It's never really about the dishes, the money, or who said what. It's the pattern underneath — the loop you both fall into without noticing. This workbook helps you see it, name it, and break it.
Frameworks for the space between two people.
Gottman's 40-year study found 69% of relationship conflicts are never fully resolved. The goal isn't to win — it's to break the loop.
The same argument keeps coming back wearing a different outfit. Different trigger, identical ending. Here's what that loop feels like from the inside.
You can predict exactly how it'll go — who says what, who shuts down, who walks off. And it still happens anyway.
It "blows over," nothing actually changes, and you both quietly brace for the next time it surfaces.
Each loop chips away a little more. You're not enemies — you're just two people slowly drifting out of sync.
The Workbook
A structured, self-guided workbook that walks you through your own conflict loop — so you can finally interrupt it instead of repeating it. No therapy jargon. No homework you'll never do. Just a clear path you work through at your own pace.
The workbook moves you through a single clear arc: spot the loop, give it a name, and build the tools to break it. Every worksheet is built to be used, not just read.
Three worksheets to pinpoint your repeating argument, trace its trigger, and capture the four moments where it always plays out.
A guided worksheet to name your loop out loud. Once it has a name, it stops being "you vs. me" and becomes "us vs. the pattern."
Three worksheets plus ready-to-use scripts for the moment the loop starts — so you have a different move to make in real time.
A plain-language grounding in why the same fight repeats — and the four moments every loop runs through.
A simple progress tracker and check-in to keep the new pattern alive long after the first read-through.
Honest guidance on when a workbook is enough — and a curated list of professional and crisis resources for when it isn't.
Download once and open it on your phone, tablet, or laptop. Prefer pen and paper? Print the worksheets and work through them together at the kitchen table. It's yours to keep.
You don't need to fix everything at once. You just need to see the loop clearly enough to step out of it.
Pin down the exact argument that keeps coming back and the moments where it always turns.
Give the loop a name you both recognise. Naming it turns a blame game into a shared problem.
Use scripts and small interruptions to make a different move the next time the pattern starts.
"We named our loop 'The Scoreboard.' Just having a name for it changed everything — now one of us can say it and we both step back instead of digging in."
"I'd read all the relationship books. This was the first one that actually made me do something. The worksheets are short enough that we finished them."
"Same argument for two years. We saw it written out on paper for the first time and just looked at each other. That was the turning point."
Illustrative examples shown for demonstration while we gather verified reader stories. This workbook is a self-guided educational tool, not therapy or a substitute for professional care.
No. It's a self-guided educational workbook built on well-known relationship research. It's a tool you work through on your own terms — not a session, not advice, and not a replacement for a professional. If things feel beyond a workbook, we point you to support resources inside.
Not at all. Plenty of people start it solo and bring their partner in once they've mapped the loop themselves. It works either way — alone to understand your side, or together to build a shared language.
You can read it in an evening, but the worksheets are designed to be revisited. Most people work through the three steps over a week or two, then keep the tracker going. There's no clock — it's yours to keep forever.
A 20-page PDF workbook — 3 steps, 7 worksheets, plus a foundation section, a progress tracker, and a support resources page. It's delivered as an instant download right after checkout, so you can open it on any device or print it.
Stop bracing for the next version of the same fight. Get the workbook, map your pattern, and make a different move.