When Couples Therapy Hasn't Worked — Body Compass
Relational & Somatic Support After Couples Therapy
You talk better now.
You still don't
want each other.

Therapy can teach you to fight less and listen better without ever touching why you stopped having sex, or why one of you still carries everything. Those two things usually need a different kind of work — one that goes into the body and names the pattern directly.

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Body Compass
A couple can become fluent in talking about their problem and still be living entirely inside it. That isn't a failure of effort. It's what happens when the work never reaches the body, the desire, or the politics underneath the pattern.
— Nicole Siegel, Certified Sexological Bodyworker®
You're in the right place if
You recognize this.
You've done real work in therapy — you fight less, listen better, understand each other more — and you still haven't had sex in months
Your therapist helped you communicate about the mental load. The load itself never actually moved.
Sex came up once or twice in sessions and got redirected, like it was outside what your therapist could help with
Nobody in that room ever said the word patriarchy, or named who was raised to manage and who wasn't — even though it was clearly part of what was happening
You left feeling closer as people and exactly as far apart as lovers
You're not looking to replace your therapist. You're looking for the piece that room never got to.
You suspect the actual problem lives in your body, not in a misunderstanding that better words could fix
You want someone who will name the gendered pattern directly and work with your bodies, not just your conversation
What this work does differently
Talking about the pattern
and changing it
are not the same skill.
What therapy is built for
Building communication skills, emotional safety, and the ability to hear each other — genuinely valuable, and not the same as changing the pattern itself
Most therapists are trained to stay neutral on gender and politics, even when the imbalance in front of them is clearly gendered
Sex and desire are often treated as a specialty outside scope, and get a brief mention before the session moves on
The body rarely comes up directly — nervous system states, where desire physically goes, what a freeze response actually is
What this work does
Names the gendered, political pattern directly — who was raised to manage, who was raised to be managed for — as the architecture, not a side note
Starts with sex and the body, because that's the actual foundation of this practice, not an add-on specialty
Works with the nervous system directly — what's driving the shutdown, the resentment, the disappearance of desire
Often runs alongside an existing therapist, picking up specifically where talk-based work stops
What's actually happening
Understanding a pattern
doesn't move
a nervous system.

Talk therapy is genuinely effective at building insight and communication. What it doesn't automatically do is redistribute a structural imbalance that was never named as structural, or revive desire that died for reasons that live in the body, not in the conversation.

This is why a couple can leave therapy able to describe their pattern in detail — who overfunctions, who's checked out, why sex disappeared — and still be living inside that exact pattern. The insight is real. It just hasn't reached the place where the pattern actually runs: the nervous system, and the social conditioning that built it long before the relationship started.

This work goes directly to both. It names the gendered architecture of the pattern out loud, and it works with the body — breath, nervous system regulation, the felt experience of desire — rather than relying on conversation alone to do work conversation was never built to do.

What becomes possible
Real couples.
Real outcomes.
After two years in therapy
A couple who could describe their pattern perfectly and hadn't had sex in eight months — within four months of this work, wanted each other again.
Four months in
"Our therapist helped us communicate. Nicole helped us understand why the pattern existed in the first place. Once I understood that, I stopped taking it so personally."
After the work
The mental load that three years of couples therapy never touched — finally redistributed, once it was named as a pattern instead of a misunderstanding.
From people who found their way here
What they said
on the other side.
We were excellent communicators and still hadn't had sex in almost a year. Nicole started exactly there, instead of redirecting away from it the way our therapist always had.
— Former client
Our therapist never touched our sex life directly. Nicole did, immediately. That was where the actual information was the whole time.
— Former client
Nicole named the gendered pattern our therapist always seemed to step around. That single thing reframed everything else we'd been working on for two years.
— Former client
How this work is built
What this
work actually is

This work is built on the Body Compass Method™ — a systems-oriented, somatic approach Nicole created through years of direct work with bodies and relationships. She is a Certified Sexological Bodyworker® and trauma-informed practitioner.

It combines somatic practice with relational and systems thinking — naming the gendered, political pattern underneath a dynamic directly, and working with the nervous system rather than relying on conversation alone.

This is coaching, not therapy, and frequently runs alongside an existing therapeutic relationship. Remote sessions are available and effective for most of this work. Nicole works with couples remotely worldwide, with in-person sessions available in Austin, TX.

Where to begin
Two ways to take
the first step.
Free · 30 minutes
Clarity Call
No cost · No obligation
A 30-minute conversation to talk about where you are and whether this work is the right fit. If it isn't, Nicole will tell you that directly — and point you toward what is.
Book the free call
Nicole Siegel
Your guide
Nicole Siegel
Certified Sexological Bodyworker®

I work with the body first, because that's where most relationship patterns actually live — not in the words two people use to describe their problem, but in the nervous system states underneath it. A conversation can be perfectly clear and still not move a body that's been bracing, managing, or shutting down for years.

That's the layer I bring that talk-based work often doesn't reach. Breath, nervous system regulation, the felt experience of safety and desire — these change a pattern from the inside, in a way insight alone rarely does. When it's relevant, I also name the social conditioning shaping the dynamic, because bodies don't form their patterns in a vacuum.

Understanding your pattern clearly is a real accomplishment. It isn't the same as changing it. This work is built for the second part.

Certified Sexological Bodyworker® Systems-Oriented Somatic Trauma-Informed
Common questions
Things people wonder
before reaching out.
Not necessarily. Many clients do this work alongside an existing therapist — the two often address different layers of the same pattern. This is something to discuss on the clarity call.
Yes, directly, from the first session. Sex and the body are the foundation this work is built on, not a specialty referred elsewhere.
Better communication
didn't move it.
This goes to where
it's actually stuck.

30 minutes. Nicole listens, assesses fit, and tells you honestly whether this work is right for your relationship.

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