Is Betrayal Trauma Detrimental to an Addict’s Recovery?
Description
What happens when a betrayed partner is told that their trauma is detrimental to an addict’s recovery?
In this discussion, we unpack why this perspective is outdated, harmful, and rooted in misunderstanding.
We explore the difference between sobriety and true recovery, how shame resiliency plays a role, and why betrayal trauma responses are valid—not intentional attempts to sabotage healing. Recovery requires accountability, empathy, and facing reality, not avoidance.
Key insights in this video:
- Why betrayal trauma is not detrimental, but a natural trauma response
- The difference between recovery vs. sobriety in addiction healing
- How shame resiliency supports accountability and growth
- Why outdated therapeutic advice can harm both the addict and the betrayed partner
- The importance of seeing trauma responses as unintentional, not blame-worthy
Healing is not about avoiding the mirror that a partner holds up—it’s about learning to face it, accept responsibility, and build resilience. Both individuals deserve support and accurate, trauma-informed guidance to move toward real recovery.
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