Betrayal - In Sickness and In Health | Saskia's Story
Episode Date: February 5, 2026As Saskia’s health spirals, Mike is there for her. But her unraveling isn't what it seems. Content Warning for mental health struggles, substance dependence, chronic illness, physical inju...ry, death of a parent, and tech-enabled sexual abuse. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. Follow our newsletter and join the Betrayal community at betrayal.substack.com. For resources on sexual violence, visit rainn.org/betrayal. You can also get free, confidential, 24/7 support through RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Hotline. Text HOPE to 64673 or call 1-800-656-HOPE. Every state has a domestic violence coalition, and many counties also have resources available. If you’re looking for help, go onto your county’s website to see what resources are available locally, or search the web for your state’s domestic violence coalition. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
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Saskia was days away from her wedding.
She thought she was ready to marry Mike, her partner and best friend of five years.
But then, a few nights before their wedding, she saw something.
I remember we were in bed.
I can't tell you what was happening before, after, but it was literally like a snapshot in time.
In the middle of the night, she opened her eyes, disoriented, exhausted.
Mike was wide awake on his laptop.
And on his screen, she could see two people.
And I didn't know if it was like a movie or whether he knew them.
And I remember being really confused and saying like, what's going on?
She couldn't make sense of what she was seeing, but it felt wrong.
She didn't know.
couldn't know that she was getting a glimpse of the real Mike,
the one who only came out at night.
And he said, oh, say hi.
I'm Andrea Gunning, and this is Betrayal, Season 5, Episode 2,
in sickness and in health.
We're going to return to that night a few days before the wedding,
when Saskia saw something on Mike's computer.
But to understand what was going on there and all that came next,
we need to go back in time
because this wasn't a random crime
and Saskia wasn't a random victim.
She believes Mike chose her for a reason.
The key to understanding this story
is understanding Saskia herself,
the strong parts of her and the vulnerable parts too.
So let's return to the beginning.
Saskia grew up in a suburb of D.C. where she still lives today
In many ways, she had a great childhood.
At times, it sounded to me like something out of a 70s TV show.
She's always been an animal lover.
And growing up, her cat would walk her and her friends to school.
We'd be like, go home, Chong, go home.
Her cats came with the names Cheech and Chong.
Her friend Megan remembers those walks and that cat very well.
He would just come behind us, walk us to school.
And when we got to the crosswalk, he would go.
go his merry way. I have no idea. Like, who knows where he went. They were Lachki kids,
living the quintessential suburban life. Saskia's older sister has lots of happy memories of playing
with Saskia and their two brothers. Here's Marisa. We would go down to the creek behind our house,
and we had a huge fort there, and we would just spend a lot of time traveling the creek and
looking for crayfish. But these joyful moments were only part of the story. I think that our
childhood was this odd combination of idyllic and traumatic and traumatic to nobody's fault.
You know, our parents did their very best.
They were amazing people, but they had a lot of challenges.
Sometime in his 30s, my dad had what we term his breakdown.
Their dad was a smart guy.
He went to Stanford undergrad in Georgetown Law.
He loved musicals and museums.
and before his breakdown, he was a constant source of conversation and laughter.
But that version of their father feels like a distant memory.
Because after his breakdown,
he was just a very fragile and mentally ill person sometimes.
There were times when their dad seemed stable,
but then he'd enter a period where he'd lose touch with reality.
He would be hospitalized, and then he would be good for a while,
but, you know, he never returned to his baseline.
The man that my mother married and the person that he wanted to become,
I think I've always been aware that something was shattered, you know,
and that he couldn't be that anymore.
Saskia was just a baby when her dad got sick.
For her whole childhood, he was on disability and in and out of the hospital.
Her mom had to focus on managing her husband's care
and keeping the family afloat financially.
As the youngest of four, Saskia was often forgotten.
Whom didn't feel like a place that I was even really wanted.
I don't think I got a hug from either of my parents,
and I don't think I got an I love you from my mom until I started giving them out
when I was in college as well.
I definitely wish I had a closer relationship with my parents at a younger age.
I think it would have fared me well to have felt like I was important.
But my friends gave me that.
She and her friends spent a lot of time unsupervised.
Here's Saski's friend Megan again.
Nowadays, kids would just be on their phones for five hours, but back then there was nothing to do.
So we grew up drinking.
My mom was not a drinker, but she kept this boxed wine in the fridge.
I mean, we would drink box wine at 10 in my mom's house.
By 13, they were getting to be able to.
drunk all the time.
We just sat on my floor, got hammered, walked around at the park.
That's what we did, like, all the time growing up from a very young age.
Binge drinking every weekend.
That was our culture.
And we thought Saskia was lucky because our parents would go away.
The older siblings would be in charge.
And there would be parties all the time.
So we partied at Sasse's house a lot.
By the way, Sosya's friends and family often call her Soss.
You'll hear both names throughout the season.
Soss has always struggled with anxiety and depression.
And when she was a kid, she learned that drinking could be an escape.
Since I had been introduced to it at such a young age,
it was the thing that I knew that helped me.
It helped me cope with a lot of things that I hadn't dealt with yet,
like stuff for my childhood.
and it still stayed my coping mechanism for a long time.
As the friends entered high school, then college, drinking became their main activity.
Here's Megan.
We were way worse when we were older.
Because we got more money, everyone, all of us were in the tank.
Every weekend we did the same thing over and over, just wash, rinse, repeat.
Still, Sassia knew when the partying needed to take a back seat.
like when her friend Heather had a baby
with a guy who became abusive.
They were young, only 21.
But Saskia skipped parties
with their other friends
to show up for Heather.
Here's how Heather remembers it.
Our other friends were out like partying
and going to bars.
Soss always stayed by me
and checked on me,
still hung out with me,
came over to help me with the baby.
She was just the most solid friend I had.
That's just who Soskiya is,
deeply loyal.
and deeply empathetic.
She's the kind of friend
who was only ever a phone call away.
It's that caring nature
that led her to become a social worker.
I've always been interested
in how, you know, the mind works
and I've always had a lot of empathy
for people who struggle with mental health,
probably because my dad's own mental health struggles,
my own mental health struggles.
For 17 years,
Saskia worked in child protective services,
or CPS.
She did physical abuse and neglect investigations.
Then she transitioned to supporting teens in the foster care system.
Many of these kids never had adults looking out for them, or people they could count on.
While working at CPS, Saskia became friends with Rob.
He's an attorney who worked with kids in the system.
Rob wanted to participate in this series because he has a lot to say about Saskia's character.
Nobody that I have worked with in 27 plus years has done what Saska has done,
has been the social worker for these teens in care with such optimism and joy and encouragement as Saskia.
Rob's wife, Colleen, saw that same spark in her.
Colleen was also a social worker with CPS.
She remembers the first time she met Saskia
and a team training during an icebreaker.
No one was responding when asked for volunteers
and Saskia was just like, okay, and like jumped in
and was just fun and energetic.
Colleen can still picture Saskia's smile that day.
Saskia has always been someone who brings light to dark situations.
But at home, she's struggled.
The love and care she's so easily,
gave to other people, she wasn't getting from her first husband, Chris.
When that marriage began to fall apart, she turned to Rob and Colleen.
This period of time was definitely the first time that I saw Saskia as not a bubbly, joyful
person.
She had gotten quieter.
She did share with me that she had been drinking more, and she was concerned about that.
I did drink a lot because I felt so lonely.
I felt neglected.
Saskia told us there were nights during that marriage where she'd take it too far, blackout.
From her sister Marisa's perspective, Chris wasn't helping.
And her first marriage, they partied too much.
There was a lot of drinking and kind of over-the-top behavior.
When Saskia finally ended things with Chris, it felt like a new beginning.
I was confident in knowing that that was the right thing to do.
I had wrapped my head around, this is not the person that I need to put all my energy into
anymore. And that felt like a relief.
She started to really work on herself.
I went to therapy, you know, did talk about some of the issues with childhood,
worked through some past relationship tendencies.
She'd never been in a stable, loving relationship.
or had one modeled for her.
As you heard in episode one,
she gravitated towards bad boys and big personalities, chaos.
And Mike felt the opposite of that.
When she met her new boyfriend Mike Levin Good,
she could tell right away.
This guy was her chance to build something different,
something real.
He felt stable and he felt safe
and he felt loving and he felt caring and he felt like a partner.
And I felt like, okay, I'm doing things differently this time.
Everyone in her life could see this was a positive change for Saskia.
Here's her sister, Marisa.
I've always viewed her as my baby sister as a very strong person, but somebody who's vulnerable.
And he gave her a sense of stability.
He would keep routines.
He worked out.
He made food that was healthy.
He drank, but it didn't seem like he drank to excess.
He was solid.
Saskia's friend Heather thought so too.
Mike just seemed calm, put together, just chill.
And at the time, I thought that was so good in what Sas really needed.
From day one, Saska's friends and family made it known that they liked Mike.
The encouragement went a long way.
They thought he was great.
and stable and good for me.
He really cared about me.
I finally met someone who I was in a healthy relationship with.
It didn't take long for Mike to become her confidant.
He showed a genuine interest in getting to know the real her,
even the fragile parts.
Early on, Saskia opened up about her dad's mental illness
and how it impacted her childhood.
She talked about her own struggles
with anxiety and depression,
and how, after her first marriage,
she felt broken.
He found me at a very vulnerable place,
and I really needed somebody to help me.
Someone to show me real love
and affection and time
and all the things that I didn't get
from my childhood or from my first marriage.
Mike gave me all those things.
Mike was there for her through it all.
If you can remember,
Mike was her wrong.
in the divorce, and he supported her as she carried her sister's baby, giving her nightly massages,
and talking through any challenges in the process. With Mike by her side, this pregnancy was one of the
happiest, healthiest times in her life. And that all changed after I had the baby.
She'd been with Mike for four years at that point, four great years. But just after Saskia
gave birth to her sister's son.
It was like the other shoe dropped.
It began one morning when she had trouble getting out of bed.
It was like I was under quickstand or something.
I wasn't totally conscious.
I couldn't wake up.
I couldn't walk.
I just felt like there were weights on my body
and I just needed to sleep many more hours,
even though I thought I'd been sleeping all night.
She'd never experienced anything like
this before. And quickly, this feeling became a regular occurrence. She'd had anxiety and depression
her whole life. But I've never struggled that bad with my mental health. I've never felt like
such trash about myself. I'd be in a conversation and I'd have to like just get out of
there. Like everything just felt so overwhelming. I was literally just trying to survive and get to the
next day and then the next day and the next day. And the next day.
She became haunted by insomnia.
She'd experienced it before, but never this bad.
She was going days without sleeping.
I felt like if I can't sleep, how am I supposed to take care of the kids?
How am I supposed to get to work the next day?
It was awful.
Her doctors prescribed pills to help her sleep, but nothing seemed to work.
The only thing that made me feel better was alcohol, to be honest with you.
And now I realize that contributed, but
it was survival to me at the time.
I just felt like I was fighting all the time just to stay alive.
What she was experiencing was severe,
so much so that it began impacting her ability to do her job.
I had a friend at work who let me use her office just to go in and cry
when my anxiety became so much.
After consulting with her doctors,
she decided to take time off.
She started taking medical leave here and there.
Sometimes there'd be months.
when she couldn't go into the office.
My coworkers had to take on more cases.
These teenagers that I was really close with
and really depended on me,
had to get switched to other workers.
I felt like I was letting down my kids,
letting down everybody at work.
No matter how sick she got,
Mike stood by her.
He encouraged her to try new meds and new treatments,
anything to help her feel better.
He also made sure she was taking
care of herself in other ways.
If I needed to sleep in, if I wasn't feeling well, he could take the kids to their sporting
events and he would always make dinner every night.
It left me able to do the things that were helpful to me.
She felt unbelievably grateful for him.
They weren't even married.
And he was there for her as a real partner.
It felt like he was helping me and I'm losing it.
That's what it felt like.
I was struggling so much and I just wanted to survive and get through.
He continued to write her love letters, letting her know he wasn't going anywhere.
Here's an excerpt from one of those letters read by a voice actor.
I wish I could just take away all your worry and give you the peace of mind that you deserve.
Now that we have each other, there is nothing we can't handle together.
It was in the middle of her decline that Mike proposed to her.
His timing made the gesture even more significant to Saskia.
He wanted to spend a life with her, even when she was at her lowest.
That meant the world.
She didn't know what she'd do without him.
When Mike suddenly wanted to move up the wedding, it was confusing to her.
But she went along with it.
him wanting to have the wedding quickly felt strange,
but I had no reason to doubt his intentions.
He loved her, and she only saw the best in him,
until that night just before the wedding,
when Saskia awoke to find Mike on his laptop.
She saw two bodies on the screen.
Something was off,
but she wasn't in a state to understand any of the details.
I was in like a twilight or in a fog.
Remember, Saski was taking meds to manage her mental health and insomnia,
and she was so desperate for a good night's sleep that she'd often drink on top of her meds.
If we're drinking and I take my medication at night, I'm not going to be waking up.
This moment with the computer, it was confusing and concerning, but the next morning...
I didn't really remember it.
I didn't process it.
I didn't know what it meant.
When she woke up, she only had a blurry image of what she'd seen
and a quiet feeling of unease.
She was about to marry this man.
Was there something he was hiding from her?
I was freaked out and talked to Heather about it.
Saskia drove to her friend Heather's house to pick up favors for her wedding.
Right away, Heather could tell,
Saskia was upset.
Heather brought her into her living room
and Saskia explained
what little she remembered.
With so few details,
Heather didn't see cause for alarm.
Here's Heather.
I took it as like
he was probably just watching porn
and testing the waters
and I said, you know,
maybe he thought you'd be into it.
I definitely minimized it
and did not think anything of it.
That is,
Until the day she found out what Mike had done.
And I was like, holy shit.
Knowing what I know now, I should have been like, get out.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm in a little at Lamova.
It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.
had both been assassinated.
And Black America was out of breaking point.
Writing and protests broke out on an unprecedented scale.
In Atlanta, Georgia at Martin's Alma,
Morehouse College, the students had their own protest.
It featured two prominent figures in black history,
Martin Luther King Sr. and a young student, Samuel L. Jackson.
To be in what we really thought was a revolution.
I mean, people would die.
In 1968, the murder of Dr. King, which traumatized everyone.
The FBI had a role in the murder of a Black Panther leader in Chicago.
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What if mind control is real?
If you could control the behavior of anybody around you,
what kind of life would you have?
Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car?
When you look at your car,
you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings.
Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you?
I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused.
Can you get someone to join your cult?
NLP was used on me to access my subconscious.
NLP, aka neurolinguistic programming,
is a blend of hypnosis, linguistics, and psychology.
Fans say it's like finally getting a user manual for your brain.
It's about engineering consciousness.
Mind games is the story of NLP.
It's crazy cast of disciples,
and the fake doctor who invented it at a new age commune,
and sold it to guys in suits.
He stood trial for murder and got acquitted.
The biggest mind game of all, NLP, might actually work.
This is wild.
Listen to Mind Games on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the unpurposed podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
The thing I would say to my younger self is congratulations.
So you get to marry Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
And also, you know, your daughter is incredible.
That's beautiful, man.
Yeah.
Thank you.
That's so beautiful.
I can see that got you a little.
Yeah, for sure.
Our daughter, she came to the world under sort of very intense circumstances,
which I'd not really talked about ever.
Growing up on Disney in front of a million, how did that shape your sense of self?
I went blank.
I hit a bad note.
then I couldn't kind of recover.
And I built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Just before their wedding, Saska caught Mike looking at something on his computer.
It was the middle of the night after he thought Saskia had gone to sleep.
Saskia saw two people on the screen.
What they were doing, what Mike was doing, she didn't know.
She had taken sleeping men's and drank alcohol the night before, which clouded her memory.
With her friend's reassurance, Saskia pushed the incident out of her mind and went ahead with the wedding.
There was so much evidence that he was well-intentioned.
He was a great husband, a great guy.
He was part of my family.
We had a combined little Brady bunch.
It was one weird moment in five years of a great relationship.
Plus, she didn't even know if she'd really seen anything.
She wasn't going to let that get in the way of getting married.
And maybe her gut feeling was just her nerves.
The wedding day was beautiful, but it also came with a lot of difficulty.
On what should have been the happiest day of her life, Saskia was falling apart.
She felt like she had to take medication just to remain stable.
It sucks when you feel like just have to get through your wedding.
I don't think I was ever present in any of those moments because I was struggling so bad.
I was just trying to like get through to happier times because I thought that I should be happy.
It didn't make sense.
She had a great job, great kids, and now a great husband.
And I didn't understand it because I'm like, I have this guy who's so in love with me and has my back,
but yet I feel so much pressure to hold it together.
After the wedding, she thought she'd feel some relief.
But the more she held on, the sicker she got.
And now, it wasn't only her mental health that was taking a hit.
She was physically ill too.
I just felt paralyzed.
We asked her to describe what that was like in her body.
You can't open your eyes fully.
You can't wake up.
And if you do try to get up, you're going to pass out.
I remember getting out of bed and I went in the shower.
I kind of felt like I was underwater or something.
I felt such a heaviness.
You know, you see dots.
I started to fill dots and I sat down with the shower.
still on and, like, reached up, pushed the shower off, crawled back to my bed.
I mean, I must have slept for another six hours or something.
She had that same feeling the morning of her kids' picture day.
When I remember waking up and, again, feeling like I was underwater, but trying to
make my way to my kids' rooms, which was down a hallway.
And I ended up passing out, and I had hit my head against something.
She was bleeding so bad, she had to get staples in her head.
Whatever was wrong with her, it was getting worse.
Other strange symptoms kept popping up.
I was picking my skin so bad that I had people at work telling me, like, why are you picking your face?
I could hear my stomach gurgling all the time, like making loud noises and just I always had so much nervous energy.
People at work were taking notice.
Here's Vera, one of her co-workers,
from Child Protective Services.
She was fidgety, she was anxious,
she looked nervous, she lost weight,
she kept picking her hair.
You could see that she was dealing with something.
Over the two years this had been going on,
Saskia did all that she could to get well.
She changed her diet, got an exercise routine,
tried tons of different medications.
She saw specialists and sought out
experimental treatments.
But nothing was helping me.
Susque's sister, Marisa, was especially worried.
This process of tweaking meds was a familiar one.
One, she'd been helping their dad navigate for years.
People don't understand the medication process is,
especially if you're severely mentally ill, it's not a quick fix.
You don't go and get the Zoloft and you're better the next day.
It's a constant process.
of tweaking, adding, minusing, changing, which takes months.
And it winds up being a cocktail of, then you have symptoms and side effects.
Okay, let's use this to address the insomnia because this medication is working, but now you can't sleep.
Okay, let's try that. Come back in a month.
As time went on, Saskia grew more and more desperate for answers.
Anything that would bring her back to herself.
I thought I was hanging on by a thread like my sanity and using prescription drugs and alcohol and whatever else to try to hold on long enough that I could get better.
It got to the point that Saskia checked herself into the hospital twice.
They just adjusted my medications and I felt more hopeful. I felt healthier.
We sleep got a little bit better.
Everyone saw Saskia's improvement, including Mike.
He wrote her a card in the hospital, encouraging her to keep going.
I am so proud of you for fighting so hard.
It can't be easy for you, but I'm here for you 1,000%.
Remember the good times.
They will come back.
Just remember that you are never alone.
It felt like just what I needed.
After a few days in the hospital,
she would feel better.
It was as if a fog had lifted.
I would start to do better
and get out and have some hope
and I would quickly, like, decompensate again.
As they watched Saskia's ups and downs,
Marisa and Mike were at a loss.
Saskia seemed to be going down
a similar road to her dad.
Here's Marisa.
My dad got to a point
where we couldn't get him back to baseline,
but I spent a good portion of my adult life
trying to help him find quality
life. We didn't want Saskia to lose her baseline. You know, we wanted her to have her life. And so it's like,
that seems to be slipping away. There was a lot of talking with Mike about how to fix this. What should we
do? Go to the doctor. Let's try this. Let's try that. That's kind of where we were at in that phase.
Hoping it was not just what was going to be. I'm trying to fix it, but not understanding.
why it had gotten more intense and like why she was struggling so much.
That first year after their wedding was one of the hardest for everyone.
And it only grew harder when Saskia and Marisa lost their mom.
She had had a massive stroke and it was completely unexpected.
And we all met at the hospital.
My dad was in a mental hospital at the time in Baltimore.
And we wanted to go get him.
when we pulled the tubes so that we could all be together and say goodbye.
Saskia's sister, brothers, and dad all spent the night around the hospital bed.
But because of her health, Saskia had to miss her mother's last moments.
Soss wanted to, but she could not risk that night of sleep.
One night of no sleep would have been devastating for her.
And I understood that because that's the level of what she was going through.
I just couldn't handle it.
And it makes me sad that I couldn't have been present for that.
Saskia's friends knew what a devastating loss this was.
And at such a vulnerable time.
So they came together to show their love for Saskia and to grieve with her.
Her friend Bridget organized a dinner at Saskia's house.
Saskia's mom, Erna, used to make lasagna.
So I made a lasagna dinner and I came over and we were all going to have drinks and just hang out family time.
And we had some drinks and everyone's fine.
And not too long after, Saskia was all of a sudden incoherent.
It was odd because it happened so fast.
And I was like, wow, like, would she go do shots in the kitchen?
Like, what's going on?
To the point where she couldn't talk, she couldn't walk, she couldn't stand up.
Bridget had seen Saskia get drunk many times before.
They'd been best friends since grade school.
This was something else.
Bridget thought she should go lie down.
I walked her up the steps.
She's falling against the wall.
I got her into her bed.
Her body was limp, but her eyes were wide open.
And Saskia has no memory of any of this.
I don't remember Bridget bringing me to the room.
I don't remember her being next to me in the bed.
I don't remember talking to her.
But the moment is seared into Bridget's mind.
I just laid down next to her,
and I remember it so very,
her whole body is so tense. And I just remember stroking her arm and just giving her like
affirmations like I would do to my son. And I was just like, you're safe, you're loved,
you're surrounded by family. And I just kept repeating that. And I could feel her tenseness.
And she was just out. And I was just heartbroken for her.
Everyone was heartbroken and worried. But on that day in the thick of everything else Saskia
was going through, any reaction would have been appropriate.
As observers, we kind of chalked it up to, she just drank too much because she was so sad
because she lost her mom.
That combined with whatever medication she's prescribed, like, not going too well.
Marisa had never seen anything like it.
We were all incredibly concerned about what was going on.
Does she need to go to the hospital?
This is not normal.
Mike was the calming, reassuring force who said,
no, I've got her.
I'll take care of her.
Don't worry.
She'll just go to sleep and we'll wake up in the morning
and I'll let you know how she is.
Everyone headed out, wrote it off as a bad night.
But Bridget would never forget how Saskia felt in her arms,
the tension in her body as she went to sleep.
That's your home.
That's your husband.
You're supposed to be safe.
It's like she subconsciously knew something was going to happen.
Welcome to the A building.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm in Alec Lamoma.
It's 1969.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.
had both been assassinated.
And Black America was out of breaking point.
Writing and protests broke out on an unprecedented scale.
In Atlanta, Georgia, at Martin's Almermata, Morehouse College,
the students had their own protest.
It featured two prominent figures.
in Black History, Martin Luther King Sr. and a young student, Samuel L. Jackson.
To be in what we really thought was a revolution. I mean, people would die.
In 1968, the murder of Dr. King, which traumatized everyone.
The FBI had a role in the murder of a Black Panther leader in Chicago.
This story is about protest. It echoes in today's world far more than it should, and it will blow your mind.
Listen to the A building on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Seems like just yesterday that the Two Guys Five Rings podcast was in Paris for the Olympics.
And now we're heading to Milan for the 26th Milan Cortina Olympic Winter Games.
I'm Bowen-Yang.
And I'm Matt Rogers and we'll join athletes from 93 countries as Two Guys Five Rings hits the Italian Alps for the 26 Milan-Crotina Olympic Winter Games.
Open your free.
iHeart Radio app. Do we mention it's free? Search two guys five rings and listen now. What if mind
control is real? If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have?
Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car? When you look at your car, you're going to
become overwhelmed with such good feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you?
I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP,
was used on me to access my subconscious.
NLP, aka
neurolinguistic programming,
is a blend of hypnosis,
linguistics, and psychology.
Fans say it's like
finally getting a user manual
for your brain.
It's about engineering consciousness.
Mind games is the story of NLP.
It's crazy cast of disciples
and the fake doctor
who invented it at a new age commune
and sold it to guys in suits.
He stood trial for murder
and got acquitted. The biggest mind game of all
NLP might actually work.
This is wild.
Listen to Mind Games on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the unpurposed podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
The thing I would say to my younger self is congratulations.
You get to marry Priyanka Chopra Jonas.
And also, you know, your daughter is incredible.
That's beautiful, man.
Yeah, thank you.
That's so beautiful.
I can see that got you a little.
Yeah, for sure.
Our daughter, she came to the world under sort of very intense circumstances,
which I'd not really talked about ever.
Growing up on Disney in front of a million,
how did that shape your sense of self?
I went blank, I hit a bad note, and then I couldn't kind of recover.
And I had built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of read it.
We learn who I was if you took this thing away.
Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Saskia's friends watched helplessly as her health declined.
She was no longer the silly, bubbly sauce they'd grown up with.
She struggled just to get through the day.
She hit a new low at her mom's celebration of life, when all of a sudden she was blackout drunk.
But this night wasn't a one-off.
Incidents like this kept happening.
It wasn't like when they were younger,
when Saskia or another friend would take things too far to party.
Heather says,
This seemed to be after a normal couple of drinks,
and it happened so frequently.
Bridget remembers another hard day around the same time.
It was Saskia's son's eighth birthday party.
It was at a climb zone.
and Saskia was determined to make it a special day.
Here's Bridget.
She had made all these cute hors d'oeuvres for all the kids.
And she printed out these little things and she tied it to it.
She was so proud of these goodie bags and she was so proud of like he was going to do what he wanted to do and he was super excited about it.
And I'm on my way to the party and I'm calling her and she's not answering.
And I'm like, that's odd.
Bridget tried Mike.
He was in the car with the kids.
He was like, yeah, I'm on my way.
We're going to be a little bit late, but I couldn't get Saskia awake.
And I was like, what do you mean you couldn't get her awake?
She was so looking forward to this party.
I don't understand it.
How could she have slept with this?
She was so excited.
The party went smoothly thanks to Mike and Saskia's friends.
But Saskia's absence put a dark cloud over the whole event.
Afterwards, Bridget got a text from Mike.
He was like, thanks again for helping today with the candle and other stuff.
And I said, anytime you guys are family, is Soss OK?
And he said, yes, she thinks she took more sleeping pills accidentally last night.
So she was completely zonked out, but is awake and okay now.
Megan, Saskia's sister-in-law, felt frustrated by this explanation.
At the time, we were all kind of like, pissed.
Like, what are you doing?
This is your son.
And you can't come to his birthday party at 1 o'clock in the afternoon or whatever it was.
You know, it's like, you can't just like muster.
up enough energy to, like, get there?
Nope.
To this day, this is one of the most difficult moments for Saskia to look back on.
I was so excited for the birthday party.
Sorry.
And then in the morning, I couldn't get up.
And it broke my heart.
I felt so guilty about it.
I just wanted to be a good mom and a good wife.
and my kids remember those things.
Like my son knows I didn't go to his birthday party that year.
And ate her up inside, still does.
And in moments like this, she was all the more indebted to Mike.
He helped her get the care she needed, supported her as she took more time off work.
And on top of all that, he was stepping up as a dad, driving her kids to school, scheduling their activities, and cleaning the house.
He was showing up for her family.
in ways she couldn't.
It would make me rely on him more
because I just felt worse about myself
and then I would just rely on him more.
I'm so lucky to, like, have this guy
even though I'm losing it
and even though I have these mental health problems
and I'm drinking too much
and, you know, it made me hold on harder.
His support became more and more important.
Nearly three years into her medical crisis,
Saskia was no closer to a solution.
One morning in 2018, she found herself on the bathroom floor.
I just remember waking up to him in a frenzied voice, like, get up, get up.
And I remember opening my eyes and I was on the cold floor.
And there were two perfect lines of blood.
And I was just like so in like a twilight, right?
Like so kind of out of it.
Mike was terrified.
she must have fallen.
With his help, she slowly stood up.
I remember looking in the mirror and seeing my eye.
It was swollen, shut, and completely closed.
It was the day of her high school reunion.
All of her friends were ready to go.
Saskia texted them.
She wouldn't be able to make it.
She sent Bridget a photo.
She had the darkest black eye, and she was like,
I'm not showing up looking like this.
She wouldn't be able to explain it.
She didn't even understand it.
She was walking to the bathroom and she face-planted because her body couldn't hold it.
She didn't understand why she couldn't control herself and why these things were happening.
Some of her friends like Heather tied the incident to her drinking or the way alcohol interacted with her meds.
I thought she probably got drunk and fell.
Whether it was the alcohol or her medications caused.
the change, Saskia was growing more difficult to be around. She was increasingly erratic.
She was just so paranoid accusing us of doing things behind her back, saying things behind her back.
And the only thing we were doing behind her back was talking about how worried we were about her and what was going on.
Saskia knew her friends were worried, but she also felt judged.
That was going crazy. And I was an embarrassment.
I was isolating myself from my friends
thinking that they didn't have the best intentions for me.
And I worried that I would be that failure
like my dad was believed to be.
Her dad couldn't outrun his mental health struggles.
And maybe Saskia was destined for the same.
As Saskia pushed her friends away,
they knew she'd always have Mike.
So as they became more and more concerned,
they went to him.
They tried to get him to talk to Saskia about her drinking and her men's.
Every time he assured them, he had everything under control.
As Heather recalls, he seemed like everything was fine.
Then came October 27, 2018.
It had been two years since Saskia and Mike's wedding.
Three years since our health took a turn for the worse.
My friend Allison was having a Halloween party.
And my sister was nice enough to have the kids for a sleepover over her house.
Allison's house was done up for the occasion.
There were themed snacks, a photo wall, and everyone went all out with their costumes.
I was a cowgirl, and Mike was a cowboy.
Pretty generic.
But I still had some remnants of a black eye.
And, you know, a lot of people asked me about it, and I kind of just said,
I don't know how, but I think that I fell and I'm okay.
After her last fall, everyone was on high alert around Saskia.
And before long, that concern seemed justified.
According to Megan,
Sass was wasted again, and I say again,
because at that point it was a real recurrence.
By that time, she was getting in the tank all the time.
Bridget tried to get Mike's help.
I was like, you know, Saskia seems pretty,
messed up. I just grabbed her water and he was like, no, she's fine. And it was a very abnormal
response because anyone who has to deal with somebody who's drunk, you're not going to be like,
no, she's fine. So I was very shocked that he just downplayed it. Heather couldn't understand how
Mike could be so calm. Even when some of our friends approached him with concerns, he was like,
she's fine. Eventually, Mike did get Saskia to leave. It was late. And we were,
when they got home, Mike went right to the bedroom.
Saskia took a moment downstairs to eat and take her nighttime meds.
Which I always did so that I could sleep through the night.
Then she went up to their room.
Mike was already in bed.
He was facing his nightstand and I wasn't sure if he was sleeping or not.
So I like went and put my arm around him and we started making out.
And I remember him telling me that he was going to use the bathroom and to hold.
and to hold on.
A lot of time passed, and I'm sitting there thinking what is going on.
And then I guess I fell asleep.
Next thing I remember, I kind of opened my eyes and looked up,
and I saw him laying opposite from me.
Her eyes fluttered open.
She didn't know how much time had passed.
But Mike was awake.
He was lying with his head at the end of the bed.
He wasn't looking at Saskia.
He was on his laptop.
The open screen was facing me.
I saw what looked like a mostly naked back and butt
with some light blue underpants on.
But just as quickly as she opened her eyes,
she was getting sucked back into the darkness.
The drugs, the alcohol rushed in like a riptide.
pulling her back into the depths.
She had been here once before, a few nights before her wedding.
But this time, she held on to the light.
She needed to remember.
So she focused on the glow of the screen.
I told myself, this is really important,
and I need to remember anything that I can.
And trust me, I was feeling pretty out of it.
I don't know how I was able to do this,
But I remember looking and I saw the name Chatterbate.
And then I remember seeing 1,600 followers.
I didn't know what that meant, but I just knew.
Just remember these things, these are significant.
And I passed back out.
The next morning I woke up and I remembered.
Somehow, despite the meds in her system,
she was able to hold onto that image of the person
in their underwear.
And those words, chatterbate, 1,600 followers.
But I had no idea until I confronted him later in the day,
the depth of what he was doing.
I said, I need you to tell me exactly what you're doing.
And I'm not going to tell the police if you totally come clean
and you tell me what has been going on.
So I asked him,
to show me the website and he opened it on the laptop.
And the picture was there.
It was the picture from the night before.
And I was like, that's my underwear.
I realized I was like, that's my underwear.
I said, is that me?
And he said, yes, that's you.
And he said, I guess we're both a little bit crazy.
On the next episode of Betrayal.
She let out this blood-curdling scream and ran down the hall.
Then the sheriffs came sprinting.
They didn't know what had happened.
They just heard this scream and came sprinting down after her.
And she was just in shock, like, what is going on?
For resources on sexual violence, visit rain.org slash betrayal.
That's r-a-in-n-n-org.org.
betrayal. You can also get free confidential 24-7 support through Rain's National Sexual
Assault Hotline. Just text Hope to 64673 or call 1-800-656-5-6-Hope. You are not alone.
If you would like to reach out to the betrayal team or want to tell us your story, email us
at Betrayalpod at gmail.com. That is Betrayal P-O-D at gmail.com. Or follow us on
Instagram at Betrayal Pod.
To access additional content and to connect with the Betrayal community, join our
Substack at Betrayal.substack.com.
We're grateful for your support.
One way to show support is by subscribing to our show on Apple Podcasts.
Don't forget to rate and review Betrayal.
Five-star reviews go a long way.
A big thank you to all of our listeners.
Betrayal is a production of Glass Podcasts, a division of Glass Entertainment Group
in partnership with IHeart podcasts.
The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass and Jennifer Fascent.
Hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gunning.
Written and produced by Caitlin Golden.
Our supervising producer is Carrie Hartman.
Our story editor is Monique Laborde.
Also produced by Ben Federman.
Associate producers are Olivia Hewitt and Leah Jablo.
Production Management by Kristen Melchuri.
Additional support by Curry Richmond.
Our I-Hart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Kreins
Audio editing by Tanner Robbins
with additional editing and mixing by Matt Dalbekio.
Special thanks to Saskia, her friends, and family.
And special thanks to Will Pearson and Carrie Lieberman.
The trail's theme is composed by Oliver Baines,
Music Library provided by Mib Music.
And for more podcasts from IHeart,
visit the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It seems like just yesterday that the Two Guys Five Rings podcast was in Paris for the Olympics.
And now we're heading to Milan for the 26 Milan Cortina Olympic Winter Games.
I'm Bowen-Yang.
And I'm Matt Rogers and we'll join athletes from 93 countries as Two Guys Five Rings hits the Italian Alps for the 26 Milan-Cortina Olympic Winter Games.
Open your free IHeart Radio app.
Do we mention it's free?
Search Two Guys Five Rings.
and listen now.
Black history lives in our stories,
our culture, and the conversations we still having today.
This Black History Month, the podcast, I didn't know.
Maybe you didn't either.
Digs into the moments, perspectives, and experiences that don't always make the textbook.
Let me tell you about Garrett Morgan.
Brough had to pretend he didn't even exist just to sell his own invention.
Listen to I didn't know.
Maybe you didn't either.
from the Black Effect Podcast Network
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or simply wherever you get your podcast.
1969, Malcolm and Martin are gone.
America is in crisis.
At a Morehouse college, the students make their move.
These students, including a young Samuel L. Jackson,
locked up the members of the board of trustees,
including Martin Luther King's senior.
It's the true story of protests and rebellion
in black American history that you'll never forget.
I'm Hans Charles.
I'm Minnick Lamumba.
Listen to the A-building on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the on-purpose podcast.
On a recent episode, I sat down with Nick Jonas, singer, songwriter, actor, and global superstar.
I went blank.
I hit a bad note, and I couldn't kind of recover.
And I had built up this idea that music and being musician was my whole identity.
I had to sort of relearn who I was if you took.
this thing away. Who am I?
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty
on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. This is an IHeart
podcast. Guaranteed
human.
