What It Means to Work Relationally in Therapy
/People often come to therapy with a reasonable question: what does working relationally actually mean?
It can sound thoughtful and appealing, but also a little vague. Sometimes it sounds as though it simply means the therapist is warm or empathic. That matters, of course, but relational therapy usually means something more than warmth alone.
At its heart, working relationally means recognising that we are shaped in relationship, that many of our difficulties are organised through relationship, and that healing also happens through relationship.
That includes the relationship with other people, the relationship with ourselves, and the relationship that gradually develops within therapy itself.
We are shaped in relationship
Much of how we come to know ourselves develops in contact with other people.
We learn, often implicitly:
whether our feelings are welcome or too much
whether closeness feels safe, uncertain, intrusive, or unavailable
whether we need to adapt, hide, perform, please, or stay self-contained
what to expect when we are vulnerable, expressive, dependent, or in need
These patterns are not just ideas. Over time, they can become woven into the way we feel, think, respond, and organise ourselves in everyday life.
So when therapy works relationally, it does not look only at symptoms in isolation. It becomes interested in the ways a person has learned to relate — to others, to emotion, to need, to conflict, to closeness, and to themselves.
Relational therapy is not just talking about relationships
Working relationally does include exploring past and present relationships, but it is not limited to that.
It also means paying attention to what happens between therapist and client. Over time, familiar expectations and patterns can begin to show themselves in the therapeutic relationship itself.
A person may expect judgement, distance, pressure, misunderstanding, abandonment, engulfment, or the need to get things right. They may find themselves becoming compliant, guarded, self-critical, withdrawn, overly accommodating, or suddenly angry without fully knowing why.
This is not seen as a problem or a failure. Often, it is valuable information.
A relational approach pays careful and respectful attention to these moments. Rather than rushing to interpret them, it tries to understand what may be getting communicated through the pattern.
What appears in therapy is often not random. It may reflect an older way of organising around safety, attachment, protection, or survival.
In this sense, relational therapy is not only about insight. It is also about making room for new experience.
Exploring the self
Working relationally also means making space for a fuller exploration of the self.
Many people live with inner tension or conflict that can be hard to name. One part may want closeness, while another pulls away. One aspect may feel capable and thoughtful, while another becomes frightened, ashamed, or overwhelmed very quickly.
Therapy can help bring curiosity to these different ways of experiencing and responding.
This is one reason ego state work can be especially helpful.
In Transactional Analysis, ego states describe distinct patterns of feeling, thinking, bodily experience, and behaviour. These are often understood as Parent, Adult, and Child ego states.
This can offer a grounded way of understanding why we do not always respond from the same place.
At times, a person may be in a more Adult state — reflective, present, and able to think and feel with some steadiness. At other times, they may find themselves pulled into an internal Parent mode marked by pressure, criticism, or rigid expectations. At other moments, Child experience may become active, bringing vulnerability, protest, fear, compliance, shame, longing, or overwhelm.
A relational approach does not reduce people to these categories. Rather, it uses them to notice what is happening with greater clarity and compassion.
This can help a person move from asking What is wrong with me? to asking What state am I in right now? or What has become activated here?
Why insight is often not enough
Many people already understand a great deal about themselves.
They may know why they struggle in relationships. They may understand where their self-criticism comes from. They may recognise that they are repeating old patterns. And yet, when the moment comes, the same reactions still happen.
This can be discouraging and confusing.
But often the issue is not a lack of insight. It is that the pattern is not only cognitive. It is also emotional, relational, and physiological.
A person may know they are not in danger, yet their body tightens as though danger is present. They may know a partner’s disappointment is not the same as childhood rejection, yet something in them collapses, defends, or panics before thought has had time to settle things.
This is where a purely top-down approach can begin to reach its limits.
Why shock, affect, and the body matter too
For some people, especially where trauma or chronic relational stress has been present, therapy needs to take seriously the role of shock, affect, and the nervous system.
By shock, I mean not only obvious traumatic events, but also the way the system may have had to respond to moments of alarm, misattunement, emotional injury, fear, humiliation, helplessness, or sudden disruption.
By affect, I mean the emotional charge carried in the system — fear, grief, rage, shame, dread, despair, longing, or hurt that may be difficult to regulate, express, or even fully recognise.
If these layers are not acknowledged, therapy can remain too cognitive. A person may be encouraged to reflect, reframe, or make sense of things while something more activated and embodied continues to drive the pattern underneath.
Working relationally does not mean staying only in words. It means recognising when the person in front of you is not only describing an issue, but re-entering a state.
Integrating top-down and bottom-up approaches
This is why integrating top-down and bottom-up work can matter so much.
Top-down approaches help with reflection, understanding, language, meaning-making, and perspective.
Bottom-up approaches help address what is happening through the body and nervous system — tension, impulse, orienting, autonomic activation, shock response, collapse, and patterns that are held procedurally rather than only verbally.
A relational psychotherapy approach can hold both.
Therapy may involve careful exploration of meaning, history, and relationship, while also recognising the need to work with what happens in the body, in affect, and in the nervous system.
In practice, this may include drawing on approaches such as Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR), Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, or ILF neurofeedback, where helpful.
These approaches do not replace relational work. They can support and deepen it.
What integration really means
Integration does not mean becoming perfectly calm, endlessly self-aware, or free from all internal conflict.
It means that different layers of experience can begin to come into better relationship with one another.
A person may become more able to notice when a critical internal Parent is active, to stay more connected to Adult reflection, and to recognise when Child vulnerability or fear has been stirred. They may become more able to tolerate affect without being overtaken by it. They may find that the body no longer has to carry quite so much unresolved shock on its own.
Over time, there may be more flexibility, more choice, and more capacity to remain in contact — with oneself, with others, and with the present moment.
So what does working relationally actually mean?
It means therapy is not treated as the delivery of techniques to a problem.
It means the person is understood in context — relationally, emotionally, developmentally, and physiologically.
It means paying attention to how patterns were formed, how they continue to shape present experience, and how they may show themselves in therapy itself.
It means valuing self-exploration, recognising the usefulness of ego states, and understanding that meaningful change often requires more than insight alone.
And it means that healing is not only about understanding yourself better from a distance, but about gradually experiencing yourself differently — with more contact, more regulation, more integration, and more room to live from the present rather than from old survival patterns.
If you are wondering whether this way of working may be a good fit, you may also wish to read more about psychotherapy, trauma-informed therapy, and how I work, or get in touch to arrange a free 20-minute consultation.