Individual & Couples Therapy for Betrayal, Infidelity, & Broken Trust

When trust is broken, nothing feels solid. You're left questioning everything—including yourself.

Close-up of a person holding a smartphone with another person sitting nearby, arms crossed, at a wooden table.

What It Feels Like

The moment everything changed may be crystal clear—or it may have unfolded slowly over time. A partner’s affair. Hidden addiction. Repeated dishonesty. Whatever the specifics, something you counted on has collapsed.

You might feel disoriented, overwhelmed, or numb. You replay what happened, searching for clues you missed. You wonder what was real. You swing between anger, heartbreak, and exhaustion—sometimes all in the same hour.

Even if you’re not sure what’s next, you know this: you can’t go back to how things were.

I work with both individuals and couples navigating betrayal. Whether you’re deciding if a relationship can be rebuilt—or simply trying to make sense of what happened—therapy offers a space to begin.

A happy couple sitting on a couch and smiling at each other in a bright living room.

How Therapy Can Help

Betrayal trauma affects your sense of safety, identity, and connection. It’s not just about what someone did—it’s about how that rupture lives in your body, your thoughts, your relationships.

In therapy, we create space to slow down and honor the full impact of what you’re carrying. For individuals, this means exploring the pain without judgment, tending to the nervous system, rebuilding self-trust, and clarifying what healing might look like for you. For couples, this means creating safety for honest conversations, acknowledging harm, and—if both partners are willing—beginning the slow, careful work of repair.

The path forward might not be clear yet—but we’ll find your footing together.

What Healing Can Look Like

  • You begin to feel your feet under you again.

  • You don’t question your reality as much.

  • You get clearer on what you need, and more confident asking for it.

  • If you’re in a relationship, you begin to see movement—more honesty, more care, more choice.

  • If you’re moving on, you do so with clarity and self-respect.

Healing from betrayal doesn’t mean forgetting what happened. It means living in a way that honors your experience, your boundaries, and your worth.

You didn’t deserve what happened. But you do deserve support.

Whether you're healing alone or together, I’ll meet you with care, clarity, and respect.