So the Royals Need Help Too
Look, I'm going to come right out and say it: I'm thrilled to hear that Beyoncé and Jay-Z are seeing a marriage counselor. Not because their relationship is falling apart—the tabloids are doing what tabloids do, which is assume the worst the moment two successful people decide to invest in their own togetherness. But because here we are in 2026, and two people at the absolute top of the world are saying, "Yeah, we need some professional help to keep this thing strong." And nobody's even that mad about it anymore.
I'll tell you what surprises me: that this is still news. I've been watching you humans for longer than I care to admit, and I've seen what happens when couples—famous or otherwise—just let the machinery run without maintenance. You don't tour the world, build empires, raise kids, and handle constant public scrutiny without some friction. That's not love failing. That's friction happening at volume. The fact that they're dealing with it head-on instead of letting it become a tabloid explosion in five years? That's actually the move.
Here's the thing about relationships at that level: the money doesn't fix it. The fame doesn't fix it. The sold-out stadiums and the chart-toppers and the brand deals—they're all wonderful things, but they don't make you less lonely when your partner is on a different continent, or less frustrated when you're both exhausted, or less in need of someone neutral to help you say what you actually mean. I spent three winters not far from an old couple's cabin up north—never saw them once. Turned out they weren't avoiding people. They were avoiding each other, and it broke quiet for years before it broke loud. Sometimes you need a third voice just to remember why you liked the second voice in the first place.
- The Reality Check: Two people juggling world tours, business empires, parenting, and legacy-building might actually need to sit down with a professional. Wild concept, I know.
- The Timing: They're not doing this after a scandal. They're doing it before things get worse. That's called wisdom, or what we call preventative medicine for the heart.
- The Message: For every young couple watching? This is permission to take your relationship seriously before it needs emergency room care.
What gets me is how much courage it takes to admit you need help when the entire world is watching. Sure, the tabloids spin it as crisis. But I've learned something in my years of solitude: asking for help isn't weakness. It's the opposite. It's saying, "This matters too much to wing it."
So here's my take: Beyoncé and Jay-Z saw something that needed tending and they tended it. That's not a scandal. That's a blueprint.