions by consulting with a panel of experts including relationship therapists…
Jan 23, 2020You Can Be In A Relationship And Still Be Lonely
Loneliness In A Relationship Often Feels Shameful And Goes Unspoken. When we talk about loneliness, we often don’t think of the feeling in terms of being in a relationship. When married or in a relationship, the presumption is that we’ve found our person: the one person who will make us feel not so lonely. However, this isn’t always the case. Though it often goes unspoken, loneliness happens…
Jan 16, 2020Tribeca Therapy On How Different Attachment Styles Handle Breakups In Well + Good
Attachment is a powerful, often hidden determinant in who we’re drawn to in relationships. Recently, Well + Good featured Tribeca Therapy in an article on how different attachment styles deal with breakups. Writer Nikhita Mahtani defines the four attachment styles–secure, anxious, dismissive-avoidant and fearful-avoidant–and speaks with our Founder and Clinical Director Matt on how these styles…
Jan 09, 2020It's Not About The Dishes: It's About A Couple's Fear And Desire For Care
A Gendered Over-functioning Dynamic Signals Unmet Emotional Needs In A Relationship. While over-functioning can take many shapes and forms, I’ve noticed a gendered over-functioning dynamic in the heterosexual couples I see in my couples therapy practice with women doing the bulk of the household chores, as well as the relational and emotional heavy-lifting for their male partners.…
Jan 02, 2020Nora Dankner Featured In Business Insider On Marriage Story's Depiction Of Divorce
[caption id="attachment_5838" align="alignleft" width="300"] (Heyday Films/Netflix)[/caption]We’re excited to share that our therapist Nora Dankner was recently featured in Business Insider responding to Noah Baumbach’s film Marriage Story from the perspective of a couples therapist who works with partners who are considering or going through a divorce. Nora specifically addresses what the film…
Dec 26, 2019Tribeca Therapy In The Atlantic On When And How To Bring A Partner Home To Visit Family
We’re thrilled to share that Tribeca Therapy was featured in The Atlantic, focusing on how couples can navigate decisions around bringing a partner home to visit family during the holidays. After tracing how shifting cultural norms about how much influence family has in a couple’s relationship has made when to introduce a partner a fraught question, writer Ashley Fetters speaks to our Founder and…
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