Shownotes
You can see the body. You cannot find the person.
That is the Ex Paradox — the specific disorientation of looking back at someone and wondering if the version you knew ever existed at all.
In this episode, Dr. Lia Roth unpacks what betrayal actually does to you: not the act itself, but what it leaves behind. The shock that makes your past and future feel equally unreliable. The withdrawal that looks like collapse but is the system buying time. The quiet erosion of self-trust that makes basic decisions feel costly. And the disempowerment that is not weakness — it is what happens when injury, fear, and confusion all arrive at once.
She also draws on Thomas Ogden's distinction between the pain and the identification with the pain — because that difference is the line between victim and survivor. And she talks about what autonomy actually means after betrayal: not independence, not isolation, but finding your own judgment again, from the inside out.
Betrayal will try to write the rest of your story. This episode is about not letting it.
What You’ll Get
- The four main elements of betrayal: shock, withdrawal, loss of self, and disempowerment — and why they are not neat stages
- Why betrayal feels like a break in reality, not just a broken relationship
- The difference between self-blame and responsibility — and why one opens a door while the other keeps you trapped
- What obsessive thinking and hypervigilance are actually doing for you
- Thomas Ogden on the pain versus the identification with the pain
- Why autonomy is the highest level of maturity betrayal can force you toward
Mentioned in This Episode
- Get In or Get Out, But Don't Stay in the Freaking Middle — Dr. Lia Roth
- Thomas Ogden — on pain and identification with pain