Tag: <span>Trust</span>

Hope and Healing After Betrayal Trauma

“If an enemy were insulting me, I could endure it… But it is you… my companion, my close friend.”

(Psalm 55:12-13 NIV)

Have you ever been betrayed by someone close to you? Your heart securely trusted in them only to find out they were keeping secrets, actively lying about who they were—shattering trust, vows, and sacred intimacy with mental or physical infidelity. For some it is a secret pornography addiction, an emotional or physical affair, or sexually acting out outside of the relationship without the partner knowing.

As a therapist, I have sat with many who have experienced the agony of betrayal. I am also a person who has experienced it. I am not sure if there is anything as harrowingly painful. Betrayal trauma is one of the most excruciating experiences a person can ever feel. The injury carries with it devastating consequences—spiritually, emotionally and physiologically. It is not a small, superficial, short term trauma. It is deep, extensive, long lasting, and disfiguring. It is not something one can “just deal with” silently and alone. It needs specialized, intentional treatment and care.

As time goes on and we gain some distance from the damage, we can begin to grasp and conceptualize the reality of what happened with clearer eyes and less anguished hearts. We might be able to peer inside the heart and mind of the other person giving us clues as to how it could have happened. Gaining clarity and insight is helpful as we attempt to process and move beyond the trauma. This is not easy and requires much time and support as well as supernatural strength and help for many.

Life appears to spare no one from experiencing seasons of profound heartache, suffering and grief. The pain and disillusionment of it all can leave us stunned, paralyzed, and without hope. But there is hope. It is the hope that from the very ashes of our brokenness, we can glean something precious from it and emerge with an even greater capacity for love and life.

I have humbly observed, and have personally experienced, that as gut-wrenching as the experience of intimate betrayal is, it can also provide the rich opportunity for growth, insight and change like nothing else. I believe it is because the very nature and experience of betrayal begs the questions to its victims: “Who are you? And who are you now? What do you really believe about yourself? Are you in agreement with what this person’s actions have declared about who you are?”

Much of the work is the relentless battle of fighting off painful messages that seem to haunt and batter daily: There is something wrong with me. I wasn’t chosen. Someone else was more captivating, more beautiful, more special, more worthy, more desirable. People with betrayal trauma describe the paralyzing grief, shame and despair they wrestle with incessantly. They share about the PTSD effects they experience in addition to the betrayal. Intrusive images, flashbacks, insomnia, hypervigilance, irritability, health problems, “acting out” in rage and anger, becoming a person they don’t like or recognize, feeling “crazy,” chronically unsafe, empty, numb.

Betrayal is a devastating blow to us biologically and psychologically due to the powerful bonds and attachments we have formed with those deemed “safe”. Being in intimate relationships we trust to meet our core developmental needs is associated with our very sense of well-being, safety and being grounded in reality. Where there have been lies, deception and manipulation of our reality, our own instincts have become exploited and abused. This is one of the most damaging aspects of betrayal. It is a cruel violation of a person’s humanity that results in diminished self-esteem, worth, intense confusion and shame. The trauma of betrayal is multilayered and far reaching.

And yet, incredibly, many in recovery have said that their character and entire person-hood has been refined from the scourge of betrayal. That they feel transformed. They have identified that the sojourn through it actually helped define their true identity. Yes it was agonizing and they wouldn’t have chosen to go through it— but after they survived it, they actually felt stronger and more secure in who they were as individuals.

People who have been betrayed intimately know this cruel all-out attack on one’s body, soul and psyche. Many say it was the worst experience of their lives— the violent death of a hallowed relationship—along with trust, fidelity, love, sacred vows, a dream, a family.

As a betrayal trauma therapist and as one who has traveled this path, it is my firm belief that we can emerge from our most painful, deepest, darkest pits of pain and despair. Although death and destruction do occur, we can survive. The truth is that betrayal is an outward manifestation of what is going on inside of someone’s own heart—and that someone else’s choices and actions are about them— not us. It is an ownership that must be accepted and taken responsibility for. Being betrayed is not a reflection of our failure or ways we didn’t measure up. Intellectually, most of us can comprehend this and even begin to believe this. But while our minds might be able to grasp this, it can take a long time for our wounded hearts and bodies to come to terms with. Deep, internal long term care and repair is needed.

The treatment for betrayal trauma involves a process of phases that we must go through together. These involve stabilization, establishing safety, boundaries, grieving, processing, recovery of self, integration of tools for triggers, making meaning of the trauma, and more. A holistic approach of treatment consisting of emotional, spiritual and bio-psycho-social components are most effective for most.

I marvel with joy at the privilege of walking alongside these people. In the beginning they often can’t see a vision of themselves healed or free from such destruction or pain but I can. I see the healed, alive versions of themselves they can’t yet. They are brave, precious, worthy of time, tenderness, gentle care, and great love. What an honor to journey with them to the place of wholeness and truth.

Most of us wonder about what it might feel like to face our worst fears. We wonder if we would be able to survive the initial terror, horror, and pain of  it, let alone the walking through it. Many who recover claim they discovered valiant courage, strength, resilience, and triumph in place of terror and demise. It was an unexpected—and exquisite gift.

I believe that every act of pain and abuse that has been perpetrated against us can be healed. It is supremely difficult work and it takes much time— but you are worth the resources it will take. Pain and suffering comes to us all but our lives and stories belong to us—no one else. It is true that we were not able to prevent people’s choices or actions. We were vulnerable and were not protected from things that wounded us deeply and should never have happened to us. But we are here now. We are safe now. We have choices now. And we get to choose how our story is framed, how it gets told, and who the victor is in the end.

Safe People

If I had to narrow down what my biggest passion might be in terms of relationships it is probably this concept—safe people. What does it mean to be a safe person? Am I a safe person? Are you a safe person? Am I in a partnership with a safe person? There is a lot to ponder here but when I think about what my personal definition of a safe person is, I think about specific character qualities a person possesses. What comes to mind for me is:

• Honesty
• Gentleness
• Directness
• Humility
• Self-awareness
• The ability to listen to and receive truth
• Acts on need, not just hears
• Grows and works towards personal improvement

When I think of unsafe people I think of these traits:

• Dishonesty
• Defensiveness
• Withdraws or stonewalls
• Keeps secrets
• Manipulates
• Flatters but does not confront with truth
• Apologizes but does not change behavior
• Lacks personal insight and awareness

(Much of the insight I received on this is from the book “Safe People” by Cloud and Townsend—check it out!)

One of my biggest light bulb moments while I was in graduate school was the realization that I had been in some very unhealthy and even abusive relationships. I was blown away by this. I recognized and acknowledged the unsafe traits I had experienced and lived with and the tremendous impact it had on me and the relationship. I also had to admit that at times I possessed some of these same unsafe traits—sometimes as a response to the unhealthy relationships I was in. Other ways they showed up were my own learned ways of being and interacting with people that I had developed over time. Wow. Talk about the bittersweet pearls of self-awareness!

Now the subject of safe people has become one of my top therapy passions and focuses. As much as I love the art and work of psychotherapy, I think inherently I have always been a researcher. I was the kid in school who loved coming home to watch after-school specials depicting family and relationship conflicts. I was always so curious about how these people came to be, who they were, how their problems developed and how they would resolve the complex problems they were facing. I was always intrigued by people. I am still intrigued! I have discovered overwhelmingly that the concept of unsafe people is a pervasive issue in many cases of reported emotional upset and poor well-being. If I probe long enough, I usually can find unsafe people in the lives of my clients. To be fair, some of us do not realize we are unsafe. We have developed unhealthy ways of acting and being over time that have harmed others as well as ourselves. When we know better though, we can do better. It is possible to learn new ways and patterns of relating and interacting that can greatly improve the quality and integrity of our own lives and relationships.

How about you? Can you imagine how our relationships would improve or change if we were all set on the goal of becoming safe for our partners and loved ones? How would it feel to know that you no longer had to walk on eggshells around your partner? That you intrinsically knew you could tell them the truth without fear? That your feelings and experiences would be welcomed and validated? That when you asked for what you needed in the relationship, intentional action would be taken and not just lip service? I wonder if we realize that while we are unsafe people, over time it actually breaks down the relationship. It hinders our vulnerability. We hide our emotions rather than share and express freely. Intimacy cannot thrive or grow in the presence of fear.

Whether or not we think about it much, I think most of us can say we deeply desire safety and trust in our relationships—especially if we have been betrayed or violated. It will take much time and effort to regain these, if they were ever present in the first place. Surprisingly, for many of my clients, becoming a safe person emerges as the primary foundational goal for them. What a joy to assist in this! It is a valuable and worthy pursuit that will reap significant long term benefits for everyone involved.