The Betrayer’s Pain

The Betrayer's Pain
Tim Tedder, Dr. Monique Thompson

Pain on Both Sides

Most people who follow this podcast are betrayed partners, and understandably so. The pain of being cheated on is acute, disorienting, and often traumatic. The Recovery Room is committed to honoring that experience.

But genuine recovery, the kind that produces lasting change and real safety in a relationship, requires more than behavior management from the person who had the affair. It requires something harder with more work “on the inside.” And in this episode, we go there.

Dr. Monique Thompson, a psychotherapist in the Dallas Metroplex with more than a thousand couples in her clinical background, joins Tim to talk about the side of infidelity that rarely gets examined: the inner wounds of the involved partner.

This isn't about generating sympathy for someone who broke trust. It's about understanding what actually needs to happen for change to be real.

In this conversation, Tim and Monique explore:

  • Why the person who had the affair experiences a genuine fracture of identity — and why that matters for recovery

  • The problem with treating behavior change as the finish line

  • How shame keeps the involved partner stuck and why it actually increases the risk of repeated harm

  • The concept of "seemingly unimportant decisions" and how people drift toward betrayal through a long chain of uncaptured thoughts

  • Why self-compassion isn't self-excuse; it's the gateway to authentic inner change

  • A breathing & thought practice that helps regulate the nervous system and access honesty

  • How EMDR therapy is being used not just for betrayed partners, but for involved partners carrying shame

  • The difference between trauma-informed self-care (including something as simple as a daily walk) and formal trauma treatment

  • Where to start if you've had an affair and haven't yet done any real inner work

Dr. Thompson is direct, warm, and grounded in current science, and she brings a genuinely non-judgmental lens to a topic that is easy to oversimplify. Whether you're the person who was betrayed, the one who broke trust, or a couple trying to figure out what real recovery looks like together, this conversation offers something worth sitting with.

LINKS and EXTRAS

Dr. Monique Thompson

A psychotherapist in the Dallas Metroplex area of Texas, Dr. Thompson has seen over 1,000 couples in her counseling practice over the years and now shares tips and tools for couples to help recover from infidelity. Dr. Thompson is married to her husband of 20 years, affectionately known as Big Daddy Wonderfulness The Unconquerable, and lives in a small town with her two daughters.

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Trust Yourself After Being Betrayed