In this article I share my experience working as a relationship counsellor with couples where there has been a break of trust. I describe some common themes and how relationship counselling can help.
When I work with couples, I find out some general details about their relationship and then we look at why they have come. Here are some typical issues around affairs, betrayal and break of trust:
The betrayed partners tend to be wondering:
The Betrayed partners tend to be wondering:
Here are some themes that help:
Affairs / Betrayals break the bond of trust in a relationship. The emotional crisis and shock that follow naturally press couple to seek support and answers. Relationship counselling provides a framework to hold off making any big decisions so that there is time to work things through. It is not possible at the outset to know the impact of betrayal on a relationship. Many couples do work things through and some don’t. A betrayal does change a relationship. Paradoxically it can make a relationship stronger as you have been forced to really look at what is going on. Trust returns over time, yet instead of blind trust, it’s an informed trust that comes through honest communication.
Wanting to know the details in order to understand is an attempt to deal with feelings of hurt. The belief is that if we know all the details then we will feel better. Upto a point it’s only natural to want to know the details. The thing to notice is when going over and over the details is a way of avoiding feeling. It is only through the process of feeling the feelings that peace is found. Relationship counselling can help you express what you are feeling and give you support to trust the process of feeling.
Sometimes I see couples where an affair occurred some time ago. They felt they dealt with it yet the betrayed partner still brings it up. She hurts about it and wants to know ‘Why?”. He is sick of feeling bad about it every time she brings it up. They may have come to see me about something else. The “unresolved” affair is at the root of the issue.
Sometimes couples come when the affair has just been uncovered. They are in crisis and shock. The betrayed partner wants to know the details. The betraying partner tends to cover things up and the details come out drip by drip. It’s a problem. All discussions are about the details. One feels unsafe, the other defensive.
Many men are conditioned to avoid being wrong and consequently avoid conflict. This is true for some women too. When the betraying partners are faced with their wrongdoing and anger/hurt of their partner they feel shame and don’t know how to respond. As a result they can’t remember details, go numb, feel angry, distance, don’t want to talk it or become defensive. The rub is that they need to take responsibility for what they have done. The betraying partners need to find a place of dignity and acceptance of making a mistake. They need stay open, be present to their partner so he/she can work through the feelings. When they can hear their partner’s experience fully and are willing to engage, connection is re-established, their partner feels it and the healing starts.
A betrayal/Affair means giving up fantasies and illusions about love and relationships and that might involve grieving the loss of blind trust.
When you have been betrayed by your partner it doesn’t make sense to blindly trust them again. You need to move from automatic blind trust to building informed trust. Informed trust is not just there, it something you build and work at together over time.
Blind trust is the belief that love means your partner is always one with you and would never hurt you. Blind trust confuses trust with love and ignores the complexities of relationships and outside factors. Informed trust is a trust that his built by sharing one’s emotional self, by accepting the reality of who the other person is, by honest communication and working together to resolve differences and through having fun together.
An affair or betrayal is an attempt at problem solving something that has not been able to be worked though in the relationship. It’s true that the betrayer needs to take responsibility for what they have done. The 2nd step is for both partners to look at what could not be spoken about in the relationship that lead to the affair.
Relationship counselling provides a framework to manage the crisis.
It helps by:
If you have experienced a break of trust. It’s worth going together with your partner to relationship counselling and give yourself time to work things through rather than feeling you must split up or move out. It can feel such a relief to speak about what happened to a relationship counsellor and allow time to process what has happened.
Copyright (2011) Richard Cole
Richard Cole is a relationship counsellor who specialises in working with couples at St Pancras Relationship Counselling and Couples Counselling in London.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com
If you are dealing with some of the issues explored in this article within your relationship you may find it helpful to work with a therapist: