Welcome to my Blog
Thank you for stopping by. This space is where I share research, reflections, and practical tools drawn from my experience as a marriage and family therapist with an international practice.
I write about what happens to desire, attachment, and meaning once the early myths stop working.
Are you a couple looking for clarity? A professional curious about the science of relationships? Or simply someone interested in how love and resilience work? I’m glad you’ve found your way here. I can help with that. I’m accepting new clients, and this blog is for the benefit of all my gentle readers.
Each post is written with one goal in mind: to help you better understand yourself, your partner, and the hidden dynamics that shape human connection.
Grab a coffee (or a notebook), explore what speaks to you, and take what’s useful back into your life and relationships.
And if a post sparks a question, or makes you realize you could use more support, I’d love to hear from you. Let’s explore the scope of work you’d like to do together.
Be Well, Stay Kind, and Godspeed.
~Daniel
P.S.
Feel free to explore the categories below to find past blog posts on the topics that matter most to you. If you’re curious about attachment, navigating conflict, or strengthening intimacy, these archives are a great way to dive deeper into the research and insights that I’ve been sharing for years.
- Attachment Issues
- Coronavirus
- Couples Therapy
- Extramarital Affairs
- Family Life and Parenting
- How to Fight Fair
- Inlaws and Extended Families
- Intercultural Relationships
- Marriage and Mental Health
- Married Life & Intimate Relationships
- Neurodiverse Couples
- Separation & Divorce
- Signs of Trouble
- Social Media and Relationships
- What Happy Couples Know
Intensity Is Not Intimacy: The Cultural Error We Rarely Question
New research shows that romantic relationships high in passion but low in intimacy and commitment are associated with higher levels of severe psychological aggression and coercive control.
The central error in modern romance is treating emotional intensity as evidence of intimacy, when in fact it often reflects nervous system arousal rather than relational safety.
The Cultural Error We Rarely Question
We live in a culture that treats chemistry as proof.
Intensity Is Not Intimacy: Why high-passion relationships without emotional closeness carry higher risk of psychological aggression
Romantic relationships high in passion but low in intimacy and commitment are associated with significantly higher levels of severe psychological aggression and coercive control.
That finding comes from new research published in Violence Against Women, and it punctures one of our most cherished cultural illusions—that intensity protects us.
It does not.
Science-Based Interventions for Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA): What Actually Helps—and What Backfires
Once parents, caregivers, or clinicians finally recognize Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA), the next question arrives immediately:
Okay. So what actually works?
This is where many otherwise solid resources falter. Some offer false certainty. Others drift into ideology. Still others quietly repackage compliance-based strategies with softer language and hope no one notices.
Here’s the honest answer, grounded in current research:
There is no single, manualized “PDA treatment.”
But there are science-based intervention principles that consistently reduce distress and increase functioning for PDA-profile nervous systems.
This post explains what the research supports, what it cautions against, and how to think clearly about intervention without turning PDA into either a behavioral problem or a philosophical manifesto.
Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA): Why Some Nervous Systems Say “No” to Demands—and Why That Might Be Rational
Pathological Demand Avoidance—PDA—is one of those terms that manages to be simultaneously indispensable and irritating.
Indispensable because it names a real, repeatable clinical pattern that many Autistic adults, families, and therapists recognize instantly.
Irritating because it contains the word pathological, which suggests the problem lies entirely inside the person rather than in the demand-saturated systems pressing down on them.
And yet, the term persists. Not because it is elegant, but because it is useful.
This post aspires to be a definitive, current guide to demand avoidance: where the term came from, what the most up-to-date research actually says, why concepts like bandwidth and transition stress are central (not optional), and why PDA may be less a disorder of defiance than a nervous system refusing to cooperate with near-normative hegemony.
I presented on PDA and relational dynamics in 2023 at the American Family Therapy Academy in Baltimore, to a clinical audience of family therapists—many of whom realized, mid-lecture, that they had been seeing PDA for years without having language for it.
Why Narcissism and OCD Are Secretly in a Situation-ship
Psychologists have finally identified the missing link between narcissism and obsessive-compulsive symptoms, and—brace yourself—it’s perfectionism.
Not the charming, color-coded, Marie-Kondo-adjacent kind.
The poisonous kind. The kind that wakes up at 3 a.m. to inform you that you are a fraud and should probably alphabetize your regrets.
A new study published in Personality and Individual Differences suggests that narcissism doesn’t slide directly into OCD.
It takes an Uber. And the driver’s name is discrepancy.
What Is Grey Rocking? When Emotional Withdrawal Helps—and Hurts
Before there was Yellow Rocking, there was Grey rocking.
Grey rocking didn’t emerge because folks were confused about boundaries.
It emerged because, for many people, boundaries were not safe.
Grey rock was invented in the relational emergency room.
It is what folks reach for when explaining themselves only makes things worse, when emotional honesty becomes ammunition, and when every reaction—anger, sadness, reason—gets metabolized into more chaos.
So you disappear. Politely. Strategically. You flatten your affect and narrow your language until there’s nothing left to grab onto.
And for a while, it works.
But grey rock was never meant to be a destination. It was meant to be a holding pattern.
The Definitive Guide to the Yellow Rock Method
The Yellow Rock Method is a neutral, emotionally regulated communication strategy used in high-conflict co-parenting situations—especially when one parent escalates, provokes, or distorts interactions.
It sits intentionally between:
Grey Rock (minimal, emotionally flat, disengaged), and
Collaborative co-parenting (warm, flexible, emotionally responsive).
Yellow Rock = calm, courteous, brief, factual, and child-focused.
This guide is written for parents, mediators, attorneys, and therapists seeking a court-credible explanation of Yellow Rock grounded in high-conflict divorce research and real custody dynamics.
Adults With ADHD Want More Support—and Feel Like They Get Less
Adults with ADHD don’t want too much from their relationships.
They want enough.
And often, they don’t feel they’re getting it.
A recent study in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships puts empirical weight behind a familiar, quietly destabilizing experience: adults with ADHD report wanting significantly more emotional, practical, and affirming support from romantic partners—while simultaneously feeling less supported than they need to be.
This isn’t entitlement.
It isn’t neediness.
It’s a pattern I call support translation failure.
Support translation failure occurs when care is offered sincerely but arrives in a form the receiving nervous system can’t register—because of timing, clarity, or emotional mismatch.
Effort is present, but support still feels absent.
The Difference Between Flirting for “We” and Flirting for “Me”
The problem isn’t flirting.
The problem is mistaking charm for intention.
We like to treat flirting as a harmless social tic—chemistry with manners, a little verbal jazz.
Something that floats in the air and dissolves without consequence. This new research suggests that for a meaningful subset of people, flirting is not atmosphere. It’s infrastructure.
A study published in Personality and Individual Differences finds that folks high in so-called Dark Triad traits are more likely to flirt instrumentally—not to build connection, but to secure advantage.
Flirting, in this frame, is not a prelude to intimacy. It’s a tool. Sometimes it’s a screwdriver. Sometimes it’s a crowbar.
The researchers—led by Braden T. Hall—asked a deceptively simple question:
Are some people flirting to build a we, while others are flirting to benefit me?
The answer is yes. And the difference is not the room. It’s the person.
Autism, Culture, and the Myth of Social Deficits
For decades, autism research has revolved around a single, largely unexamined premise:
that social understanding has one correct shape.
New cross-cultural research suggests something far more destabilizing: what Western psychology has labeled autistic social deficits are often failures of interpretation—amplified by culture, not caused by neurology.
Autism, in this framing, is not a disorder of social cognition.
It is a difference that becomes disabling only inside rigid social systems.
Why Other Marriages Look Happier Online
Other marriages don’t look happier online because they are happier.
They look happier because they are not being asked to be honest.
What you are seeing is not happiness. It is selection.
A chosen minute. Cropped from a longer, less cooperative week. Lit properly. Edited gently. Paired with music that suggests meaning where there is mostly timing.
Gratitude, in this setting, is not a feeling—it is a formatting choice.
Your marriage, meanwhile, is happening in real time. It has dishes. It has silence.
It has conversations that begin with logistics and end with something unnamed sitting between you. It contains affection that must survive fatigue and desire that does not arrive on schedule.
Real marriages are stubbornly uncinematic.
They refuse to perform.
Weekly Therapy vs. Intensive Therapy: Same Goal, Different Physics
Most arguments about therapy models confuse preference with mechanics.
This isn’t about which approach is “better.”
It’s about what kind of change the container can physically support.
Weekly therapy and intensive therapy aim at the same outcome—relational reorganization—but they operate under different constraints.
When couples stall, it’s rarely because they lack insight. It’s because the format can’t hold the problem they’re actually having.