Crucible Therapy
A clear introduction to Crucible Therapy for couples and therapists.
This site explains Dr. David Schnarch's model in plain language for people trying to make sense of conflict, intimacy, desire, and long-term love, and for therapists who want a serious entry point into the work.
For Couples
If something in the relationship feels stuck, start with the part that feels most familiar.
Crucible Therapy is most useful when the same argument keeps repeating, closeness feels tense, or sex, trust, and emotional distance have become loaded with pressure. It does not begin with scripts. It begins with understanding how each person functions when intimacy gets hard.
If you are trying to name the problem before you decide what kind of help you need, these are the clearest places to begin.
Communication gridlock
Understand why the same fight keeps recurring even when both of you know what the other person means.
Read the communication page → IssueDesire and intimacy
See how pressure, anxiety, desire differences, and sexual distance fit into the Crucible view of growth.
Read the intimacy page → IssueBetrayal and repair
Read how the model understands affairs, broken trust, and the emotional pressure that follows disclosure.
Read the infidelity page → IssueDistance and disconnection
Start here if the relationship feels flat, shut down, or more like coexistence than real intimacy.
Read the disconnection page →
For Therapists
If you are a clinician, use the site as an orientation to the model and its training path.
Crucible Therapy makes the most sense when you read it as a coherent model of differentiation, intimacy, and adult development rather than as a set of techniques. The therapist path on this site is meant to help you get your bearings quickly.
Start with the overview, then use the training article, core concepts, and books to see whether this is an approach you want to study more seriously.
How to become a Crucible therapist
See the practical route into the model through reading, consultation, and ICTEC training.
Read the therapist guide → OrientationHow the approach differs
Understand how Crucible Therapy diverges from communication-first or attachment-first models.
Read the comparison → Core BookStart with Passionate Marriage
Go to the foundational text if you want the core ideas in Schnarch's own language.
Read the book summary → BackgroundWho was David Schnarch?
Get the background on the psychologist whose work shaped this model of intimacy and growth.
Read the profile →Books
Core books for learning the model
These summaries are the fastest way to understand the main books behind Crucible Therapy before you decide which full text to read next.
Passionate Marriage
The foundational text of Crucible Therapy, exploring how differentiation transforms sexual intimacy and emotional connection in long-term relationships.
Read Summary
Intimacy & Desire
A deep dive into the relationship between emotional intimacy and sexual desire, offering insights into rekindling passion through personal growth.
Read Summary
Brain Talk
Exploring the neuroscience behind intimate relationships and how our brains shape—and are shaped by—our closest connections.
Read Summary
Living at the Bottom of the Ocean
Schnarch's final, posthumously released work on emotional regression—understanding and recovering from those moments when we "lose it."
Read Summary