For couples carrying more than one world

Cross-cultural couples therapy

Online therapy for intercultural and mixed-heritage couples navigating belonging, family and difference.

Sometimes the argument is not only about what happened. It is about what the moment means.

Family loyalty, religion, language, migration, gender expectations, privacy, duty and belonging can enter a relationship long before either partner knows they are speaking through them. Therapy gives that hidden meaning somewhere careful to be spoken, not flattened into communication problems.

Kita Tabachka seated in a rust armchair in her warm, book-lined home office.
  • Cross-cultural and intercultural couples therapy
  • Online in English for UK and international clients
  • Couples-focused and trauma-informed
  • Family, values, religion and belonging aware
Who this is for

This is for couples who love each other, but keep colliding at the level of meaning.

The issue may look like communication on the surface, but underneath it may be questions of respect, loyalty, home, identity, faith, family pressure, gender roles, or who has to bend more for the relationship to work.

One partner may feel judged. The other may feel erased. Both may be tired of translating themselves.

Recognition

Common struggles

  • We keep having the same argument, but we are not arguing about the same thing.
  • Family expectations are affecting our relationship.
  • Religion, tradition or values keep becoming a point of strain.
  • One of us feels unseen inside the other’s world.
  • We are tired of explaining ourselves.
  • We need help holding difference without turning it into blame.
In your own words

Difference is not the problem. What matters is what difference activates.

Hover or tab through each card to see how the work meets it.

What it can feel like

We are arguing, but not about the same thing.

Hover or focus to read
How we meet it

In cross-cultural relationships, conflict often touches dignity, history, faith, loyalty and belonging. We name what is really being protected.

Communication problems
What it can feel like

Family expectations are affecting our relationship.

Hover or focus to read
How we meet it

Family loyalty and duty carry emotional meaning that needs to be understood, not dismissed. We make room for both worlds.

Belonging hub
What it can feel like

One of us feels unseen inside the other’s world.

Hover or focus to read
How we meet it

Therapy helps each partner feel less caricatured and more accurately understood, without either history disappearing.

Expat therapy
What we work with

Difference is not the problem by itself. What matters is what difference activates.

In cross-cultural relationships, conflict often touches dignity, history, faith, identity, loyalty, duty and fear of being swallowed or left behind.

Therapy helps each partner feel less caricatured and more accurately understood. It also asks whether the relationship can become strong enough to hold difference without requiring one person to disappear inside the other’s frame.

How the work moves

How therapy works

  1. 01

    Map the recurring points of cultural friction.

  2. 02

    Identify what each partner believes is being threatened or protected.

  3. 03

    Build shared language without erasing difference.

  4. 04

    Work with family pressure, loyalty and belonging where relevant.

  5. 05

    Strengthen the relationship as a place where both histories can be held.

A pattern worth naming

Two people, two whole worlds.

When love crosses cultures, the friction is rarely about who is right. It is about what each person fears losing when they bend toward the other.

The one who feels judged

Senses their world, faith or family being weighed and found wanting, and braces against having to defend where they come from.

The one who feels erased

Senses their needs disappearing inside the other’s traditions or family expectations, and fears bending until there is nothing left.

Some couples do not need to become more similar. They need a way to hold difference without requiring one person to disappear.

Book a free consultation
Questions

Common questions

Do you work with mixed-religion or intercultural couples?

Yes.

Can therapy help if family pressure is part of the problem?

Yes. Family expectations often carry emotional meaning that needs to be understood, not dismissed.

What if one of us feels more pressure to adapt?

That is often central to the work.

One conversation

Difference does not have to become distance.

Some couples do not need to become more similar. They need a better way to understand what difference activates, protects and threatens in each of them.

Start with a free 15 to 20 minute consultation

Between sessions, you may find my resources and worksheets helpful.

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