EP 70: How Does the Unfaithful Female Find Honesty, Remorse, and Safety After Infidelity cover art

EP 70: How Does the Unfaithful Female Find Honesty, Remorse, and Safety After Infidelity

EP 70: How Does the Unfaithful Female Find Honesty, Remorse, and Safety After Infidelity

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In today's episode, I welcome Judith Nissen back to the podcast for an honest and much-needed conversation about unfaithful women, betrayed men, and what real repair requires after betrayal.

Judith shares from her work with women and, more specifically, with women who have betrayed. In this conversation, we unpack what may be happening beneath the defensiveness, shame, emotional collapse, or blame that betrayed men often experience after discovery. This is not about excusing betrayal. It is about helping both the betrayed and the unfaithful better understand why some women may struggle to show remorse clearly, even when remorse is present underneath the weight of moral injury, guilt, and self-betrayal.

Throughout the episode, Judith explains how shame can become a major barrier to repair. When an unfaithful woman is consumed by her own injury, she may unintentionally make the conversation about her pain instead of the pain she caused. We talk about the need for women to take ownership of their choices, stop expecting the betrayed partner to heal their shame, and begin practicing honesty, vulnerability, empathy, and responsibility in a consistent way.

A major part of this conversation focuses on what genuine remorse actually looks like. Judith and I discuss why "I'm sorry" is not enough when the betrayed partner is still carrying trauma, triggers, intrusive thoughts, and deep emotional injury. Real remorse has to be shown through action: learning to stay present, telling the truth, recognizing defensiveness, correcting course, and choosing repair over self-protection again and again.

We also explore empathy and why it can feel so difficult or even performative in the beginning. Judith shares that empathy is a skill that can be developed, but it requires willingness, practice, and a sincere desire to understand what the betrayed partner actually needs. For betrayed men, my hope is that this conversation gives you language for what you may be seeing in your unfaithful partner, while also reminding you that your pain should not be dismissed, minimized, or blamed back onto you.

Another important theme is boundaries. Judith explains that boundaries are not punishments or rules meant to control the other person. They are protective choices that help the betrayed partner stay grounded, safe, and clear about what they will and will not engage with. We talk through what it can look like for betrayed men to hold those boundaries firmly, without losing themselves in the process.

This episode is direct, compassionate, and deeply honest. It speaks to the betrayed man who is wondering if she can change, and to the unfaithful woman who needs to stop hiding behind shame and begin doing the work of becoming safe, honest, and accountable.

By the end of this conversation, my hope is that you'll have a clearer understanding of what may be happening inside the unfaithful female, what true repair requires, and why healing can only begin when truth, ownership, empathy, and boundaries are taken seriously.

Remember, you can heal and you can find new life.

To Healing,
Sam
samshealingpodcast@gmail.com

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