From Betrayal To Breakthrough podcast

456: Why Betrayal Is Different From Other Traumas

0:00
31:45
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

Dr. Debi breaks down the fundamental differences between betrayal and other types of trauma, explaining why traditional trauma recovery approaches often fall short for betrayal survivors. 

Key Insights 

The Three Core Discoveries from Dr. Debi's PhD Research: 

  1. Betrayal is a different type of trauma that requires a different approach to heal 

  1. Most people who've been betrayed experience symptoms of Post Betrayal Syndrome® 

  1. There are five predictable stages of recovery, with most people getting stuck at Stage 3 

Why Betrayal Trauma Is Unique 

The Dual Rebuilding Process Unlike other traumas where you rebuild your life, betrayal requires you to rebuild both your life AND your sense of self. The core aspects that get shattered include: 

  • Confidence 

  • Worthiness 

  • Trust 

  • Belonging 

  • Sense of safety 

Complete Reality Disruption With other traumas (car accidents, natural disasters, loss), your perception of reality stays intact. With betrayal: 

  • Your entire worldview gets destroyed 

  • Past memories become tainted and questioned 

  • Every moment you shared is reexamined through a new, painful lens 

  • Your trust in the person who was supposed to be your safest person is shattered 

The Self-Trust Crisis When the person you trusted most proves untrustworthy, you immediately question yourself: 

  • "How did I not see this?" 

  • "What's wrong with my judgment?" 

  • "Can I ever trust my own decisions again?" 

This creates a paralyzing fear about moving forward and engaging with others. 

Identity Destruction Betrayal triggers a complete identity crisis: 

  • Your roles are questioned 

  • Your sense of self is shattered 

  • You take it personally, wondering if you're lovable, worthy, or deserving 

  • Everything you thought you knew about yourself comes into question 

Why Traditional Trauma Treatment Fall Short When it Comes to Betrayal 

Standard trauma approaches focus on: 

  • Processing the event 

  • Reducing fear 

  • Building coping skills 

  • Increasing sense of safety 

But these don't address: 

  • The shattering of self-trust 

  • The identity crisis 

  • The complete disruption of reality and worldview 

  • The unique isolation that comes with betrayal 

The Isolation Factor 

Unlike other traumas where communities rally together (like natural disasters or loss of a loved one), betrayal creates unique isolation: 

  • People don't know what to say, so they say nothing 

  • Friends and family may distance themselves out of discomfort 

  • Some may minimize the betrayal to avoid dealing with it 

  • The betrayed often suffers in silence, embarrassed and ashamed 

  • Many cover for the betrayer to maintain appearances, suffering at their own expense 

The Impossible Burden 

After betrayal, people who've been betrayed are expected to: 

  • Continue caring for children and elderly parents 

  • Maintain their careers 

  • Keep up with daily responsibilities 

  • Function normally in society 

All while their entire world has been shattered and they're questioning everything about themselves and their reality. 

For Coaches and Practitioners 

This is what your clients may be experiencing even if they haven't explicitly told you about a betrayal. They may be: 

  • Struggling and suffering in silence 

  • Unable to hold coherent thoughts 

  • Barely functioning day-to-day 

  • Covering for their betrayer while dealing with the devastation alone 

Understanding these unique aspects of betrayal trauma is essential for providing effective support and guidance. 

 

About Dr. Debi Dr. Debi Silber is the Founder and CEO of The PBT Institute, a two-time TEDx speaker, and holds a PhD in transpersonal psychology. Her groundbreaking research on betrayal led to the discovery of Post Betrayal Syndrome® and the 5 Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™. 

Resources 

Weitere Episoden von „From Betrayal To Breakthrough“