Retrouvaille (French for “rediscovery”) originated in 1977 in the French-speaking province of Quebec in Canada, and from there has spread to a number of other countries, including the US, Australia and New Zealand, Mexico and the Philippines. It was introduced to Ireland last year.
Steve and Gayleen Jacobs, an American couple now living in Dublin, were initially sceptical about the programme. Gayleen in particular felt their marriage was over and doubted that Retrouvaille could help. “I hated him,” she says of her husband. “I had gone past all the anger, I didn’t care any more. I just wanted out.” She had got to the stage of writing an unposted letter to her mother asking for financial help to escape the marriage when a priest friend persuaded them to try Retrouvaille as a last-ditch effort.
Arriving at the appointed venue, she was not impressed. “The presenters were American and were professionally cheerful in the way that only Americans can be,” she recalls. “Everybody was wearing name badges. The men were sent off into a separate room from the women and we were told to write to each other.
“My letter to Steve said: ‘I am only writing to you because I have been told to and the vultures are watching me. This isn’t going to work.’ I wanted to leave that first evening but was persuaded to stay. By mid-Saturday, I was beginning to change my mind.”
By the end of the course she was convinced, and one year on their marriage is good and getting better. “We have ‘rediscovered’ one another,” says Steve.