Rebuilding Trust through BRAVING: A Journey of Hope for Betrayed Partners with Dr. Karen Strange (Season: 2, Episode #2)
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
-
ナレーター:
-
著者:
概要
Host: MaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, CSAT, CPTT Guest: Dr. Karen Strange, PhD, LMFT, CSAT, CPTT
Episode SummaryHealing from sexual betrayal is not something anyone is meant to navigate alone. In this Season 2 episode of Rise: Hope and Healing from Sexual Betrayal, host MaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, CSAT, CPTT, is joined by colleague and friend Dr. Karen Strange, PhD, LMFT, CSAT, CPTT, for a deeply compassionate conversation about stabilizing after betrayal and rebuilding trust—first with yourself, and then, if appropriate, with a partner.
Together, MaryAnn and Karen explore betrayal through both clinical insight and lived experience, addressing the profound shock, grief, and disorientation betrayed partners often face. Using Brené Brown’s BRAVING framework, they break down trust into understandable, actionable components while emphasizing that trust is rebuilt through behavior over time, not promises or pressure.
This episode also introduces the powerful Kintsugi bowl metaphor—the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with gold—as a symbol of post-betrayal healing, growth, and meaning-making after profound rupture.
If you are early in betrayal trauma recovery, struggling with self-doubt, or feeling pressured to “move on” before you feel safe, this conversation offers grounding, validation, and hope.
Key Topics Discussed-
Why betrayal trauma often mirrors PTSD
-
Stabilization as the first priority after sexual betrayal
-
The Kintsugi bowl as a metaphor for healing after being “shattered”
-
Why trust is cognitive, not emotional
-
Brené Brown’s BRAVING framework applied to betrayal recovery:
-
Boundaries
-
Reliability
-
Accountability
-
Vault (confidentiality and discernment)
-
Integrity
-
Non-judgment
-
Generosity
-
-
Trusting behavior over words
-
Gaslighting, self-doubt, and learning to trust your body again
-
The role of accountability, support groups, therapy, and sponsors
-
Why over-disclosure can retraumatize betrayed partners
-
Rebuilding trust with yourself through self-compassion
-
Healing takes time—and time is your ally, not your enemy
-
Trust is rebuilt through consistent, observable behavior, not urgency
-
You are allowed to share your story; your partner owns theirs
-
Self-compassion is foundational to stabilization and recovery
-
Listening to your body is a powerful form of wisdom
-
You can actively engage in healing while you wait for clarity
1. The BRAVING Self-Trust Exercise Write down B-R-A-V-I-N-G and reflect on what you need in each area to rebuild trust with yourself.
2. Daily Self-Compassion Practice Visit self-compassion.org (Kristin Neff, PhD) and choose a brief daily practice to support stabilization, reduce shame, and restore internal safety.
Resources Mentioned-
Brené Brown – BRAVING: Trust Framework
-
Kristin Neff, PhD – Self-Compassion Practices
-
Therapist-led courses and groups for betrayed partners: humanintimacy.com
Dr. Karen Strange, PhD, LMFT, CSAT, CPTT, is a licensed marriage and family therapist practicing in South Carolina. She brings both professional expertise and lived experience as a betrayed partner, offering deep empathy, wisdom, and hope to individuals and couples healing after betrayal.
About the HostMaryAnn Michaelis, LCSW, CSAT, CPTT is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Certified Sex Addiction Therapist, and Certified Partner Trauma Therapist. She is the founder of HART Recovery Institute (Healing Addiction, Relationships, Trauma) and the host of Rise: Hope and Healing from Sexual Betrayal. MaryAnn is also a recovering betrayed partner and a passionate advocate for trauma-informed, compassionate healing.
If This Episode Helped YouPlease consider sharing, liking, or subscribing. You may help someone else feel less alone and more understood.
You deserve healing. You deserve wholeness. And you don’t have to do this alone.