One couple we worked with told us they were discouraged by how much tension they were noticing lately.
“If we were doing better,” they said, “we wouldn’t be so aware of everything.”
They interpreted their growing awareness as evidence that their marriage was getting worse, not better. Every pattern they noticed felt like a new problem to solve, another deficit to overcome.
What they didn’t realize was that awareness wasn’t a step backward—it was the first sign that something was finally coming into the light.
Awareness often feels uncomfortable because it interrupts autopilot.
It slows you down long enough to see patterns you’ve been running for years—patterns that may have served you once but no longer fit who you’re becoming.
When you start noticing how you withdraw during conflict, how certain conversations trigger defensiveness, or how distance quietly builds between you, it can feel like failure. But noticing is not the same as breaking.
You can’t realign what you refuse to acknowledge.
Awareness isn’t the problem—it’s the doorway. It’s what creates the possibility of change. Before you noticed, you were simply repeating. Now that you see it, you can choose something different.
Scripture tells us that God’s light “makes everything visible” (Ephesians 5:13-14). Light doesn’t create the problem—it reveals what’s already there so it can be addressed. Awareness is an act of grace, not condemnation.
What’s Still True
Seeing what’s misaligned is progress, not proof that something is wrong.
What You Can Do…Today (1 Minute)
Each spouse name one thing you’ve recently noticed about yourself in the relationship.