Divorce Ambivalence Workshop

We are pleased to offer a research-informed, skills-based 2-3 hour workshop on working with individual divorce-ambivalent clients. On this page, you will find the course description, then a list of our official presenters, who are licensed to offer this online or in person. Please reach out to them directly to coordinate their offering of this workshop.

Course Description

When an individual client is struggling with chronic ambivalence about whether to stay in a marriage or a long-term committed relationship, the therapist may also struggle with how to be helpful. Research shows that up to 22% of married individuals in any given year have serious divorce ideation. Most won’t divorce in the short run, but use individual therapy to process their ambivalent feelings about staying married.

These therapy sessions are often dominated by the ups and downs of a stuck relationship, making it difficult to work on other therapeutic issues that may be closer to your clinical expertise.

This workshop provides tools and strategies that therapists can use with their individual clients who are unsure about whether to stay in, seek couples therapy, or leave their marriage.

This presentation also provides concrete skills for making referrals, when appropriate, for discernment counseling, a brief model designed specifically for couples when one partner is leaning out of the marriage but unsure about divorce or seeking couples therapy, and the other partner wants to preserve the relationship.

This is an intensely practical workshop that is backed by research on divorce ambivalence. Participants will receive many sample lines of communication to use with clients as well as key strategies to avoid bad-story-of-the-week individual therapy or premature referrals to couples therapy with clients who are not motivated to work on their marriage right now.

Learning objectives: Participants will be able to :

  • Define divorce ambivalence in clients
  • Identify the main challenges for working with divorce-ambivalent clients in individual therapy
  • Discuss the principle clinical strategies and skills for treating divorce-ambivalent clients
  • Describe skills for referring these clients for couples’ work

Courtney Freiman, LCP

Krista Sisterhen, MSW, LISW

Lynda Martin, LMFT

Adam Smithey, LMFT

Lauren Hoyt, LMFT, LISAC,CSAT, EMDR

Catherine Pfuntner,LMFT, CSAC, ICADC