Why Betrayal Gets Worse After Discovery (What No One Tells You) with Darrell Brazell (Rise Season 2, Episode 11) Podcast By  cover art

Why Betrayal Gets Worse After Discovery (What No One Tells You) with Darrell Brazell (Rise Season 2, Episode 11)

Why Betrayal Gets Worse After Discovery (What No One Tells You) with Darrell Brazell (Rise Season 2, Episode 11)

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Why Betrayal Gets Worse After Discovery (What No One Tells You)

What actually happens after betrayal is discovered?

In this episode of Rise: Hope & Healing After Sexual Betrayal, MaryAnn Michaelis LCSW, CSAT, CPTT, and expert Pastor Darrell Brazell, PSAP, unpack the exposure phase (D-Day) using Dr. Omar Minwalla’s 22 Rooms of Betrayal framework.

They discuss why many partners experience increased confusion, trauma, and emotional harm after discovery, not less—and how integrity abuse behaviors play a central role and can intensify during this time.

This episode includes discussion of sexual betrayal, deception, intentional abuse behaiors and betrayal trauma, which may be activating for some listeners—especially those early in their healing journey. Please listen gently and take care of yourself as you go. You’re encouraged to pause, take breaks, or return at another time if needed. You are always in control of how and when you engage with this content.

What’s Discussed

This conversation walks through common dynamics that emerge after discovery, including patterns like gaslighting, minimization, blame-shifting, and ongoing deception. It also highlights the painful mismatch many couples experience—where one partner is just beginning to process the truth while the other may already be in a very different place emotionally.

The episode also touches on staggered disclosure (or “trickle truth”) and why it can be especially damaging, as well as the continued patterns that often show up even after recovery has begun.

Recovery Realities

MaryAnn and Darrell discuss why healing doesn’t end with discovery or even disclosure. Trust remains fragile, trauma responses can persist, and harmful patterns may continue without intentional change. The conversation emphasizes that healing takes time, and there is no quick or linear path forward.

Closing Perspective

For many betrayed partners, discovery can bring both pain and clarity—helping make sense of things that never quite added up before. This episode offers language and insight into these experiences, reminding listeners that what they’re feeling is valid and that they are not alone.

Key Takeaways
  • Betrayal trauma is complex and long-lasting
  • Integrity abuse behaviors often intensify after discovery
  • Staggered disclosure significantly increases trauma
  • Healing requires consistent accountability, not quick fixes
  • Safety and trust are rebuilt slowly over time
Resources
  • Human Intimacy Companion Course: humanintimacy.com
  • IAB Resource List
  • Dr. Omar Minwalla’s “22 Rooms of Betrayal” resources
  • The Grief After Betrayal Impact Scale (GABIS) survey

Listener Support

If this episode resonates with you:

  • Share it with someone who may feel alone
  • Follow the podcast for ongoing support
  • Reach out for professional or community care

Primary Keywords: betrayal trauma, sexual betrayal recovery, integrity abuse, gaslighting in relationships, D-Day discovery, partner betrayal healing, disclosure trauma, emotional abuse patterns, relationship recovery after infidelity, Dr. Omar Minwalla,

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