When one of you wants out — and neither of you knows what comes next
Your marriage is at a crossroads. One of you may be ready to leave. The other may be desperate to stay. Or you're both somewhere in between, exhausted and unsure, hoping someone can help you figure out what to do.
This is one of the most painful and disorienting places a couple can be. The uncertainty alone is its own kind of suffering. You may not even know what kind of help you need — whether it's couples therapy, a trial separation, or something else entirely. That confusion is completely understandable and exactly what I work with.
I'm Jen Joseph, a Certified Discernment Counselor and LMFT practicing online throughout California and Oregon. I work with couples who are considering divorce, couples where one partner is leaning out, and couples who aren't sure whether regular couples therapy is even the right next step.
Therapy for Marriages at a Crossroads
Online therapy for couples in California & Oregon
Where are you right now?
Couples on the brink don't all look the same. Some arrive in crisis — after a blow-up, a disclosure, an ultimatum. Others have been steadily deteriorating for years and have finally run out of road. Some have already tried couples therapy and found it didn't help.
Here are a few of the situations I commonly work with:
One of you wants out; the other doesn't
One partner is seriously considering divorce while the other wants to save the marriage. You're in different places, and that difference itself has become the problem — it's hard to have any productive conversation when you're not even sure you're working toward the same thing.
You've already tried couples therapy
It didn't help. Or it helped for a while but you weren’t able to sustain the changes. One of you has lost confidence that the marriage can be fixed. You're not ready to call it, but you're not sure what else to do.
Both of you are ambivalent
Neither of you is completely sure. You're both somewhere between staying and leaving, and the uncertainty is exhausting. You love each other and you're also not sure that's enough. You need help thinking clearly, not more time to circle.
Divorce feels inevitable, but you're not certain
You've thought about it for a long time. Maybe you've even said it out loud. But something is keeping you from pulling the trigger and you want to understand what that something is before you make a decision you can't undo.
Why jumping straight into couples therapy often doesn't work
Standard couples therapy is built on a shared premise: both partners want to work on the marriage. When that's genuinely true, it can be life-changing. But when one partner has one foot out the door and doesn’t have the energy to invest in the work of repair, couples therapy can be a waste of time. The result is often what I call half-hearted couples therapy: one partner is just going through the motions, while the other is pouring their heart and soul into working on the relationship, and neither of them are getting what they actually need.
Couples therapy also asks both partners to take a hard to not just look at their own contributions, but to be vulnerable and practice interacting with their partner in more emotionally open ways. That kind of openness requires a level of commitment and investment that typically isn't there when divorce is on the table. When one partner is leaning out, asking them to do deep relational work before they've even decided if they want to commit to working on the marriage for a period of time, is often fruitless.
This is why I often recommend something different first…
Discernment Counseling
Online across California & Oregon
Discernment Counseling is a short-term, highly structured process designed specifically for couples where one partner is leaning toward divorce and the other wants to save the marriage. It was developed by William Doherty at the Doherty Relationship Institute — and I am a Certified Discernment Counselor through that program.
The goal isn't to fix your marriage. It’s to take a pause and explore your own contributions to the marital breakdown and decide whether or not your marriage is worth working on for a period of time.
In Discernment Counseling, you come in as a couple — but the most intensive work happens one-on-one with me. That structure exists for a reason: when you're in different places about the marriage, you each need space to think clearly without managing your partner's reactions at the same time. In those individual conversations, I help each of you take an honest look at your own contributions to the marital issues. Not to assign blame — but because that self-understanding is valuable regardless of which direction you choose.
Most couples complete Discernment Counseling in two to five sessions. It's a small investment of time that can make an enormous difference in such a consequential decision.
The three paths
In Discernment Counseling, every session stays focused on helping you discern between three possible directions. There's no right answer — only the one that's right for you.
Status quo
1
You're not ready to work on the marriage, and you're not ready to end it. You need more time — to do your own reflection, to wait for something to become clearer, or simply to catch your breath. Some couples choose this path temporarily and return to Discernment Counseling when they're ready for the next decision.
Separation or divorce
2
You've gained the clarity to move forward with ending the marriage — with more understanding of how you got here and what you'd want to carry forward into whatever comes next.
Six months of focused couples therapy
3
Both partners commit to a genuine effort in six months of couples therapy— with divorce off the table for that period of time. It's a real commitment, made with eyes open and a newfound understanding of your own part to play in relational healing and reconciliation. At the end of six months, you reassess.
Still have questions?
I’ve got answers!
Frequently Asked Questions
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Discernment Counseling isn't always the answer. If both of you are genuinely ambivalent about the marriage — neither of you fully leaning out — and you're both willing to try couples therapy to see if it can help, then couples therapy may be the right starting point rather than Discernment Counseling.
The distinction matters: Discernment Counseling is for couples where the question is whether to work on the marriage and requires one leaning-in spouse. Couples therapy is for couples who've already decided they want to try. If you're in that second place — uncertain but willing — standard couples therapy may be exactly what you need.
I offer couples therapy for couples at all stages, including those who are struggling significantly but not yet at the brink. You can read more about my approach to couples therapy here.
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If your partner isn't willing to engage in any kind of couples work, that doesn't mean there's nothing to do. Individual therapy can be genuinely useful here — for processing your own feelings about the marriage, clarifying what you want, and understanding your own side of the relational dynamic. Profound things can shift in a relationship when even one partner does real work. I'm happy to work with you individually if that's where you are.
A few things I want you to know…
Whichever direction you're leaning, I won't push you toward any particular outcome. My job is not to save your marriage or to help you leave it — it's to help you make a clear,honest,informed decision about what you actually want. That means I'll treat both of you with equal respect and compassion, regardless of which path you're on.
I also won't pretend this is easy. Being on the brink of divorce is one of the hardest places a person can be, and the uncertainty makes everything harder. What I can offer is a structured, skilled process that cuts through some of that uncertainty — and a space where both of you can think and feel and speak honestly without it immediately becoming another fight.
I work with couples online throughout California and Oregon, including Portland, San Francisco, the Bay Area, Los Angeles, and San Diego. As a Certified Discernment Counselor, I've worked with many couples in exactly this place — and I know how much can shift in just a few sessions when the right structure is in place.
—Certified Discernment Counselor — Doherty Relationship Institute
—LMFT licensed in California (#116063) and Oregon (#T1949)
—AASECT Certified Sex Therapist
—LGBTQIA+, kink, ENM, and neurodivergent affirming
—Online sessions throughout CA + OR