What we treat
Understanding Betrayal Trauma
Betrayal trauma occurs when trust is broken in a close relationship — through infidelity, emotional dishonesty, secrecy, or compulsive sexual behavior. This kind of relational injury doesn't just damage the relationship. It disrupts your sense of safety, reality, and identity.
At Big Valley Therapy, we specialize in helping individuals and couples across Utah navigate the aftermath of betrayal. We offer both in-person sessions in the Salt Lake Valley and telehealth therapy for clients statewide.
When trust is broken, the impact extends far beyond the relationship:
- Emotional safety and nervous system regulation
- Your sense of reality and ability to trust yourself
- Sleep, concentration, and daily functioning
Many people feel shocked, confused, or emotionally overwhelmed after discovery. These reactions are not signs of weakness — they are normal nervous system responses to an attachment injury.
Recognizing the signs
Signs and Symptoms of Betrayal Trauma
Betrayal trauma shows up differently for everyone, but there are common patterns in how the mind and body respond to relational injury.
Emotional & psychological
- Intrusive thoughts or mental replay
- Anxiety and hypervigilance
- Emotional numbness or shutdown
- Difficulty trusting your own perceptions
- Shame, self-blame, or loss of worth
- Anger, grief, or cycling between both
Physical & nervous system
- Sleep disruption or insomnia
- Panic attacks or racing heart
- Fatigue or difficulty concentrating
- Physical tension or feeling "on edge"
- Nausea or appetite changes
These reactions are not character flaws. They are protective nervous system responses trying to restore safety after relational injury. If you recognize these experiences, betrayal trauma therapy can help you move from survival mode toward stability.
The healing process
How Betrayal Trauma Therapy Helps
Therapy for betrayal trauma is not about rushing to forgiveness or making quick decisions about your relationship. At Big Valley Therapy, we focus first on stabilization — helping your nervous system return to a regulated state so you can think clearly and feel grounded again.
Stabilization
The initial phase focuses on reducing overwhelm. We help you develop tools to manage intrusive thoughts, regulate difficult emotions, and restore a basic sense of safety in your body and daily life.
Processing
Once stabilization is in place, we gently begin processing the traumatic material using EMDR and Internal Family Systems (IFS). This phase addresses the deeper emotional wounds — not just the event itself, but the impact on your identity and self-trust.
Integration
The final phase is about rebuilding — your sense of self, your ability to trust, and if you choose, your relationship. Healing is paced carefully and entirely on your terms.
Clients often experience:
- Less emotional reactivity
- Restored self-trust
- Reduced anxiety
- Fewer intrusive thoughts
- Greater clarity in decisions
- Stronger sense of identity
Healing is paced carefully. The goal is long-term stability — not rushed emotional processing.
Our clinical framework
A Trauma-Informed Approach to Betrayal Trauma
Betrayal trauma is not something to "move past quickly." It is an attachment injury that impacts emotional and physiological safety systems. A trauma-informed approach means we never rush the process — your pace sets the pace.
Safety
Every session begins with your emotional and physical safety as the foundation.
Choice
You are always in control of what we explore and at what depth.
Pacing
We move at the speed your nervous system can handle — never faster.
You are never pushed beyond what your system can handle. Healing happens when you feel safe enough to let it.
Your space to heal
Individual Therapy for Betrayal Trauma
Many people seek individual therapy after betrayal because it provides a private space to process emotions without pressure. You don't have to protect anyone else's feelings or manage anyone else's reactions — this time is entirely yours.
Whether you are still in the relationship, considering leaving, or somewhere in between, individual therapy supports grounded decision-making and emotional stability — never pushing you toward any particular outcome.
Rebuild self-trustLearn to trust your own perceptions and instincts again after betrayal.
Strengthen boundariesDevelop clear, healthy boundaries that reflect your values and needs.
Reduce emotional overwhelmLearn practical tools to regulate anxiety, grief, and intrusive thoughts.
Restore identity and clarityReconnect with who you are outside of the relationship and the betrayal.
Individual therapy after betrayal is not about choosing sides — it is about giving yourself the support and space to heal on your own terms.
Healing together
Couples Therapy After Betrayal
Couples therapy after betrayal is only appropriate when both partners are emotionally ready. Jumping into couples work too soon — before individual stabilization has occurred — can retraumatize the injured partner and stall the healing process.
Important: Couples therapy is not the first step after betrayal. Individual therapy for the injured partner typically comes first, creating a foundation of emotional safety before relational work begins.
When the time is right, couples therapy focuses on rebuilding the relationship from the ground up — not through reassurance alone, but through consistent action, accountability, and emotional repair.
Emotional safety
Rebuilding a sense of security within the relationship.
Honesty & transparency
Creating new patterns of open, honest communication.
Trust through action
Trust is rebuilt through behavior over time — not promises.
The goal is never rushed reconciliation. It is building a relationship where both partners feel safe, seen, and genuinely connected.
There is a way forward
Healing Is Possible
Betrayal trauma can deeply disrupt emotional safety and relationship trust. The pain is real, and it deserves to be taken seriously. But healing is possible — and you don't have to navigate it alone.
At Big Valley Therapy, we walk alongside you through every stage of this journey — offering a calm, structured, and non-judgmental space for healing.
Start Betrayal Trauma Therapy in Utah
If you are feeling overwhelmed, confused, or emotionally exhausted after betrayal, support is available. We offer a calm, structured, and non-judgmental space for healing — both in person in Sandy, Utah and via telehealth across the state.
Common questions
Frequently Asked Questions
What is betrayal trauma? +
Betrayal trauma is a psychological response that occurs when someone you depend on for safety or support violates your trust — most commonly through infidelity, pornography use, or emotional deception. It is considered a form of relational trauma and can produce symptoms similar to PTSD, including intrusive thoughts, emotional dysregulation, and hypervigilance.
How long does betrayal trauma therapy take? +
Healing timelines vary depending on the severity of the betrayal, your history, and your goals. Some clients begin to feel significant relief within 8–12 sessions. Others benefit from longer-term support. We pace therapy to your needs — never rushing the process.
Do I need to bring my partner to therapy? +
No. Many clients begin with individual therapy after betrayal, and that is often the right starting point. Individual therapy gives you a private space to process your own emotions without pressure. Couples therapy is only introduced when both partners are emotionally ready and it is clinically appropriate.
Is betrayal trauma therapy different from regular trauma therapy? +
Betrayal trauma has unique features — the source of the harm is often someone you still love or live with. Our therapy is specifically tailored to address attachment injury, self-trust, and the relational complexity that comes with this type of trauma.
Do you offer telehealth therapy in Utah? +
Yes. We offer both in-person sessions at our Sandy, Utah office and telehealth therapy for clients anywhere in the state.
What therapy approaches do you use for betrayal trauma? +
We primarily use EMDR, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) — all evidence-based approaches well-researched for trauma and relational healing.
How do I know if I'm ready to start therapy? +
You don't have to feel ready — you just have to be willing. Many clients start therapy in crisis and that is completely normal. We offer a free 15-minute consultation so you can get a sense of whether Big Valley Therapy is a good fit before committing to anything.
Contact Us
We would love to support you on your healing journey. Whether you're ready to begin or just exploring whether Big Valley Therapy is a good fit, please reach out — we would love to hear from you.