
A number of women in relationships or marriages are thriving, yet it’s entirely normal for moments ofuncertainty to sneak in.
A small oversight by a partner can shake a sense of security, and suddenly, the future once imaginedfeels uncertain.
Grace, a newly married woman in Nairobi, shared her feelings with Eve:
“I love him, but sometimes I worry that when we’re achieving and growing together, he’ll loosen thebond or forget what we’ve been through. I’ve seen marriages that were strong until they just fell apart.That’s my nightmare.”
That kind of quiet fear isn’t uncommon. Many women, like Grace, carry deep love alongside persistentdoubt. Often, this starts with the question: Am I enough?
She may find herself shouldering invisible emotional work, like making sure conversations flow,celebrations happen, and conflicts are resolved.
Over time, that unseen load drains her peace and breeds gentle resentment. This, coupled with pasthurts, makes it easy to fear that today’s stability might slip away tomorrow, even when everythingseems calm on the surface.
According to Dr. Elizabeth Njue, a Nairobi-based relationship psychologist, these thoughtful steps cantransform doubt into deeper closeness:
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1. Name the doubt.
“When questions like ‘What if he changes?’ or ‘Am I enough?’ surface, acknowledging them as signals,not signs of failure, creates space to investigate them safely,” says Dr. Njue.
2. Reflect on its source.She encourages couples to consider whether such doubt stems from fears of losing independence,childhood emotional patterns, career pressures, or cultural expectations. Dr. Njue explains:
“Understanding the ‘why’ transforms vague unease into insight, opening the door to honest dialogue.”
3. Speak with care.Dr. Njue advises using language that fosters connection:
“‘I’ve been feeling…’ instead of ‘You don’t…’. When partners feel heard and not blamed, it becomeseasier to explore and resolve underlying concerns together.”
4. Check the emotional labour.“Is she managing most of the unseen relationship work, from organising plans to maintaining emotionalconnection?” Dr. Njue asks. She urges couples to pause and assess:
“Is this energy being shared fairly? Balanced effort fosters trust and diminishes burnout.”
5. Try premarital or emotional counselling.In Nairobi, structured programmes focusing on communication, finances, intimacy, and conflictresolution have strengthened marriages. Dr. Njue points out:
“Couples who prepare together build more resilient and cohesive relationships.”
6. Seek professional support if needed.If anxiety continues to linger, Dr. Njue recommends working with a therapist, especially one trained inattachment-based approaches or Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), to help couples break negativepatterns and deepen emotional connection.
She reminds us: “Doubt can be the doorway to deeper understanding. Facing it together builds apartnership rooted not in perfection, but in trust, empathy, and shared growth.”
These gentle and grounded steps offer women like Grace a path from uncertainty to clarity: noticingdoubt, tracing its roots, speaking with empathy, equalising emotional effort, preparing as a team, andreaching out to professionals when needed.Through this, doubt becomes less of a threat and more of a catalyst for stronger, more connected love.