Couple offering comfort to each other representing empathy and emotional safety in betrayal trauma healing

Betrayal trauma healing is rarely a straight line. For the betrayed partner, ordinary moments — a song on the radio, a specific location, a particular time of day — can suddenly trigger waves of anger, grief, or panic. What looks like an overreaction to the betraying partner is often a trauma response to a wound that has not yet been processed.

How the betraying partner responds in these moments is one of the most consequential factors in whether the relationship heals — or fractures further. According to the American Psychological Association, emotional responsiveness from the betraying partner is one of the strongest predictors of whether couples successfully recover from infidelity.


The Defensiveness Trap

When a betrayed partner is triggered, the betraying partner's instinct is often to become defensive — to explain, clarify, or minimize:

Defensive responses — escalate pain

  • "It wasn't my intention to hurt you."
  • "You're overreacting."
  • "Are we really doing this again?"
  • "I said I was sorry — what more do you want?"

Empathic responses — invite healing

  • "I can see how much this is hurting you."
  • "I'm here. I'm not going anywhere."
  • "I'm grateful you're sharing this with me."
  • "Tell me more about what you're feeling."

Defensive responses — even when technically accurate — address the surface event rather than the underlying wound. They signal to the betrayed partner that their pain is inconvenient or excessive. This deepens the injury rather than beginning to heal it.


Empathy as the Foundation of Betrayal Trauma Healing

As researcher Brené Brown teaches, empathy means stepping into another person's emotional space — not fixing it, not offering reassurance, and not rushing them through it. Empathy communicates: "Your pain is real. I see it. I am with you in it."

This is radically different from reassurance — which focuses on resolving the betraying partner's discomfort rather than the betrayed partner's pain. Reassurance says: "It won't happen again." Empathy says: "I understand why you are not sure you believe that yet."

Empathy does not require understanding every nuance of your partner's pain. It requires showing up — fully present, without defense — and letting their pain matter to you.


Questions to Ask Yourself in Triggered Moments

When your partner is triggered and you feel the pull toward defensiveness, pause and ask yourself:

"What part of my partner's pain is being activated right now — and what does that part need?"
"Am I trying to end this conversation too quickly — to relieve my own discomfort rather than theirs?"
"What would it look like to stay in this moment with them rather than trying to fix or resolve it?"
"How can I show — not just say — that I genuinely see their pain?"

What Betrayal Trauma Healing Actually Requires

Healing from betrayal trauma is not a single conversation or a single apology. It is a process — measured in months rather than weeks — that requires consistent emotional presence from both partners. It typically unfolds in stages:

1

Safety and stabilization

The betrayed partner needs to feel physically and emotionally safe before any deeper healing work is possible. This often happens in individual therapy first.

2

Honest disclosure and accountability

The betraying partner takes full accountability — without minimizing, blaming, or rushing reconciliation. Honesty at this stage is the foundation of restored trust.

3

Processing the grief and trauma

The betrayed partner processes the full weight of what happened — with a therapist and, when ready, in supported couples conversations.

4

Rebuilding connection and trust

Both partners begin building a new version of the relationship — one built on honesty, genuine empathy, and the evidence of consistent change over time.

This work is most effectively supported by both individual betrayal trauma therapy and couples therapy — often running concurrently. Through Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), couples learn how to create the emotional safety that makes this kind of healing genuinely possible.

Betrayal trauma healing is not about returning to what the relationship was before. It is about building something more honest, more connected, and more resilient than what existed before the betrayal.

Whether you are the betrayed or the betraying partner, Big Valley Therapy can help you navigate this — in person in Sandy, Utah and via telehealth statewide. Schedule a Free Consultation

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