Power Couples: How Secure Love Creates Real Strength
Real Power Comes From How Secure You Feel in Love
In healthy relationships, connection isn’t just emotional — it’s energizing.
As relationship therapist Eva Van Prooyen, MFT explains, secure, loving partnerships don’t just feel good… they literally fuel your life force. When two people know how to truly be good partners to each other, they create a type of relationship that gives energy instead of draining it. Secure love steadies you through challenges and makes everyday life lighter, smoother, and more joyful. This is what separates ordinary couples from power couples: they create a partnership where both people feel seen, valued, and supported — not just sometimes, but consistently.
Eva highlights something essential: secure-functioning couples operate with fairness, sensitivity, and deep respect. When one partner starts feeling unwanted, unseen, or unimportant, they begin to emotionally “underperform.” The brain shifts into survival mode, and instead of connecting, they protect.
In other words:
If emotional safety drops, so does the quality of the relationship. But when both partners feel secure, the relationship becomes a source of stability — not stress. One of the strongest principles of PACT (Psychobiological Approach to Couples Therapy) is simple but profound:
Your partner is your responsibility, and you are in theirs.
Not in a controlling way — but in a deeply supportive way.
Eva encourages couples to:
understand how they themselves move through the world
understand how their partner actually operates (not how they wish they operated)
This kind of awareness and curiosity creates a strong foundation. It helps couples shift each other into better moods, lower stress, and reduced anxiety — because they know what their partner needs. And yes, this requires effort.
As Eva humorously puts it, maybe wedding vows should include:
“I take you to be my perfect pain in the butt.”
Because love isn’t perfect — but secure-functioning couples know how to manage challenges with compassion instead of conflict. Love becomes powerful when both partners choose each other’s well-being as much as their own. Being “good at your partner” is one of the most meaningful parts of creating a strong, secure relationship. As Eva explains, you get your own needs met by helping your partner feel safe, valued, and supported enough to meet yours. When you elevate your partner, you elevate the relationship—and when the relationship is strong, both people thrive. Small but intentional actions make a powerful difference: speaking kindly about your partner, introducing them proudly in public, offering subtle signals like “I’ve got you,” or checking in before defensiveness builds. These gestures consistently communicate, “You are in my care,” creating emotional safety that reignites connection and intimacy. This is the heart of a true power couple: two people who help each other operate at their best, every single day.
When you create emotional safety, you create a relationship that can withstand anything — and grow through everything.

