Addressing Relationship Trauma After Infidelity

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Rebuilding After

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Infidelity is a tale as old as time. This form of betrayal exacts a significant toll on a couple’s relationship and often emerges as the symptom of a larger disease: disconnection. Yet, despite its prevalence, rebuilding after infidelity continues to be a widely misunderstood phenomenon. 

Affairs can be viewed as the warning light that flashes on a car’s dashboard; it indicates the presence of a leak or larger problem that needs attention. Just as with cars, it is by becoming aware of the underlying issues that precipitated the affair (and implementing corrective strategies) that couples can begin to rebuild their relationships. 

For more insight, read: How to Optimize Neuroplasticity In Relationships

When partners begin to pull away from one another (whether it be emotionally, sexually, or both), the potential for an affair to occur increases. With the natural stressors that accompany any relationship, recurrent conflict can become the wedge that drives couples apart. In an attempt to rekindle this connection, one partner may turn to a third party.  

Should I Stay or Should I Go?

Following an affair, the betrayed partner experiences a rocking of their world and may be left wondering, ‘Should I stay or should I go?’ Although recovering from infidelity poses many hurdles, it does not necessarily mean that a couple’s relationship is doomed.

In returning to the car metaphor, an affair is often the flashing light that says, ‘Help, our relationship can no longer continue this way!’ When faced with the discovery of infidelity, couples will need to determine if they want to look under the hood (see where the leak began and make the necessary repairs) or choose to throw in the towel. 

In jointly making the decision to work on the relationship, a good first step is seeking couple’s therapy and examining where cracks developed in the foundation. These cracks are often the result of destructive patterns of interaction.

Patterns of Interaction

The means through which couples interact during instances of conflict are highly telling of long-term relationship functioning. There are four negative communication styles widely considered to be the proverbial destroyers of relationship satisfaction and can be the slippery slope that leads to infidelity. These four negative communication styles include criticismdefensivenesscontempt, and stonewalling (which occurs when one partner shuts down in response to emotional flooding). 

Through my own research and through two decades of working with couples, I unequivocally believe that these negative communication styles kill more relationships and marriages, than does infidelity of any kind. Whether the relationship or marriage is in its beginning stages, has survived after having children, or has lasted thirty years, once these negative communication styles appear, if they are not worked through, that marriage will ultimately end.

Couples who present to my practice following an affair, often display these four negatives during conflict discussions. I am specifically trained to help couples find more adaptive means to communicate during these occurrences. In the face of this, I help my clients learn and implement the antidotes to these destructive patterns of interaction:

  1. Criticism – Gentle Start-Up
  2. Defensiveness – Take Responsibility
  3. Contempt – Build Culture of Appreciation
  4. Stonewalling – Physiological Self-Soothing 

Once couples have learned the necessary strategies to help them communicate more effectively, we can then begin the process of restoration.

Rebuilding After Infidelity Final Thoughts

Hand placing a block on a wall, symbolizing the process of rebuilding trust after infidelity.
A hand carefully adds a block to a wall, representing how rebuilding after infidelity requires patience, honesty, and small, consistent steps.

An affair is a cataclysmic event in a couple’s relationship. For the betrayed partner, the initial shellshock response may include angersadnesspain, and humiliation. These symptoms closely mimic post-traumatic stress reactions and can even linger long after the infidelity was discovered. Despite this, it is possible for couples to rebuild and move forward.

Relationships don’t exist in a vacuum; therefore, a necessary step to rebuilding after an affair is for both partners to commit to preserving the relationship. In order to do so, the betrayed partner will need to determine if they are able to forgive. This act is crucial to the long-term functioning of the relationship.

Moving forward from an affair is no simple task, but it can be achieved! My process is always contingent upon the couple’s willingness to examine the ways in which they interact. Some questions to consider include:

  1. Are theses negative communication styles most prevalent during conflict discussions? 
  2. Can the couple defuse arguments? Are they able to access humor or playfulness?
  3. Is the couple able to respectfully accept one another’s differing perspective?

In rebuilding after an affair, I work with couples to help them engage in healthier conflict discussions, turn towards one another, and increase emotional attunement. By strengthening these areas, the couples I work with significantly increase their chances for long-term relationship satisfaction and growth.

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Dr. Sydney Ceruto, PhD in Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience, founder of MindLAB Neuroscience, professional headshot

Dr. Sydney Ceruto

Founder & CEO of MindLAB Neuroscience, Dr. Sydney Ceruto is the pioneer of Real-Time Neuroplasticity™ — a proprietary methodology that permanently rewires the neural pathways driving behavior, decisions, and emotional responses. She works with a select number of clients, embedding into their lives in real time across every domain — personal, professional, and relational.

Dr. Ceruto is the author of The Dopamine Code: How to Rewire Your Brain for Happiness and Productivity (Simon & Schuster, June 2026) and The Dopamine Code Workbook (Simon & Schuster, October 2026).

  • PhD in Behavioral & Cognitive Neuroscience — New York University
  • Master’s Degrees in Clinical Psychology and Business Psychology — Yale University
  • Lecturer, Wharton Executive Development Program — University of Pennsylvania
  • Executive Contributor, Forbes Coaching Council (since 2019)
  • Inductee, Marquis Who’s Who in America
  • Founder, MindLAB Neuroscience (est. 2000 — 26+ years)

Regularly featured in Forbes, USA Today, Newsweek, The Huffington Post, Business Insider, Fox Business, and CBS News. For media requests, visit our Media Hub.

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