Couples Therapy After Infidelity

The discovery of infidelity in a relationship is accompanied by a period of intense emotional turmoil and uncertainty, for all people involved. Regardless of the state of the relationship before the discovery, a shift occurs when couples have to now contend with both the pain created, as well as make a decision about what comes next. The goal for every couple at this moment can be different–processing confusion and hurt, trying to make sense of what has happened, reconciliation, or figuring out how to separate with the least harm done–but for any of these goals and more, couples therapy can be a useful resource:

  • Providing a structured space: One primary way couples therapy may help after infidelity is by creating a safe, structured space for communication, particularly at a time when any communication may feel especially fraught and contentious. While the therapist is not a referee, they can serve as a more neutral facilitator, allowing both partners the opportunity to express their feelings, fears, and perspectives in a more contained space. The containment may allow for each partner to hear the other more clearly, as well as feel heard themselves, with less defensiveness or judgement.

  • Understanding underlying issues: While the discovery of fidelity may be the initial betrayal wound that brings couples to therapy after infidelity, it is nearly always a symptom of other underlying dynamics that have existed within the couple before this moment. Therapy can help the couple understand their own conflict dynamics better, as well as each of their own attachment wounds that led to one or both of them seeking connection outside of the relationship.

  • Reconciliation and rebuilding trust: For couples interested in reconciliation, rebuilding trust is both a priority and a major hurdle. It is a gradual process that requires honesty on both partners’ parts, as well as consistency, and an understanding that the relationship will be different after this infraction. In the best outcome, the relationship is an improved one–one that carries the wounds of its own history, alongside the understanding that the ability of the relationship and of the couple to adapt to its new reality creates a resilience that is necessary for the new stage of the relationship. 

  • Managing emotions: Even if the goal is reconciliation, the healing process after infidelity is rarely linear. There will be setbacks, moments of intense pain, and challenges in navigating forgiveness. Couples therapy can help the couple acknowledge and manage these difficult emotions, and develop coping mechanisms when they arise. 

  • Ending the relationship: In cases where couples decide to end the relationship for any number of reasons–either because the betrayal feels too deeply stung to overcome, or because the increased clarity of the moment tells one or both people that they are seeking something different–therapy can provide a supportive framework for the couple to navigate separation with dignity and minimize further pain.

Shame and stigma around infidelity can prevent a couple from seeking support at their most fractured, painful moments. Infidelity, like so many other sources of disconnection and harm in a relationship, does not have to define the couple. Reach out to understand how couples therapy can support you.

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