Betrayal - The Science of Storytelling for Trauma Recovery | Betrayal Weekly — BONUS
Episode Date: April 10, 2025Clinical psychologist and applied neuroscientist Dr. Kate Truitt shares the powerful science behind telling your story as a method of healing from traumatic events. To access Dr. Truitt’s... “CPR for the Amygdala” exercises, including mindful touch and cognitive distractions, visit Dr. Truitt’s YouTube channel or the free resources section at www.drkatetruitt.com. Her memoir “Keep Breathing: A Psychologist’s Intimate Journey Through Loss, Trauma, and Rediscovering Life” is available now. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com and follow us on Instagram at @betrayalpod See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Guaranteed Human.
Hey, it's Joel and Matt from How to Money.
If your New Year's resolution is to finally get your finances in shape, we've got your back.
Prices, they're still high.
And the economy is all over the place.
But 2026 is the year for you to get intentional and make real progress.
That's right.
Yeah, each week we break down what's happening with your money, the most important issues to focus on.
And the small moves that make a big difference.
Kick off the year with confidence.
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I'm John Polk. For years, I was the poster boy of the conversion therapy movement.
The ex-gay who married an ex-lesbian and traveled the world telling my story of how I changed my sexuality from gay to straight.
You might have heard my story, but you've never heard the real story.
John has never been anything that gay, but he really tried hard not.
to be. Listen to Atonement, the John Polk story on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers, but it wasn't until
2023 when he was finally caught. The answers were there, hidden in plain sight. So why did it take so long to
catch him? I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster, hunting the Long Island serial killer,
The investigation into the most notorious killer in New York since the son of Sam, available now.
Listen for free on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Dr. Priyankawali.
And I'm Hurricane Dabolu.
It's a new year.
And on the podcast's health stuff, we're resetting the way we talk about our health.
Which means being honest about what we know, what we don't know, and how messy it can all be.
I like to sleep in late and sleep early.
Is there a chronotype for that or am I just depressed?
Health stuff is about learning, laughing, and feeling a little less alone.
Listen on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Andrea Gunning and this is a special bonus episode of Betrayal.
Our team loves to dive into the science and psychology behind betrayal and the trauma it can cause.
We often talk about the power of storytelling as a tool for here.
So we got curious about how the science of storytelling really functions in trauma recovery.
That's how we found applied neuroscientist and clinical psychologist Dr. Kate Truitt.
An applied neuroscientist straddles the line between what's going on in the labs, what I call the ivory tower of the educational space, and the clinical realm.
I view myself as a translator of the brain
to best help people connect with what's happening in their mind-body system.
I specifically focus on the brain areas tied into both trauma and empowerment.
Dr. Truitt also has her own clinical practice in Los Angeles,
where she sees clients who've experienced trauma.
The through line, though, and what really, really lights me up
is helping people disseminate the impact of trauma and better understand the weird, painful experiences
that happen in our mind-body system when we've been deeply harmed.
She's very open about her own lived experiences and how they impact her work.
I'm also a survivor. I am a survivor of traumatic grief. I was widowed a week before my wedding.
And I'm harnessing my own vulnerability and knowledge of neurosephal.
science to shine the light on how change in healing is possible.
I wanted to start by asking Dr. Truitt what trauma really is in a clinical sense.
For instance, what makes something a traumatic experience to our brains?
When I look at trauma through the lens of neurobiology, I like to distill it down to the
concept of threat, safety, or a lack of safety.
Because we can experience something that feels threatening, such as getting on a roller coaster and plummeting at the earth at a very, very high rate of speed, but also knowing that supposedly if the engineers did their job, we're okay, so therefore we're safe.
If that's the case, and we like roller coasters, then it's not traumatic.
On the other hand, somebody who gets into the same roller coaster may be totally safe, hates roller coasters, but is forced to get on that roller coaster and ride the roller coaster.
roller coaster, that could be very traumatic because there's no choice. So threat in of itself is a
critical throughline of what makes something traumatic. It could be threat to life or perceived
threat to belonging, livability, threat to one's ability to make choice in their life to have
agency or threat to the baseline safety. There's one part of our brain responsible for processing
safety. It's the amygdala. Dr. Truitt actually personifies the amygdala. She affectionately calls her
Amy. By making the amygdala into a character, that can help us see its reaction as separate from
who we fundamentally are. Our little friend Amy the amygdala, who, that's what I do call her Amy the
amygdala. The amygdala is a part of our brain whose primary job is to keep us alive. And when we feel
threatened, she's assessing in our brain these core values of, am I safe, am I lovable, or do I belong,
and can I create change or what I call be successful in my life? And if there's a direct threat
to any of those values, then there's the possibility of something being encoded in our brain as
traumatic. Sometimes the amygdala struggles to determine the size of a risk, and it can be activated in all
kinds of situations. Now, there's this concept in society on social media in the clinical realm of
big T versus small T trauma. Big T trauma being something that we just lived through here in Los Angeles,
these fires, or any natural disaster or a direct assault or something that is very clear that if you
told another human this happened, societally, that other person would say, yeah, that's definitely
traumatic. Small T trauma are often just as impactful, but they're missed in the trauma dialogue,
and they create ongoing traumatic stress as well in the system. But there's things that
directly threaten those core values in more subtle ways, such as course of control, feeling
assaulted or humiliated or intimidated all of the time in ways that don't leave an actual
mark, perhaps on the body. Those small T traumas can be just as
is impactful on how the mind-body system is experiencing and processing data.
Whether it be a big T or small T trauma, when those experiences happen, it fundamentally changes
the way our brain and our body are making sense of the world around us.
What the amygdala considers to be a threat changes all the time based on the things we experience.
One of my favorite examples of this is if we go back to February of 2020,
If somebody sneezed, then it may have been a simple,
Gazunta, bless you.
Not an entire fearful mind-body reaction to, oh my gosh,
is that person sick with a virus that could kill us?
Fast forward to August 2020, a sneeze for many people
had a very different connotation.
That's a type of neuroplasticity known as stress
and de-structural plasticity.
Now, sitting here in 2025, a sneeze for many people,
once again, it's just a sneeze.
That's how our brain is supposed to respond to threats
and then also unlearn threats
when it's no longer actually threatening to us.
Whether we're aware of it or not,
our amygdala is always reacting to experiences.
Dr. Truitt says that traumas that occur in early childhood,
even ones were too young to remember,
can still have a strong impact on the amygdala sense of safety.
When we're living in a state where there is constant internalization of fear of trauma,
where our brain has learned and started to design itself around traumatic experiences,
even if the trauma is no longer happening, the traumatic event might have been, you know,
for two years during one's childhood, but if those two years were impactful enough,
the brain is still going to be harnessing and utilizing the neural pathway set down
during those childhood years.
Regardless of the degrees of trauma we experience, it always takes a toll.
Trauma exists on a spectrum, and so do the effects.
It's a rewiring of our mind-body system into feeling chronically unsafe.
Oftentimes, too, though, becomes an internalization.
It changes how we experience ourselves in the world.
We start having negative viewpoints on our capacity,
our lovability. We start feeling as though there's something wrong with us. We're shameful or that we're
a chronic failure. We can't make change in our world. Our body may be rewired into a state of chronic
stress or vigilance, meaning that all of a sudden our gastrointestinal system simply stops functioning
the way it used to, which is a part of a trauma response or we can't sleep very well or feel
rested when we're sleeping. So the impact of whether it be big tears, multi-trauma, happens in many,
many layers across the course of our mind-body functioning. It's fascinating to hear her unpack
how one event in our lives can impact our brain wiring and how it can also put our body in trauma
mode. So without proper intervention, we could stay in that state for the rest of our lives. It can keep us
from achieving our goals or experiencing joy.
The really good news about our brain is it's changeable.
It's plastic.
That's where the buzzy word, neuroplasticity comes from.
Because of neuroplasticity, we can help the brain carve new neural pathways and strengthen
the ones that we want while either desensitizing the ones that we don't want or even
helping the brain shift through and release the ones that are anchored in by trauma and
creating space for new learnings going forward, a new way of being in the world. And we can play a
very active role in that when we know how. And a lot of Dr. Truitt's work is teaching people how.
After we have a traumatic experience, our brain starts to develop a story, a narrative to explain
what happened and how it happened. We can become very attached to that story. For example,
If your partner has an affair, your brain's initial story might be, I'm not good enough.
But here's the thing.
Oftentimes, our brain writes this story while we're in trauma mode, and the first draft is full of self-blame.
What that looks like at a neurobiological level is when our little friend Amy the amygdala,
when she starts looking at the world through a lens of threat, she disrupts the storymaking parts of our brain.
such as our hippocampus, which focuses on memory of consolidation, our thinking brain, which is our prefrontal cortex, which helps us pay attention to things and make decisions.
The amygdala changes the capacity of those other parts of our brain to function in a balanced, resilient manner.
And instead starts pulling all of our other brain parts into a direction of survival mode.
Threat-based looking at the world through those trauma glass.
And when the brain is stuck in that survival mode, seeing through trauma glasses, this is what it can feel like.
The world is scary, or it could be I'm a bad person, I make bad things happen.
It could be, I am not deserving of love.
Whatever the brain has learned is the thing tied into what is painful, scary, or hard.
And the amygdala reinforces those types of stories over.
and over and over again.
The more of those stories get to exist
within our neurobiology, the stronger
they become, which means they can
start to feel like truth.
The impact is pretty profound,
and the stories are still going to be happening.
It's just that the stories are being written
by a very unkind narrator.
Part of Dr. Truitt's approach
is understanding the amygdala's response
and even empathizing with it,
because its biological intention
is to keep
us safe. That's the irony
about Amy the amygdala.
She can be very disruptive
in how she guides our brain in order
to keep us alive. But fundamentally, she does
really have our back, and that's the opportunity
in the neurobiological
healing work and integrating
that with meaning making and
simply storytelling.
We are wired to make
stories, but we're also
allowed to revise the story our
brain writes.
There's a lot of very effective different types of intervention for trauma because as humans
we're narrative creatures and until we can support the system and changing the narrative,
the meaning making of what has happened, the system can continue to be paralyzed or run by
the pain of the past. We're always going to be leaning into the meaning making, which is
fundamentally the story that our brain has around what happened and identifying new.
opportunities for finding escape from what feels inescapable.
After the break, Dr. Truitt delves into specifics about storytelling as a tool for trauma recovery.
New year, new goals, and in this economy, a better money plan is more necessary than ever.
I am Matt, and I'm Joel.
We are from the how to money podcast, and every week we help you to spend smarter, save more,
and make sense of what's going on out there.
If you want 2026 to be the year you finally feel in control,
of your money, we're here to give you the tools and advice to help you make it happen.
Listen to How to Money on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey there, this is Dr. Jesse Mills, Director of the Men's Clinic at UCLA Health and host of
the mailroom podcast. Each January guys everywhere make the same resolutions.
Get stronger, work harder, fix, what's broken? But what if the real work isn't physical at all?
To kick off the new year, I sat down with Dr. Steve Polter, a psychologist with over
30 years experience helping men unpack shame, anxiety, and emotional pain they were never taught
to name. In a powerful two-part conversation, we discuss why men aren't emotionally bulletproof,
why shame hides in plain sight, and how real strength comes from listening to yourself and to others.
Guys who are toxic, they're immature, or they've got something they just haven't resolved.
Once that gets resolved, then there comes empathy and compassion.
If you want this to be the year, you stop powering through pain and stress.
start understanding what's underneath, listen to the mailroom on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your favorite shows.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers,
but it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught.
The answers were there, hidden in plain sight.
So why did it take so long to catch him?
I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster, hunting the Long Island serial killer,
the investigation into the most notorious killer in New York,
since the son of Sam, available now.
Listen for free on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Dr. Priyanko Wali.
And I'm Hurricane de Bolu.
It's a new year.
And on the podcast's health stuff, we're resetting the way we talk about our health.
Which means being honest about what we know, what we don't know, and how messy it can all be.
I like to sleep in late and sleep early.
Is there a chronotype for that, or am I just depressed?
We talk to experts who share real experiences and insight.
You just really need to find where it is that you can have an impact in your own life and just start doing that.
We break down the topics you want to know more about.
Sleep, stress, mental health, and how the world around us affects our overall health.
We talk about all the ways to keep your body and mind, inside and out, healthy.
We human beings, all we want is connection.
We just want to connect with each other.
Health stuff is about learning, laughing, and feeling a little less alone.
Listen on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're talking with Dr. K. Truitt, who's an applied neuroscientist, clinical psychologist, and educator.
Dr. Truitt says that when it comes to identifying the stories your brain has written about trauma, you can take the first step on your own.
journaling is proven scientifically to be an incredible way to help integrate our story.
Putting something on paper is a way of honoring your own story and your own truth.
Sharing our journaling, sharing our story in a healthy way also can be incredibly healing.
It can also be very vulnerable to journal.
We can be tapping into sensory data that's tied into our traumatic experiences.
Sharing our story can be incredibly vulnerable.
and our amygdala may have fears around being rejected or feeling even more isolated after sharing.
But working through that fear and vulnerability is part of the process.
Dr. Truitt helps her clients develop tools for navigating the difficult feelings that come up when they're telling their story.
The main focus that I always recommend to my clients, friends, colleagues, anybody,
when we're doing this type of work independently is to also have a toolkit of self-reaching.
regulation tools next to us in case we tap into something that carries a lot of emotional weight
as we're journaling. And so if we have our self-regulation tools on hand as we're journaling
or writing or sharing our story, we can actually proactively heal any of those reactive
responses that are coming up. And one of my favorite tools for this is an exercise I created a
long time ago called Creating Personal Resilience for the Amygdala. C.P.
are for the amygdala. As we're doing our narrative work, as we're journaling, if we're noticing
our amygdala starting to get reactive, it's just time to push pause and take a breath
and utilize something known as mindful touch in order to downregulate the brain.
Mindful touch is a meditation practice of clearing your mind, bringing your awareness to your
body, and gently running your hands together or running your hands over your arms like a hug.
It's a way to ground yourself and help calm down your amygdala.
It seems simple, but this practice can build a sense of safety around traumatic memories.
It's a way of saying this happened rather than holding it inside,
of acknowledging the pains of the past,
and starting to create a new way forward,
imagining different outcomes,
creating a way that you would like to respond or react to something.
We can help this system find ways to re-narrate and free our brain of being stuck, locked into what happened, and know that, hey, we're not there anymore.
Another important step in this process is detaching from labels.
A tool or exercise I do with my clients quite a bit is to have them notice the difference between the statement, I am an anxious person versus I am experiencing anxiety.
as humans we tend to label ourselves and when we give ourselves big emotional labels it's hard for our mind
and our body system to dig ourselves out of that label i am bad i am depressed i am unlovable i am unworthy
i am powerless our brain buys into that as a self-identifying component of self as opposed to saying
I'm feeling powerless in this moment, which then creates space for the brain and the body to go,
oh, I can do something to feel more powerful right now.
What might that be?
Oh, I can control my breath.
Oh, I have control over that.
Or I am experiencing anxiety, which creates the opportunity to zoom out a little bit.
And say, why am I feeling anxious, which immediately starts a positive neuroplastic experience of being curious,
which gives us dopamine.
and opens at our visual sphere, both internally and externally, to seeing a larger picture around us.
And the value in that is there's space for curiosity and even possibly beginning to move into a state of
self-compassion and deeper self-awareness and self-acceptance, which fundamentally is a critical
part of healing through trauma.
Certain labels have more power than others, like the label of victim.
It's a word that comes up a lot in our interviews.
It's a polarizing and emotionally charged label.
Some people adopt it.
Others reject it.
A common label that I hear is the idea of, I am a victim, or the polarizing opposite.
I'm not a victim.
And I can see a lot of damage potentially being done on either side of the aisle.
If we are a victim, and that is the label that we're putting on our mind-bodies to
It can feel what we call in psychological terms very much having an external locus of control.
Things happen to me.
I am powerless and I cannot create change in my world.
And for the amygdala's core values, you can possibly tune in there that Amy's going to hate that.
And when she really feels powerless or weak, she's going to create a way of interacting with that statement for the good, the bad or the ugly.
But however it shows up for her to keep us safe.
oftentimes that can mean isolating or creating ways of being an interpersonal relationships that are not
preferable or are unhealthy for us. The flip side of I am not a victim, again, great if you're not a victim,
that's fine. But if that's a trauma reaction, it can bypass the reality of things happen out of
control. Scary and difficult, painful things did happen, and the mind-body system wasn't in control
in those moments. And so the label of victim and of itself become self-identifying. And either side of the
aisle, I don't believe it's supportive or helpful for my clients or anybody in the world to
have an I-M statement in one direction or the other. When we look at the term of victim, it means
something has happened that was really bad. And it's a concept. It's not a label. It's not a
self-identification. Still, having a word for that experience and the changes it caused can be a way
to acknowledge that it happened. In the field of survivalship when working with trauma survivors,
we've taken victim off the table. Because when we're a survivor, it's giving an acknowledgement to
that something did happen. So yes, there are.
There was a moment where I was a victim of something really bad happening.
And I'm standing here right now.
I made it through.
I have survived.
And therefore, there's space to look at what happened and to build through survivorship
into resilience and empowerment.
A major barrier to building resilience and empowerment is shame.
Dr. Truitt explains where shame comes from and why we hold onto it so tightly.
Ah, shame. Shame. Shame, shame, shame. Our brain can be a shame junkie. And shame is fundamentally a feeling of being flooded with a lack of self-worth, feeling completely and utterly like somebody is bad. They are broken at their core and they are bad. And the interesting thing about shame is our little friend, Amy the amygdala, loves it. Because when she's feeling shame, she's like, there is something clearly not okay.
here and she gets to make up even more stories about how we are bad, believing that she's keeping us
safe. She really does have her best interests at hearts, but feeling shame or feeling bad or broken for
Amy the amygdala actually gives her power. It helps her feel like she has agency and choice.
I know it's weird and it's real. Shame is baked into our brain's normal functioning and it's
something we have to learn to work with.
is hindsight's 2020. And so we can look back and see every flag that was missed and hold ourselves
accountable for it. And when I say hold ourselves accountable for it, of course it's not us,
it's our little friend Amy the amygdala, spinning up a narrative of saying, see, you miss that,
that's your fault, that's your fault, that's your fault, that's your fault, you miss that too.
Aren't you so bad? How did you fail on that account? What's wrong with you? So on and so forth.
again all as a way to create internally a sense of safety because when we're so flagellating
when we're beating ourselves up and holding ourselves responsible for things that we could not control
did not know about did not see our amygdala is saying remember it remember it because you don't
want this to happen again and so this is her way of being a looky loo when there's a car accident on
the freeway people
slow down, yes, perhaps for the safety of the passengers in the car accident, but also people
look because the brain's going, I need to learn something over there. Our Magdalas version of
doing that with shame and trauma is to do a hindsight review and have 2020 vision about every
single thing we missed and hold us accountable for it so we don't get into danger in the future.
New year, new goals, and in this economy, a better money plan is more necessary than ever. I am
Matt. And I'm Joel. We are from the How to Money podcast. And every week, we help you to spend
smarter, save more, and make sense of what's going on out there. If you want 2026 to be the
year you finally feel in control of your money, we're here to give you the tools and advice
to help you make it happen. Listen to How to Money on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hey there. This is Dr. Jesse Mills, Director of the Men's Clinic at UCLA Health and host of the
Mailroom podcast. Each January guys everywhere,
make the same resolutions, get stronger, work harder, fix, what's broken?
But what if the real work isn't physical at all?
To kick off the new year, I sat down with Dr. Steve Polter, a psychologist with over 30 years' experience,
helping men unpack shame, anxiety, and emotional pain they were never taught the name.
In a powerful two-part conversation, we discuss why men aren't emotionally bulletproof,
why shame hides in plain sight, and how real strength comes from listening to yourself and to others.
Guys who are toxic, they're immature, or they've got something they just haven't resolved.
Once that gets resolved, then there comes empathy as in compassion.
If you want this to be the year, you stop powering through pain and start understanding what's underneath, listen to the mailroom on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your favorite shows.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's most elusive serial killers, but it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally called.
caught. The answers were there, hidden in plain sight. So why did it take so long to catch him?
I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster, hunting the Long Island serial killer, the investigation
into the most notorious killer in New York, since the son of Sam, available now. Listen for free
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Dr. Priyanka Wally. And I'm Hurricane DeBolu. It's a new year, and on the podcast's
health stuff, we're resetting the way we talk about our health.
being honest about what we know, what we don't know, and how messy it can all be.
I like to sleep in late and sleep early. Is there a chronotype for that or am I just depressed?
We talk to experts who share real experiences and insight.
You just really need to find where it is that you can have an impact in your own life and to start doing that.
We break down the topics you want to know more about.
Sleep, stress, mental health, and how the world around us affects our
overall health. We talk about all the ways to keep your body in mind, inside and out, healthy.
We human beings, all we want is connection. We just want to connect with each other.
Health stuff is about learning, laughing, and feeling a little less alone.
Listen on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
As we often hear on our show, healing from trauma isn't linear. And healing doesn't always bring
back the person you were before.
That's one of the hardest parts.
So we asked Dr. Truitt what healing looks like when she's working with clients.
One of the interesting things that happens with my clients when we're not everybody,
but a lot of them when we begin the work is ask them, what is their goal?
And they say, I just want to be happy.
The problem is is our brain is not designed to be happy all the time.
In fact, our brain would burn out neurochemically if we were.
Our brain and our body are designed to flow and ebb.
and navigate through all types of feelings and emotions on a daily basis.
The good, the bad, the beautiful, the ugly, the calm and the neutral.
And all of those feelings become flags for helping us better understand what's happening
in the world around us.
The beautiful part of being in the work and doing the work is that those red flag moments
no longer spiral us into shame.
If shame comes up and go, oh, that's also an interesting.
data point. Why is a part of me now feeling bad again? What's happening and we can get curious?
Or in the aftermath of a red flag moment, if we've really leaned into neuroplasticity and helped
our system come home to self with loving care, we can give ourselves an internal hug or even
an external hug, wrap her arms around ourselves and go, they're there, girl, it's okay,
what's going on? And have that compassionate loving response that for so many of us, we've made
never have ever had to begin with.
Instead of making happiness a marker of healing, a more realistic approach is to build
self-compassion.
Self-compassion is a skill.
We're not born to be compassionate towards ourselves.
We are born to be compassionate towards other beings, animals, living things, even inanimate
objects, because we need other entities for survival.
But frankly, to survive, we don't have to be.
be nice to ourselves. So that's a skill that we get to learn. And that's a really critical part of
the trauma healing journey, is learning how to hold the space for ourselves that we neurobiologically,
freely give to everybody else. This is the work she's actively doing with her clients.
But Dr. Truitt acknowledges that therapy isn't always accessible. That's why she's committed to
online education and sharing free resources. So therapy is a privilege. And,
And I'm very aware that not everybody has access to it.
I also know that mental health and wellness is a human right.
So dedicate an extensive amount of time to providing resources and tools that are neurobiologically based to help people heal the experiences of their past.
Finding ways to show up in the present moment and do proactive healing in the here and now while building the neural pathways they want for their future.
because we honestly can partner with our own brains to create incredible change.
And on our YouTube channel, it's Dr. K. Truitt, which is a Google Health channel, it's approved by NIH, NIMH, as well as the World Health Organization as an educational resource.
We provide therapeutic tools, guides, information, as well as guided meditations and all sorts of ways to support people in safely moving into their own healing journey.
Along those same lines, I have two books that I've written.
The first one is called Healing in Your Hands, which the title, and it leans into exactly everything we're talking about.
It's a full healing experience for going on a guided relationship with oneself and navigating how our life experiences have shifted and change the way we experience the world around us,
while providing actionable tools and resources for curating and creating change.
Her most recent book is a memoir, where she uses her own story as a lesson in trauma recovery.
My memoir, which is called Keep Breathing, really goes into a deep dive.
And I use myself as a case study, which was quite terrifying, to be honest,
to unpack the complexities of having PTSD.
In writing her memoir, she experienced first-hand.
how healing it can be to tell your story. And it's a story she hopes other people can learn from.
It was really one of the hardest choices I've made in my life to put that book into the world,
partially because as psychologists, there's an old idea that we're supposed to be blank slates.
But fundamentally what I realize is there's a lot of people who are just like me, who are struggling,
who could possibly benefit from the information. And it was so healing to even write
my own story. It took five years and to have the space to share my story and to have my story
be held by others and reflected. So it's an incredible, incredible, powerful testimony to the power
of narrative work. And how when our story is held by others, that in of itself is really, really
healing. Thank you for listening. And a special thanks to Dr. Kate Truitt for sharing her
expertise with us. In the spirit of storytelling for trauma healing, we're going to spend the next
two weeks sharing listener essay submissions. The theme was resilience and recovery after a devastating
betrayal. We received so many incredible submissions and we're excited to share them with you.
So stay tuned and we'll be back next week.
If you would like to reach out to the betrayal team or want to tell us your betrayal story,
email us at Betrayalpod at gmail.com.
That's Betrayal P-O-D at gmail.com.
We're grateful for your support.
One way to show support is by subscribing to our show on Apple Podcasts.
And 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 and partnership with IHeart Podcasts.
The show is executive produced by Nancy Glass and Jennifer Fasin.
Hosted and produced by me, Andrea Gagher.
Gunning.
Written and produced by Monique Laborde.
Also produced by Ben Federman.
Associate producers are Kristen Mulcuri and Caitlin Golden.
Our I-Hart team is Ali Perry and Jessica Kreincheck.
Audio editing and mixing by Matt Delvecchio.
Additional editing support from Tanner Robbins.
Betrayals theme 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.
Hey, it's Joel and Matt from How to Money.
If your New Year's resolution is to finally get your finances in shape,
we've got your back.
Prices, they're still high, and the economy is all over the place.
But 2026 is the year for you to get intentional and make real progress.
That's right.
Yeah, each week we break down what's happening with your money,
the most important issues to focus on,
and the small moves that make a big difference.
Kick off the year with confidence.
Listen to How to Money on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm John Polk. For years, I was the poster boy of the conversion therapy movement.
The ex-gay who married an ex-lesbian and traveled the world telling my story of how I changed my sexuality from gay to straight.
You might have heard my story, but you've never heard the real story.
John has never been anything but gay.
but he really tried hard not to be.
Listen to Atonement, the John Polk story
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
A decade ago, I was on the trail of one of the country's
most elusive serial killers,
but it wasn't until 2023 when he was finally caught.
The answers were there, hidden in plain sight.
So why did it take so long to catch him?
I'm Josh Zeman, and this is Monster,
hunting the Long Island serial killer.
the investigation into the most notorious killer in New York since the son of Sam, available now.
Listen for free on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Dr. Priyankawali.
And I'm Hurricane Dabolu.
It's a new year.
And on the podcast's health stuff, we're resetting the way we talk about our health.
Which means being honest about what we know, what we don't know, and how messy it can all be.
I like to sleep in late and sleep early.
Is there a chronotype for that?
am I just depressed.
Health stuff is about learning, laughing, and feeling a little less alone.
Listen on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
