Narrative Therapy for Couples: Rewriting the Relationship Story
Written by [Haythem Lafhaj]
Couples often enter therapy carrying heavy stories about each other. “He never listens.” “She always criticizes.” Over time, these problem-saturated narratives harden into identities. Partners begin to see each other not as whole people, but as characters trapped in a painful script. Narrative Therapy offers a refreshing intervention: change the story, change the relationship.
At the heart of Narrative Therapy is the belief that people are not the problem—the problem is the problem (White & Epston, 1990). When applied to couples, this approach invites both partners to step outside of blame and view the problem as an external force shaping their interactions. “The criticism” or “the silence” becomes the adversary—not each other.
In practice, the therapist facilitates dialogue that helps each partner articulate how they’ve been recruited into this limiting narrative. Instead of reinforcing labels, we ask questions like: When did you first notice this pattern taking shape? What values or intentions have been overshadowed by this story? This language fosters empathy and curiosity rather than defensiveness.
One of the most powerful tools in couples work is the creation of shared counter-narratives. These are co-constructed stories that highlight resilience, teamwork, and care. For example, a couple stuck in a narrative of “we’re always disconnected” may begin to rediscover and name moments of tenderness, humor, or collaboration. These moments become building blocks for a new, preferred story.
Therapists also use letter-writing, outsider witnessing, and double listening to amplify these emerging narratives. These interventions don’t just reframe the past—they provide a new lens for the future. Couples learn to see each other not as adversaries, but as allies working together to loosen the grip of a problem-saturated story.
Narrative Therapy doesn’t promise a return to the “honeymoon phase.” Instead, it offers something more sustainable: the chance to co-author a relationship based on mutual meaning, dignity, and choice.
References:
White, M., & Epston, D. (1990). Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends. W. W. Norton & Company.
Anderson, H. (1997). Conversation, Language, and Possibilities: A Postmodern Approach to Therapy.
Gergen, K. J., & McNamee, S. (1992). Therapy as Social Construction. Sage Publications.