Therapy for Relationship Patterns
in Owings Mills, MD & across Maryland
You try to do everything “right” in relationships…
but still end up feeling hurt, confused, or not enough
You keep ending up in the same kind of relationship… even when you try to do things differently
You already know what you want to say… But something holds you back.
You replay conversations afterward, wondering if you said too much or not enough.
You try to keep the peace, even when something doesn’t feel right.
You find yourself overthinking their tone, their texts, or whether something has changed.
Part of you wants closeness, but another part pulls back, shuts down, or stays guarded.
No matter how aware you are, you keep finding yourself in the same patterns — feeling confused, drained, or questioning yourself
Why This keeps Happening
If this feels familiar, it’s often not just about the relationship itself. These patterns develop long before the relationship even begins — in childhood, where you had to adjust, stay aware, or figure out how to stay connected while also protecting yourself. You may have learned to keep the peace, avoid conflict, or become highly attuned to other people’s needs and reactions.
At the time, these patterns made sense. They helped you maintain connection, avoid rejection, or feel some sense of stability.
Over time, this can also shape who feels familiar to you. You may find yourself drawn to certain types of people or relationship dynamics, even when they’re not healthy, because they feel known, predictable, or emotionally familiar. This is why you might notice yourself repeating similar patterns in different relationships, even when you genuinely want something different.
It’s not about blaming yourself or simply “choosing wrong,” but understanding how your system has learned what feels safe, even when that version of “safe” doesn’t actually feel good.
And until those patterns are understood and processed, they tend to keep showing up, even in different relationships.
How I help with relationship patterns
In our work together, I don’t just focus on the relationship itself; I focus on understanding the patterns that keep showing up and where they come from.
Many of these patterns are not conscious choices. They’re responses your mind and body learned over time to stay connected, avoid conflict, or protect you from getting hurt. I help you slow these moments down so we can begin to understand what’s happening underneath, not just what you’re doing, but why it feels so hard to do something different.
I use trauma-focused approaches like Brainspotting and Internal Family Systems (IFS) to work with these patterns at a deeper level. Together, we begin to notice how different parts of you respond in relationships, the part that wants closeness, the part that pulls away, the part that overthinks, or tries to keep everything steady.
Instead of trying to force change, I help you understand and work with these responses so they don’t have to work so hard. This often looks like slowing down real moments from your relationships, noticing what you felt, what came up in your body, and how you responded. From there, we begin helping your system process those experiences rather than staying stuck in the same cycle.
Over time, this creates space to respond differently, not from fear, pressure, or old patterns, but from a place that feels more grounded, clear, and connected to what you actually want.
What begins to feel different
As we work together, you’ll begin to notice meaningful shifts in how you experience yourself in relationships.
I help you understand your patterns more clearly, so interactions start to feel less confusing and less overwhelming.
Instead of automatically overthinking, overgiving, or shutting down, you begin to pause, recognize what’s happening, and respond in a way that feels more grounded and intentional.
You may find it easier to express what you need, set boundaries without as much guilt, and stay present in moments that once felt uncomfortable or triggering.
Relationships can begin to feel less like something you have to manage or figure out, and more like something you can experience with a greater sense of clarity and ease.
You’re able to stay connected to yourself while also staying connected to others — without feeling like you have to disappear, overextend, or question yourself in the process.
Over time, I help you build a stronger sense of trust in yourself — so you can move through relationships with more confidence, stability, and a clearer sense of what you want and deserve.
If You’re Starting To Recognize These Patterns, Therapy Can Help You
You Don’t have to have it all figured out before reaching out
FAQS
Common questions about individual therapy for relationship issues
-
This is something many people experience, and it can feel frustrating and confusing.
Often, it’s not random. We’re naturally drawn to what feels familiar, even if that familiarity doesn’t feel good. Early relationship experiences can shape what your mind and body recognize as connection, which can influence who you’re drawn to and how you show up in relationships.
In therapy, we work on understanding those patterns so you can begin to recognize them and make different choices that feel more aligned with what you actually want.
-
Shutting down or pulling away is often a protective response. When something feels overwhelming, vulnerable, or uncertain, your system may try to create distance to keep you from getting hurt.
This can develop over time, especially if being open or expressing yourself didn’t feel safe in earlier experiences.
In our work together, we begin to understand what’s happening in those moments so you can stay more present and connected without feeling like you have to protect yourself in the same way.
-
Overthinking in relationships often comes from a need to feel certain, safe, or in control. You might find yourself analyzing conversations, tone, or small changes, trying to figure out what something means or what could go wrong.
For many people, this pattern is connected to deeper fears around rejection, misunderstanding, or not being enough.
Therapy helps you understand what’s driving that cycle so you can feel more secure and less pulled into constant mental loops.
-
This can feel confusing and exhausting, like no matter what you do, it doesn’t feel right.
These conflicting feelings often develop in earlier relationships where you had to adjust yourself in order to feel accepted or safe. Over time, this can turn into self-doubt, anxiety, and a constant questioning of yourself in relationships.
In therapy, we work on understanding where this comes from and helping you build a more stable and compassionate relationship with yourself.
-
Setting boundaries can feel difficult when part of you worries about conflict, rejection, or hurting someone else. You might find yourself saying yes when you want to say no, or staying quiet to keep the peace.
These patterns often develop as ways to maintain connection or avoid discomfort.
In our work together, we explore what makes boundaries feel hard and help you build the confidence to express your needs without as much guilt or fear.
-
Yes, even if it doesn’t feel that way right now.
Patterns that have been there for a long time can feel automatic, but they’re not permanent. When you begin to understand where they come from and how they show up, you can start responding differently.
This work isn’t about forcing change, but about helping your system feel safe enough to do something different. Over time, that creates real and lasting shifts in how you experience relationships.