Is My Marriage Worth Saving? 10 Questions to Ask Before Giving Up
A marriage counsellor’s honest guide for Indian couples โ including a real case study
โ Dr. Prerna Kohli, Ph.D. ยท ๐ June 2026 ยท โฑ 10 min read
A marriage is worth saving when at least one partner is still willing to try, emotional safety has not been replaced by contempt, and specific wounds โ not general incompatibility โ are the source of conflict. Research shows that 70โ73% of couples who commit to a full course of couples therapy show significant improvement. The right time to start is always earlier than you think.
Nobody walks into marriage planning to leave it.
Yet across India, family courts are seeing rising matrimonial dispute volumes year after year. Behind every statistic is a real couple โ sitting in silence at the dinner table, lying awake on opposite sides of the same bed, wondering whether what they are feeling is a rough patch or the beginning of the end.
The question I am asked more than any other in my clinic is this: “Is my marriage worth saving?”
After 30 years of working with Indian couples at every stage โ newly married, mid-crisis, and on the brink of separation โ my answer is rarely simple. But the questions I ask are always the same. And they almost always reveal something the couple didn’t know they knew.
Why Listen to Dr. Prerna Kohli?
I have worked with couples across every stage of marital difficulty โ from newly married couples navigating in-law conflict, to couples on the verge of divorce after decades together. What I share in this article is drawn directly from that clinical experience, combined with the most robust research available on what actually helps marriages heal.
Before you read these questions, one important note: this is not a quiz with a score. There are no right or wrong answers. These 10 questions are designed to help you understand what you are actually feeling โ and what that feeling is telling you โ before you make any decision.
The Kohli Marriage Clarity Frameworkโข
A 10-question diagnostic framework developed from 30+ years of clinical practice with Indian couples โ designed to help you understand where your marriage actually stands before making any decision.
Is this a pattern โ or a moment?
Every marriage has bad seasons. Every couple has periods of distance, conflict, and disconnection. The question is whether what you are experiencing is a temporary rupture โ or a long-standing pattern that has repeated itself for years without changing. A rupture can be repaired with the right support. A pattern requires deeper work โ but that work is possible, and it changes lives.
Do you still feel emotionally safe with your partner?
Not physical safety โ emotional safety. Can you be vulnerable without being mocked? Can you express fear without it being used against you later? Can you admit uncertainty without it becoming ammunition in the next argument? Emotional safety is the foundation of intimacy. Where it is missing, therapy is not optional โ it is essential.
Is there contempt in the relationship?
Anger is not the same as contempt. Anger says: “I am hurt and I need something from you.” Contempt says: “I no longer respect you as a person.” Dr. John Gottman’s decades of research identified contempt as the single strongest predictor of divorce. Eye-rolling, dismissiveness, mockery, condescension: these are not just bad manners. They are clinical warning signs. A marriage with anger can be healed. A marriage with contempt requires urgent, skilled intervention โ but it is not beyond repair if both people are willing.
Have you both stopped trying โ or just one of you?
A marriage can survive one person losing hope temporarily. It cannot survive both people giving up simultaneously. If one of you is still willing to work โ still willing to sit in a room and try โ there is something to work with. That willingness, even if fragile, is the most important raw material therapy has to work with.
Are children or family pressure the only reason you are staying?
Staying for children is one of the most common and most misunderstood decisions Indian couples make. Children do not benefit from an intact household where contempt, coldness, or hostility is the daily atmosphere. They benefit from emotionally healthy parents โ whether together or not. If children or family obligation are the only forces keeping a marriage together, that is not a foundation โ it is a postponement.
Have you tried therapy โ genuinely, not just once?
Many couples arrive at my clinic and tell me they have already tried therapy. When I ask how many sessions, the answer is often two or three. Real marriage therapy takes time. Research by Dr. Sue Johnson, founder of Emotionally Focused Therapy, shows improvement rates of 70โ73% among couples who commit to a full course of treatment. One month of genuine sessions can reveal more than three years of hoping things will improve on their own.
Can you still remember why you chose each other?
This is not about nostalgia. It is a clinical indicator. When a couple can no longer access any positive memory of each other โ any warmth, any reason they originally connected โ the emotional account is deeply overdrawn. When couples can still recall what drew them together, even dimly, therapy has something to work toward.
Is there a specific wound that has never been acknowledged?
Most marriages that appear to be breaking down over “constant fighting” or “incompatibility” are actually breaking down over one or two specific unacknowledged wounds โ an affair, a betrayal, a moment of profound humiliation that was never addressed. The surface conflict is almost never the real conflict. Naming the actual wound is often where healing begins.
What would your life look like in five years if nothing changes?
This is not a pessimistic question. It is a clarifying one. Sometimes imagining the future with complete honesty cuts through denial โ in both directions. For some couples, this question reveals that they want to fight for the marriage. For others, it reveals that they have already made their decision โ but have not yet said it out loud.
Are you asking this question because you want permission to leave โ or a reason to stay?
This is the most important question of all. The answer reveals more about where you truly are than any other indicator. Neither answer is wrong โ both are honest, and honesty is where real clarity begins. But knowing which one is true changes everything about what comes next.
If these questions have already given you clarity, you don’t need to read further.
WhatsApp Dr. Prerna Kohli โWhat Your Answers Mean
If most of your answers point to pain โ but also to effort: There is real hurt here, but also real willingness. This is the profile where therapy has the strongest chance of creating lasting change. Do not wait longer than you already have.
If your answers are mixed โ some hope, some exhaustion: You are in a critical window. Mixed answers often mean one partner is further along in giving up than the other. Individual sessions first โ for both of you โ can help clarify what is actually happening.
If most of your answers point to contempt, unsafety, or relief at the idea of leaving: This is important information โ not a verdict. Therapy can still help you understand what you are feeling and how to navigate what comes next with as little damage as possible.
A Real Story: When Love Was Never the Problem
“They never stopped loving each other. That was never the problem.”
The Situation
They were college sweethearts โ both in their early thirties, both working in IT, both earning well. She came from an upper-middle-class family where women were educated, opinionated, and equal partners in the household. His family was more traditional โ deeply patriarchal, with strong expectations about how a daughter-in-law should behave. Within two years of marriage, the strain had become unbearable. Eventually, she moved back to her parents’ home. She loved him. He loved her. But she could no longer survive in an environment where she was not accepted.
What Was Actually Underneath
He was the one who called my office. We began with individual sessions โ five for him, three or four for her. He came into therapy believing the problem was a conflict between his wife and his parents. He left understanding something far more important: the problem was his own unexamined belief that loving his parents required allowing them to define the boundaries of his marriage. In the Indian context, standing up for your spouse in front of your parents does not feel like boundary-setting. It feels like betrayal. Therapy helped him see that loving your parents and protecting your marriage are not opposites.
What Changed
Several joint sessions followed โ sessions where they could finally say to each other what had been unsayable. The marriage did not just survive. It was rebuilt on a clearer, more honest foundation than it had ever had before.
What Marriage Counselling Actually Looks Like
Good couples therapy creates a space where both people can finally say what they have been unable to say, and hear what they have been unable to hear. The therapist’s role is not to judge and not to decide. It is to create the conditions for honesty that the marriage itself has not been able to provide.
“In 30 years of practice, I have never met a couple who came to me too early. I have met many who came far too late โ not because their marriage was beyond saving, but because they had waited until the emotional account was so overdrawn that rebuilding required much more than it would have needed before.”
โ Dr. Prerna Kohli, Clinical Psychologist & Marriage Counsellor, Gurugram
Read what clients say about their experience in Dr. Kohli’s testimonials.
Why Indian Couples Spend โน4 Lakh on a Holiday But Won’t Spend โน40,000 on Their Marriage
A couple in crisis books a two-week holiday to Europe. They spend three, four, sometimes five lakh rupees. They have a beautiful time. They return feeling closer. And within three weeks, the same arguments are back. The same silences. The same wounds. Because the holiday paused the problem. It did not touch it.
“A holiday is cosmetic. It changes the setting, not the dynamic. The Eiffel Tower is beautiful โ but it cannot teach a husband to hear his wife, or help a wife understand why she shuts down every time he raises his voice. Only therapy can do that.”
โ Dr. Prerna Kohli
| Option | Cost | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Two-week Europe holiday | โน3 โ 5 lakh | Two weeks of relief. The problem waits at home. |
| 12 sessions of marriage counselling | โน72,000 โ โน1.2 lakh | Lasting change. Skills that stay with you for life. |
| Contested divorce (legal fees alone) | โน5 โ 20 lakh+ | Before alimony, asset division, or cost to your children. |
Signs It May Be Time to Speak to Someone
You do not need to be in crisis to benefit from therapy. If any of the following resonate with you, it may be worth reaching out for a consultation:
- A persistent feeling of not belonging โ in the marriage, or anywhere
- Emotional exhaustion that rest does not seem to fix
- Recurring conflict about values, money, or family
- Staying only for the children or family pressure
- Presenting a “happy marriage” to others while feeling empty inside
- A growing sense of distance from your partner, even when nothing has “happened”
- Feeling that you have lost the person you married โ or the person you were
A Final Word
Your marriage may be worth saving. The love may still be there, buried under years of unspoken hurt, waiting for the right conditions to surface again.
Or this may be the beginning of understanding โ honestly and without shame โ that it is not.
Either way, you deserve clarity. Not just endurance. Not just the performance of a marriage that has already ended inside. Real clarity โ about what you feel, what you want, and what is genuinely possible.
That is what therapy is for.
Ready to Talk? I Am Always Here.
I work with couples in-clinic in Gurugram and online globally. Individual and joint sessions available. Always accepting new clients.