Betrayal Weekly - Solace | EP 8 | Karoline's Story
Episode Date: July 10, 2025Karoline unpacks her healing journey with Kristin Snowden, an expert in betrayal trauma recovery. For resources on betrayal trauma and more from Kristin Snowden, visit kristinsnowden.com. If yo...u would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com and follow us on Instagram at @betrayalpod. To access our newsletter and additional content and to connect with the Betrayal community, join our Substack at betrayal.substack.com. You can listen to new episodes of Betrayal Season 4 completely ad-free and 1 week early with an iHeart True Crime+ subscription, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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It is not to your detriment that you have loved and made yourself.
willing to be vulnerable to another person.
You unfortunately just got an unhealthy, really sick person
who was so invested in keeping you out of his whole double life that he was living
and used every tactic in the world to keep you blind to that.
I'm Andrea Gunning, and this is Betrayal Season 4, Episode 8, Salas.
Caroline Berega has been dealing with the fallout of her husband's betrayal for more than
three years. When you've been married for half your life, the recovery is long, unpredictable.
At the beginning, it's just about getting through the next hour, the next 24 hours, being able to
get yourself to work or show up for your kids. Now Caroline is reaching the point where she can start
to truly process and heal from that experience. We connected Caroline with Kristen Snowden,
an expert in betrayal trauma and infidelity. She's a licensed,
marriage and family therapist in the state of California and a certified life coach.
My specialty is helping couples and individuals navigate relationship crises that have been brought
upon by uncovering an unknown addiction or infidelity. And that's either chemical addictions
or processed addictions such as sex porn love addiction. Addiction is a loaded term and one we
want to use carefully. Most of us know someone who struggled with a
chemical addiction, like one to alcohol or opioids. Process addictions are different. They involve
compulsive behaviors that activate the brain's reward system. The DSM-5, the official manual
clinicians used to diagnose mental health disorders, only recognizes one process addiction. That's
gambling disorder. Others, like sex addiction, remain controversial and are not officially classified
as mental health diagnoses.
This is not to say the experience of sex addiction isn't real and valid,
but without a diagnostic criteria, the label can be misunderstood, misused, or even abused.
Joel began using the word addiction to describe his behavior,
but only after he was caught.
You'll remember the text he sent Caroline from rehab.
Low self-esteem, self-hatred, depression, anxiety, addiction.
all contributed to my behavior and actions.
Sain people would not do what I did,
but I literally was not in my right mind.
We don't know if Joel has been diagnosed
with any addictions to substances,
but because Joel referred to himself as an addict,
you'll hear Kristen and Caroline use that term in this conversation.
They're also using it as a shorthand
for his compulsive and destructive behavior.
Kristen started one of the first dual diagnosis treatment programs
for people with both chemical addictions
and sexual acting out behaviors.
But in the last 10 years,
her focus has shifted to helping betrayed partners.
She runs groups for those that have been betrayed,
and she has a YouTube channel
where she shares free resources
for those navigating relationship crises.
I want betrayed partners to have
that specialty training and education
that they deserve
that I think is going to help launch them
into the ability to heal from these traumas.
When Kristen first meets with new clients,
she often begins with this metaphor.
Something that we do all day, every day, is we drive.
And what we do is we're essentially taking for granted
that everybody else around us is going to follow the rules of the road.
And that is what we're doing when we're in these long-term relationships with our partners.
We have very direct spoken rules,
but also unspoken rules that we're going to give each time.
the benefit of the doubt. We're going to do our best to do no harm. We're going to follow the rules
and move along in the correct way together. And then all of a sudden, when you uncover that your
partner is capable of lying, sneaking around, it is as if someone is asking you every day
to just go do the basic things like just go drive with the grocery store, just go drop your kids off.
But oh, by the way, no one's going to follow the rules of the road. Hope you make it there okay.
suddenly the drive, the simple drive that you took for granted every single day
becomes the most terrifying, hypervigilant, soul-sucking experience
because you don't know what's coming at you.
And that is like the best metaphor I have to help people understand
what these betrayed partners are going through from the minute they find out what their
partner's done and onward.
Kristen often works with people like Caroline.
who've been left to pick up the pieces in the wake of their partner's betrayal.
She's my quintessential client.
Unfortunately, I've seen hundreds of her, if not thousands.
Kristen met with Caroline several times over the course of this season.
With their permission, we'd like to share excerpts from those sessions with you.
Caroline started with the problem she confronts often in her life,
feeling on edge in the city she calls home.
All she sees are places where Joel arranged his meetups.
These are landmarks that memorialize her husband's affairs.
There's really only one way to drive to our local airport,
and I hate the drive. I hate it.
All I can do is think about, this is where he did this at,
this is where he did this at.
How many people did he meet in this area?
How many times did this occur?
Like, it is just repetitive in me.
How do you feel in your body when you're driving to the airport
and you're crossing all those triggering places and spaces.
What does it feel like?
It could be the coldest morning in Colorado,
and I will start sweating when I reach that area of town.
I will have my heat completely turned off.
I'll need to crack the window, and the nausea starts,
and my brain just starts churning.
This is the area where he did this.
How many times did he meet someone?
It will just continuously churn, and I'll keep playing it and replaying it and replaying it even after I park when I'm bringing my luggage up, when I'm checking in.
It just continuously plays in me.
The piece of it that is so aggravating is that I have no control over it.
I'm still reliving it every time I drive that route.
I think that I am a strong female, but I will tell you that if you want to,
to test someone's ability to stay strong, go through this and have to live it every day.
Right. That's why I always think it's interesting, but there's really no such thing in the
diagnostic manuals that categorizes betrayal as a form of trauma. DTSD doesn't really
fall in that because, you know, it has to be a life-threatening event. And people don't consider
these things to be life-threatening. But, I mean, I could imagine you feel like you have
PTSD symptoms. I know I do. And I think it's evidenced by the fact that my kids and I say,
unless it was an absolute life-threatening event, we will never call law enforcement.
I'm sorry. It's like a systemic betrayal, similar to people who've been betrayed to by the
religious organizations, like abused by the people in charge and then shunned and ignored and
never validated or supported by their community.
You know, I pride myself in being someone who can compartmentalize and keep myself together,
but it is a struggle to keep every emotion in and keep my shoulders back in my head high,
constantly running into his colleagues.
What's the story you're telling yourself about what they are experiencing when they see you?
When life blew up,
initially to me and my kids, Joel said it was my fault.
It was my fault because we weren't having sex as much as he wanted to.
I wasn't doing things that he wanted to sexually.
Like he pointed the finger at me.
And this is also the narrative that he started telling all of his employment.
They're thinking to themselves, we know what Joel did.
We've been told that you're the reason why this happened.
He had to go seek sex elsewhere because he wasn't getting it at home.
He needed to go find it around the community.
This is all your fault.
You caused him to lose his job.
In one of his disciplinary write-ups, it actually says,
Joel discussed that he was having problems with his wife at home.
It's like everyone heard this narrative, but me.
I didn't know this.
In my world, we were living this really blessed utopian life.
I didn't know that this was being put on blasts,
about me. Yeah. What is that like on top of the shame that you just generally experience from being
betrayed by your intimate partner and finding out that he's led this whole double life? What is that
like to have this community where they're blaming you or using your apparent marital life to
justify his behavior? It just continued to involve this constant nausea.
and chaos in my life.
And to have to have this pretend face
and this very low affect
to not show emotion was miserable.
And it definitely doesn't feel sustainable
to continue to try to have this pretend normal at work.
It doesn't feel good to have this pretend normal
at community events where I see police officers
who stare at me and my kids when we're together.
My daughter was in a car.
car accident. Her junior year shortly after he blew up our lives, about a month and a week later,
she was T-boned and hit by a driver. And when I went out to the scene to see her, thank God she
was okay. But even in that moment, cops were pulling up to the scene and I could hear them.
They didn't even care that we were there what we had just gone through. I could hear them. Oh,
my God, there's Kern's wife and his kid. Oh my God, can you believe that? He's in rehab right now.
I could hear them. And like your moment of raw vulnerability. Yes, I am terrified for my daughter.
I am terrified seeing how she looks. She's just an absolute shock. Even in that moment, it's thrown in my face.
It must be overwhelming, especially when part of your trauma has been being lied to. I can imagine it being
just even more frustrating, to say the least, that you continue to be surrounded by a community
that keeps telling you that you're to blame. There's such a healing and release of trauma that
happens when a community can share invalidating that what happened was not okay and that was scary
and that rocked our world. And I just, I'm so sad that you've been denied. I'm hearing that you live
in a community where there's just,
a lack of empathy for what you and the kids have gone through?
I think it's not only a lack of empathy.
I think it is the belief of a false narrative.
What do you tell yourself about why they can kind of be so non-empathetic?
Why they're so invested in holding on to Joel's story.
Hear me out because I'm going to sound very self-loathing while I say this.
I did it.
I believe Joel.
I mean, I initially carried this guilt when he looked at me and he said, well, we weren't having sex enough.
You were paying more attention to the kids than you did to me.
I didn't feel like you loved me.
And in the moments of it, I doubted myself.
I thought, oh, my God, were we having sex enough?
Did I show you that I loved you?
Did I pay more attention to the kids than you?
I mean, he got in my head when he was excusing his behaviors until I know the extent of what he did.
when it became reality, I was able to let go some of that guilt and that burden.
But this was someone who was extremely well liked within the department.
You know, he was friendly and got along with people and he supported his officers and all of these things.
My husband lived a double life.
And in my gut, I believe that he is an extremely intelligent man.
And I do think that he knew as things were progressing, he was about,
ready to be caught, and he needed to start shifting the blame or provide excuses. And people believe him.
When betrayal happens in a relationship, in a marriage, the vulnerability of the fact that that can
happen to anybody, that you can be blindsided by someone you trust and love, and they can hurt you
the most, I think that hits too close to home for most people. So they have to package it up in a way
that makes you different than them.
You know, it's scary to think that my partner can just go out,
have a bunch of sex with somebody else, lie, sneak around, keep doing it.
If I really sat with the vulnerability of that,
it would just lock me up.
Like, the powerless of that is just too scary.
As a defense mechanism, I have to make your story different
so I can go back and carry on in my life.
So the story has to be, Caroline didn't give him enough sex.
Well, I give my partner enough sex.
And that just others her in a way where it allows me to just not feel the vulnerability.
Do you get what I'm trying to say?
It makes sense.
Like a lot of sense.
It's just in this realm of infidelities where there seems to be this really strong focus on the betrayed partner.
No one blames the wife or the spouse or a partner for someone.
heroin addiction or set for someone's gambling addiction.
There's just something about the fact that in people's brains,
they want to make it a relational problem when it is not a relational problem.
What I always say is it's like this additional trauma and abuse that happens.
That will, as you're saying, shut a betrayed partner down,
stop them from wanting to share their story, cause them to feel even more isolated
after they've already been betrayed by the person they've made themselves most exposed to.
Why are we talking about, like, well, did you have sex with them enough?
Were you nagging?
I mean, it does nothing but harm.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans,
a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation.
There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our relationships.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
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Hi, everyone.
I'm Cheryl Strayd, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
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Do you know what I'm going to do?
pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world,
fighting for our lives.
All I'm going to do is pull out
what you already got inside.
We're there to support and celebrate each other.
And that's not like your story versus my story.
You're going to walk up and over that dang mountain.
You're not just going to put your mind over it.
Yep, yep, exactly.
And if I can't walk up and over it,
I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday
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Caroline is talking to Kristen Snowden,
a licensed therapist and life coach
who specializes in betrayal trauma.
The other night,
I was at a very popular brewery
and I walk in and I'm standing in line
and I hear Caroline
and I turn and I look
and it's one of Joel's best friends.
When Joel got in trouble,
he turned to this person
and he goes over,
opens his arm, gives me a hug.
I did like one of these where I just kept my arms straight down.
You know, like I don't want you to physically touch me.
Like you had a physiological response to him.
Yes.
We don't need to have physical contact.
I do not want to hug you.
We are not friends.
I know what you have said about me.
You know, I just kept my arms straight down very stiff.
And he was like, how are you?
And I just stopped him.
And I said, you know what?
I know all of the horrible things you have said about me and the blame you have placed on me.
there's no need for us to talk.
And he looked at me and he kind of got this smirk and he said,
okay.
But for the first time and a long time,
it felt empowering to not take it,
to not engage in it.
What do you think the difference was?
Why now?
I think the difference at this point is that I know I'm not alone.
For a long time,
I felt like this could never happen to anyone else
and this almost shame and guilt
and the personification of Joel's actions
onto me and my kids
just filled me with embarrassment.
You know, that was one of the things
that drew me in with the podcast,
this hearing, oh, my God,
like this happened to someone else.
Since everything happened,
I feel like in my past life,
I was this pretty confident person,
but since my ex-husband's secret life
had been revealed to me, I mean, it just really put a weight of constant insecurity on me, just
constant. And it's been a really long time since I have been able to keep my head up, like a really
long time. It's common for us to feel less confident in standing in our own reality when we're
surrounded by people who are questioning our reality. There was so many elements where you were
saying, look, you're in a different location. Where are you? No, you're crazy. No, I don't know. What's wrong
with you? So you're in a constant environment with him where he was questioning your reality.
And then after he left, you were living in this world where everyone was kind of validating his
narrative and not extending grace and empathy towards you in a very, very painful way. So I could
completely understand why you've struggled so much to stand in your confidence.
It's so traumatizing to have someone dismantle your instincts and intuition and question your reality,
question your sanity. It is a huge casualty of betrayal.
Yes, spot on.
I always say, like, you've been traumatized, and now you're responsible for trying your best
to mitigate those unfortunate circumstances, right, that you know.
now have a traumatized body, you're going to have trauma triggers, trauma responses. It gets really
confusing. Like, is this a red flag or is this like a trauma response, a trauma trigger that's coming
up for me? And so it's just really important to have a couple people in your community where you can
bounce this off of and validate, am I crazy? I guess it's just the most benign things. You find
yourself questioning. That is one of the healing pathways after being
betrayed. You can't do it on your own. No. And so it's this counterintuitive thing, right? People come to me
because their lives have been devastated and turned upside down because they have opened their heart
in their life to a person and they have just been lied to you and their whole lives destroy,
their families destroyed because of it. And one of my treatment processes is to say, well,
and now you need to go to a group. And the most understanding,
understandably so, they'd say, hell no.
I've exposed myself enough.
I'm popping in here for just a second.
Caroline, like many people who've been betrayed,
was initially resistant to group workshops.
But eventually she decided to give them a shot.
And she joined a group Kristen Runs for betrayed partners.
One of the big pieces of why I fell in that category was because
it's hard to believe there are evil humans out there that would do the same thing to other innocent people
and then being in that group hearing, oh my God, this happened to all of you.
Yeah.
And replace my name with your name and our stories are almost parallel to each other.
I mean, we walked a very similar path.
You feel so alone, though, at the beginning when it happens.
Like, this could not happen to anyone else,
especially when you're surrounded with friends and family members
who assimedly are living these very healthy marriages and healthy relationships.
And like you're just on this little island by yourself
that no one else would really understand.
Yeah.
And what has it been like to be in a group where you're around,
several women who are betrayed partners of sex addicts.
And, I mean, what's that been like to hear all those stories?
There's been, I mean, a great sense of camaraderie, definitely, some validation.
And I always think it's very interesting.
One of the myths about betrayal trauma is we think that the person that got betrayed,
the person that got bamboozled and lied to is this passive person that just kind of gets fooled.
But so often I run into betrayed partners.
And in every other facet of their life, they're extremely clear about what they want, what they need.
And it just shows the manipulation power that their addict partners use.
A hundred percent accurate.
You've seen in these groups, these phenomenal women who are just so smart, have these careers, had these lives, had these great children, and then just got sideswived and blindsided.
by their partner's behavior that they had no idea.
And these betrayed partners often are so busy, in fact, living their lives,
trying to be the best parents they can be, be the best partners that they can be,
and don't even realize that people can lie and deceive and commit illegal acts.
All of those are so far off their radar.
That is why they are kind of victimized over such a long period of time.
That is why they are often so primed to let their partner's lies, kind of trump their own instincts and intuition.
Yes, yes.
And I'm just going to say, you're a beautiful woman, you're well-spoken, you're educated, you have this career, you have these kids.
And it just starts ticking stories off of people's list.
Like they can't write the story that you were unattractive or you were crazy or you were money-hungry.
I mean, because you're just, you're none of those things.
You're a high-functioning, attractive, loving, stable human being that happened to marry an unhealthy person.
And you are still suffering the consequences.
Thank you for saying that.
That makes me like, thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah, I know.
It is not to your detriment that you have loved and made yourself willing to be vulnerable to another person.
person. You unfortunately just got the person who was so invested in keeping you out of his whole
double life that he was living and used every tactic in the world to keep you blind to that.
I heard from multiple family members and then some of his subsequent online paramours,
he actually used me filing the divorce as a tool to garner some of them.
His comment to people was, I was sick and Caroline wouldn't work with me.
You know, Caroline wouldn't stay with me and see me through getting the therapy I needed.
You know, she just wanted to run right away.
That was one of the things that he had told people.
And it had been used against me of, well, if you really loved him, you would have stuck it out with him.
Well, and better yet, someone in recovery who's really reckoned with the fact that there are consequences to every action is understanding.
that like these are the typical consequences that come with that behavior.
I made bad choices and I lied and I snuck around and I broke my vows and I exposed my family
to a lot of uncertainty and unsafe and it's heartbreaking and horrible and I wish that wasn't the
case. I wish I'd change sooner. I mean those are words of someone who's moving through recovery.
His words are more reflective of somebody who's just always constantly building that wall
of entitlement. I work so hard, I'm entitled to go do this. She's always nagging me. I'm entitled
to go do this. I didn't get that promotion. I'm entitled to go do this. It's my birthday. I'm
entitled to go do this. I had childhood trauma. I'm entitled to go do this. Those are dangerous,
dangerous people. That is not a sign of someone who is, as we say in the 12-step world,
who's humbled and surrendered. It's a sign of someone who is always setting up justification,
rationale and entitlement
to go out and do what they want to do
because I get to.
They are not thinking about the family system.
They are not thinking about their values and goals.
They're not definitely not thinking about
the true consequences to their behaviors.
Those were all things required for someone to live in recovery.
It was funny because you actually said this to me last week.
I had this moment of like a mind fuck of like,
did I give it at my all?
Should I have stayed in?
You know, I made a vow to stay with him in sickness and in health.
As a reminder, Caroline made the decision to leave the marriage
after she got a call from a case manager at Joel's rehab facility.
The case manager told Caroline that Joel was one of the worst cases of sex addiction
she'd ever seen.
He wasn't taking the treatment seriously.
And when Caroline realized he wasn't doing the,
the work, she decided their marriage was irreparable.
And that's why I tried to separate our lives as quick as I could.
Caroline reflected back on this moment after hearing the stories of other women in Kristen's group,
some of whom were trying to repair their marriages.
I took pause for a second of seeing these women really try and then saying, you know,
I think I'm to the point now where I can walk away because I've really done everything.
exhausted all efforts. And I had a moment of I should have exhausted all efforts. Why didn't I do that?
So this past week, two of them did say it. I wish I would have left right away. And like after we
hung up, I just, I don't know, I just like cried and cried and cried just because it was
validating. There's so many things that just you replay in your head like, did I, should I?
Could I, even though I know I did the right thing, but hearing someone say, I wish I did that.
It just felt validating.
And like we said, in any given group, there's always a story in your head that should I have tried harder?
Should I have left sooner?
It is the conundrum.
Yeah, for sure.
you know, having hope that they'll change.
And then it's the painful coming to that hard conclusion
when you're just like, I don't think this person's ever going to change.
It's not always the case.
I obviously do work with couples and addicts in recovery who do pivot and change.
So I always say it's okay to leave and it's okay to stay.
But especially the betrayed partners who don't get the closure.
the full disclosure of what really happened,
a full understanding of why they did what they did,
with a newfound understanding
because they've done all this work
to understand their poor coping skills
and what led them to do these behaviors
and what was really going on in their head.
It is so hard for betrayed partners
to move through and heal without that closure.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong,
and then there's your body having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and host of the podcast,
a slight change of plans, a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation.
There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our
relationships. I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change. We have to be willing
to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes. Listen to a slight change of plans on the
I-HeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. On a recent episode of the podcast,
Money and Wealth with John Hobriant, I sit down with Tiffany the budgetista Aliche to talk about what
it really takes to take control of your money. What would that look like in a podcast?
families if everyone was able to pass on wealth to the people when they're no longer here.
We break down budgeting, financial discipline, and how to build real wealth, starting with the mindset shifts.
Too many of us were never, ever taught.
Financial education is not always about like, I'm going to get rich. That's great. It's about
creating an atmosphere for you to be able to take care of yourself and leave a strong financial
legacy for your family.
If you've ever felt you didn't get the memo on money,
this conversation is for you to hear more.
Listen to Money and Wealth with John O'Brien
from the Black Effect Network on the I'd Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hi, everyone. I'm Cheryl Stray, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes, adventures, and adrenaline seekers.
to discuss the inner landscapes and life experiences
that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
I also bring a bit of advice into the mix
so we too can better understand
how to face our own seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Do you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to pull out what you already have inside.
We're coming into this world fighting for our lives.
All I'm going to do is pull out what you already got inside.
We're there to support and celebrate each other.
And that's not like your story versus my story.
you're going to walk up and over that dang mountain.
You're not just going to put your mind over it.
Yep, yep, exactly.
And if I can't walk up and over it, I'm going to go through it.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up? I'm Miles Turner.
And I'm Brianna Stewart.
And our podcast, Game Recognized Game, has never been done before.
Two active players giving you a real look at our lives and what we actually think,
on and off the floor.
Nothing's off limits.
We talk trade requests.
What's the vibe of that when it's like your star player is like, well, I want to leave.
And then actually now I'm going to stay.
We talk tanking.
I mean, honestly, like, I might get in trouble for this answer,
but I think it's like definitely happening in the WBA.
And yeah, we talk about our mistakes too.
They pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, we got a call last night,
man, you can't be rolling around the city like this tonight before games, no, you know, doing this, doing whatever.
And of course, family stories.
And we're like, mommy, why did you miss that?
Mommy, do you play basketball?
Check out Game Recognized game with Stoian Miles on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We've been listening to Caroline talk with Kristen Snowden about healing after betrayal.
One of the things Caroline addressed in her sessions was how to have healthy relationships going forward.
Every Sunday, a group of friends and I get together.
and we do something called Separate Club.
I mean, they're kind of my core group of people,
like my trusted circle, the ones who know the full story.
But one of the things about being in that circle
is that they've seen me on this journey
of attempting to move forward,
attempting to garner some semblance of normalcy.
And they've seen me go from very, very scared to start dating
to I'm going to rip the Band-Aid off and go on my first date.
or I think I'll hang out with this person for a little bit.
This person is not healthier.
These qualities are things that I don't want around me.
And I will make excuses very quick to not let things be serious or feel vulnerable in any way.
And then there's been times where I have thought I just am starting to feel too close
and I'd rather run before I feel hurt.
Well, for the first time, maybe ever, since this happened, I have been around someone who is just, if you just saw this person, my joke is that this is like a mother's dream.
I mean, this is someone who is personable and handsome and amazing has done good service for the community and to his country.
and there are times where I have been getting ready to hang out with him
and I will literally be putting on my makeup and think to myself,
you should run tonight.
Tonight's the night.
You should just go to dinner and then ghost him,
never speak to him again.
And I can't really tell you why.
It's just this feeling of protect yourself now
before you feel any more vulnerable.
Run.
Nothing has gone wrong.
There's been no red flag.
there's nothing except this internal voice in me that says,
you're starting to let your guard down, protect yourself, go, go now.
And, you know, this separate club that I do,
I took a chance and invited him to separate club.
He walked in just a little bit late.
Now, the excuse for being late, something came up with his kids.
He was just running a little bit late.
Was it two hours late?
an hour late, not even close, nothing like that.
But in that moment, I thought, there it is, there's your reason.
Do it, do it now.
Just ridiculous.
And one of my friends in Supper Club actually said,
do not let this be this reason that you let something good go.
Don't do it.
So I know people see it and I know it,
but I don't know how to let go of that feeling.
Well, honestly,
because once you've had your instincts and intuition totally destroyed and dismantled and being told, oh, it's night outside when the sun is beaming in your eyes, it's so common to constantly struggle with the inner compass of what's safe and what's not safe.
When we have these wounded parts in us, these really hurt parts because understandably so, you have been victimized.
we often want to push them away because we're sitting there getting ready for the date we should be
happy we tell ourselves what we should be right this is a good person it's great that we're dating
as you said all the moms of the world would love him so we instinctively want to push out that scared part
that's screaming out but you have to do kind of something that is counterintuitive which is go into
that part and learn more and it actually is pretty amazing like the stories that scared part will
tell you. Yeah, I think that's a really good challenge. And for a woman, let's say, especially a
nurturing mom like you, it helps with our paradigm shift if we view it as like a scared child or even
a scared teenager. And you listen to it like a mom because you're not judging it. You're not saying,
oh, what's wrong with you? This guy's great. Like, stop it. Shut up. Instead, you can say like,
What's scary? All right. How can I help you feel safe? What do we know now versus what we're feeling
inside and can we get through this? And then you and I talked about this before, but it's also all
about the repair attempt that happens once you bring this to the person you're dating. You now
have taken the minute to be like, this triggered the heck out of me. I feel really unsafe.
lateness does not just mean being late to me.
There's this amazing repair attempt that can happen in a future relationship where this time
your partner doesn't invalidate you.
They don't tell you you're crazy.
They can say, you know, I'm sorry this made you feel scared or upset.
I'm sorry this triggered a history.
But let me help you feel safer this time.
So it's interesting that you bring that last part up because
I wanted to be fair and I actually told him about the podcast.
And so telling him about the podcast meant that I had to tell him about my history.
And I admit that I not only told him to be fair, but I also told him because there was this piece of me that was like, so you're going to hear this and you're going to see just the insanity that I've had to experience.
let me see if I can get you to run.
And his response was,
I think you're really brave.
Wow.
And how healing was that sentence?
It was just like, oh my God.
Oh my God, like, thank you.
It had been a really long time to hear someone.
I mean, of course, my friends, my friends
have seen and heard
and they know the insanity
and the wheel of insanity
that I was locked into
and what I was going through.
But for him to have taken pause,
listened to me,
asked relevant clarifying questions,
and then ended it with,
I think you're really brave.
It took this weight
off of me
and to have just this pause
for
wait, there is some humanity in this.
That is so healing.
I mean, that's why I also say why betrayal trauma can never be healed on your own,
because these are severe attachment wounds.
These are wounds that came due to others breaking your heart and betraying you.
So a lot of the healing and rewiring has to occur in a relationship setting.
And as you mentioned, good friends, family, but your brain has to find new evidence that your ex's
behaviors were more unique and an anomaly that you can avoid by taking healthy steps and
setting up boundaries and keeping other safe people around you for a checks and balance system.
But these are the rule.
He was the exception.
These are the rule.
And you can still feel safe and vulnerable with you.
these people. It's tough though. It's scary. Well, and let's like talk to those scared parts for a
second. What is different? You know, update those scared parts that were betrayed and blindsided.
What is different now? Well, one of the biggest things is that I'm not married and I'm not locked
into this need to believe or feel like I needed to have blind trust in someone
that I am my own authority.
I can make my own decisions on this.
I don't need to believe anyone for anything.
Yeah.
I always say I never let someone tell me what my reality and my experience is.
You never get to tell me that.
And even if even if I am inaccurate,
with like thinking that you're somewhere or that you were cheating and you're not cheating.
The bottom line is my experiences, I'm questioning your choices.
I'm not feeling safe in this relationship.
I'm experiencing incongruencies that are making me want to pull away.
I don't feel respected.
I don't feel like you're hearing me.
And those are all important things to be relentless about.
I'm supposed to feel safe with other people.
And so when I don't, it's my job, my responsibility to really go inside and say, okay, what is happening that's making me not feel safe?
A partner who loves you, who considers you a partner, because I should both be invested in helping the other person feel safe, be able to talk it out, negotiate, validate, change the way you approach issues that aren't working.
But from the parts work, I would say, don't.
Don't ignore those parts.
They're not bad.
But you have to dive deeper into that part and understand what's it trying to tell you.
And then the other piece is to let them know this is an updated information.
I didn't know how to keep myself safe in the past.
I was completely bamboozled.
I was deprived of all the information I needed to keep myself safe.
I didn't even know what I didn't even know.
But look how much more I know now.
Thank you, Kristen.
and you have no idea this means so much to me.
The fact that I have this clarity and insight now,
I just I can't thank you enough.
A quick note before we end,
Caroline and Kristen discussed attachment wounds and parts work,
which are just two approaches to dealing with trauma responses.
Kristen recommended that Caroline seek out further evidence-based trauma therapy practices,
such as EMDR, neurofeedback, brain spotting,
and internal family systems work.
It's critical for anyone seeking therapeutic care to work with a licensed professional.
If you want more from Kristen, go to her website, Kristen Snowden.com.
We've linked it in the show notes.
On the next episode of Betrayal, we discuss how grief is a marathon.
Well, this is the first year that we have actually gotten to seek.
My brother just crossed the finish line.
Thank you for listening to Betrayal Season 4.
If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal team, email us at Betrayal Pod.
at gmail.com. That's Betrayal P-O-D at Gmail.com. Also, please be sure to follow us on Instagram
at Betrayal Pod and me, Andrea H. Gunning, for all Betrayal content, news, and updates.
One way to support this series is by subscribing to our show on Apple Podcasts.
Please rate and review Betrayal. Five-star reviews help us know you appreciate what we do.
Betrayal is a production of Glass Podcasts, a division of Glass Entertainment Group,
in partnership with I-Hard podcasts.
The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass and Jennifer Fasin.
Betrayal is hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gunning.
Written and produced by Caitlin Golden.
Also produced by Carrie Hartman and Ben Federman.
Our associate producer is Kristen Mulcuri.
Our I-Heart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Kreincheck.
Story editing by Monique Laborde.
Audio editing and mixing by Matt Dalvecchio.
Editing by Tanner Robbins.
Special thanks to voice actor John Belomo.
And special thanks to Caroline and her family.
Betrayal's theme is composed by Oliver Baines.
Music Library provided by Mide Music.
And for more podcasts from IHeart, visit the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast,
a slight change of plans, a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, listeners.
I'm Anna Sinfield.
host of The Girlfriends Trust Me Babe.
I'm excited to share the Girlfriends Trust Me Babe story with you.
And I want to let you know that you can get access to all episodes of season one, two, three and four of the Girlfriends.
And every single episode of The Girlfriends Trust Me Babe, 100% ad free with an I-heart True Crime Plus subscription.
Available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
Plus, you'll get access to all episodes of The Girlfriends Trust Me Babe one week ahead of everyone else.
available only to I Heart True Crime Plus subscribers.
So don't wait, head to Apple Podcasts, search for IHeart True Crime Plus, and subscribe today.
Hi, listeners.
I'm Jamal Jordan, the host of Roarshack Murder at City Hall podcast.
In July 2003, Councilman James E. Davis, an ambitious rising star in Brooklyn politics,
was murdered inside New York City Hall.
shot to death in front of more than 200 people.
The killer?
His political opponent, a man named Neil Askew.
The full story of this shocking public murder
and the relationship between these two men
has not yet been told.
Until now.
I want to let you know that you can get access
to all episodes of Rochak murder at City Hall
100% ad-free with an I-heart True Crime Plus subscription
available exclusively on Apple Podcast.
Plus, you'll get access to all episodes of Roastrack murder at City Hall one week ahead of everyone else,
available only to Iheart True Crime Plus subscribers.
So don't wait.
Head's Apple Podcasts, search for IHeart True Crime Plus, and subscribe today.
Hey there, folks, Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes here.
And we know there is a lot of news coming at you these days from the war with Iran to the ongoing Epstein fallout,
government shutdowns, high profile.
trial and what the hell is that Blake lively thing about anyway.
We are on it every day, all day.
Follow us, Amy and TJ for news updates throughout the day.
Listen to Amy and TJ on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
