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WHY DON’T WE HEAL TOGETHER?

MEET STEPH AND CRAIG

Get ready to meet Steph and Craig, a couple whose love story reminds us that healing doesn’t happen in a straight line—it happens side by side.

Their journey began back in 2011 when fate placed them on intersecting paths: Craig was a rookie police officer, and Steph had just started working as a 911 dispatcher. The connection was instant and electric. “We were definitely attracted to each other,” they recall, “but there was more—and if you’d asked us back then, we probably couldn’t have explained it. Today, it’s clear to us that we were meant to be together and have been throughout many lifetimes.”

But their love story wasn’t a fairy tale—it was real, raw, and filled with moments that forced them to grow. Both were coming out of previous marriages, each with two children, and in 2014 they took a brave leap: they bought a house together and blended their families under one roof. “It was messy beyond messy,” they admit, laughing. “But it was also an accomplishment we’re still proud of.”

Join us as we interview Steph and Craig and learn how love, loss, therapy, and deep transformation helped them build not just a marriage—but a safe place to be fully seen.

Q: Let’s rewind. How did your love story begin—and what drew you to each other in the first place?

We met in 2011 and immediately felt a strong pull to one another. At the time, Craig was a rookie police officer and Steph had just started as a 911 dispatcher. We were definitely attracted to each other but there was more—and if you’d asked us back then, we probably couldn’t have explained it. Today, it’s clear to us that we were meant to be together and have been throughout many lifetimes.

Q: Was there a moment early on when you realized your relationship was going to require more than love to work?

At the beginning of our relationship, there was a lot we had to navigate. We were both ending marriages and blending our families—each of us brought two kids into the relationship. In 2014, we bought a home together and moved everyone in under one roof. That in itself was a massive accomplishment—but it was also messy beyond messy.

Q: You’ve said that marriage can trigger your deepest patterns. What was one personal pattern that surfaced for each of you?

We believe that relationships—especially our closest ones—reveal what still needs healing from our pasts. Around 2017–2018, we began realizing this more deeply. Craig was fired in 2015, right after we got married, and that moment became a catalyst for both of us. It triggered old behaviors we’d used since childhood to protect ourselves. Unpacking those and learning to both give and receive love freely has been our shared lesson ever since.

Q: What was the moment everything broke down—and what did rebuilding actually look like?

When Craig lost his job in 2015, everything started to unravel. We had just returned from our honeymoon, and within months, he was fired. It was terrifying. We hit rock bottom more than once, and it felt like our relationship might not make it. But those breakdowns forced us to rebuild from the inside out. We started therapy—individually and together—in 2020, and that’s when everything began to change. Without that support, we wouldn’t be where we are today.

Q: You talk a lot about the masks we wear in relationships. What were yours?

Craig’s biggest mask was pretending everything was fine. He avoided deep emotions most of his life, and underneath that mask was a lot of pain and sadness.
Steph’s mask was being the people pleaser—the one who tried to keep the peace, manage everyone’s emotions, and make herself small to be loved. Taking off that mask meant letting Craig see all of her—the messy, wild, and brilliant parts too.

Q: Steph, what came up for you when Craig attended that men’s retreat—and how did it shift your dynamic?

When Craig went to that retreat, I knew how important it was for him, but I also feared it might be the end of our relationship. It was one of the hardest moments of letting go. Looking back, I realize that in order to heal together, we first had to heal apart. Letting go gave both of us space to find ourselves—and that’s what ultimately brought us back stronger.

Q: Craig, how did watching Steph embrace healing influence your own growth?

There have been countless moments where I thought, I need to get my act together, or I’m going to lose her. Every time she leveled up, it forced me to take a hard look at how I was showing up. Her healing directly influenced mine.

Q: You’ve experienced MDMA-assisted therapy. What surprised you most about that process?

The biggest surprise was how much compassion it created. It gave us a level of understanding for each other we’d never had before. We started seeing each other through the lens of childhood wounds—with reverence and patience. When one of us connects to those wounded parts, the other shows up with love and safety. It’s become the foundation of how we love now.

Q: How do you balance growing individually without growing apart?

That’s something we’ve had to learn the hard way. For years, our codependency made it difficult to give each other space. But now, we trust that growth doesn’t mean separation. We stopped measuring who was evolving faster and started walking together—side by side, no matter what.

Q: What’s your go-to method for navigating tough conversations without spiraling?

We start by checking our basic needs first: Are we hungry? Tired? Overstimulated? Once we’re regulated, we can actually communicate. We also use a “pause button.” If one of us feels overwhelmed, we pause the conversation—whether that’s for ten minutes or a full day. The key is that whoever pressed pause is responsible for bringing it back up. That small system changed everything.

Q: What tools or rituals have helped rebuild trust and emotional safety?

Communication and reflection. When one of us speaks, the other listens—then repeats back what they heard to make sure it’s understood. It sounds simple, but that practice has changed our relationship. Feeling seen and heard is everything.

Q: Your podcast is incredibly vulnerable. How do you protect your relationship from emotional burnout?

We didn’t at first! We overshared everything and learned the hard way that boundaries are vital. Now, we’re more intentional about what we share and what stays sacred between us.

 

Q: If you could go back and give yourselves advice during your first year of marriage, what would it be?

Get into therapy sooner. Honestly, it would’ve saved us a lot of pain and confusion.

Q: Lastly, if you could change the world one happy couple at a time, how would you complete this phrase: Why Don’t We…?

Show up for each other like no one else ever has.

There you have it, folks—Steph and Craig’s love story isn’t just about staying together; it’s about growing together, even when it hurts. From heartbreak to healing, from masks to authenticity, their journey reminds us that love isn’t found—it’s built, brick by honest brick. So, if you’ve ever wondered whether it’s possible to heal in partnership, take a note from Steph and Craig: show up, stay curious, and keep doing the work—together.