After the Affair podcast

171. The 3 Ingredients Behind Most Betrayals

0:00
11:12
Spol 15 sekunder tilbage
Spol 15 sekunder frem

As the year comes to a close, many betrayed partners find themselves reviewing everything that happened, and quietly turning that review into self-attack.

What did I miss?

What should I have done differently?

How did this happen to me?

In this episode, Luke offers a clear, grounding framework for understanding how most betrayals actually occur, without excusing the behaviour and without placing responsibility where it doesn’t belong.

You’ll learn the three ingredients that show up again and again behind infidelity: unmet needs, unhealthy coping, and weak or undefined boundaries — and why none of them are a reflection of your worth, effort, or adequacy as a partner.

This episode isn’t about certainty.

It’s about probability, perspective, and ending the year without turning yourself into the problem.

Key Takeaways

  • Unmet needs are internal experiences, not partner failures
  • Adults are responsible for expressing and managing their own needs
  • Betrayal is often driven by escape, not desire
  • Avoidance, emotional outsourcing, and validation-seeking play a major role in infidelity
  • Boundaries are internal commitments, not rules for others
  • Most betrayals involve a combination of needs, coping, and boundaries
  • Understanding betrayal doesn’t require blaming yourself
  • You can learn from betrayal without turning yourself into the lesson

Work With Luke

If this episode helped loosen some of the self-blame you’ve been carrying, ongoing support can help you integrate what you’ve been through, without losing yourself in it.

Through one-to-one coaching and The After the Affair Collective, Luke helps people move from confusion and self-attack into clarity, dignity, and grounded forward movement.

You don’t need to carry responsibility that was never yours.

Flere episoder fra "After the Affair"