• Name Surname, Psychiatrist

    Name Surname

    Psychiatrist, Psychologist

    939 West North Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60642

    Name Surname is a Psychiatrist in Chicago, Illinois and has been in practice for 23 years. They treat Infidelity, Psychosis, Anxiety.

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  • Mari Roberson, Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC)

    Mari Roberson

    Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC)

    4513 South Genesee Street, Seattle, Washington 98118

    Mari Roberson is a Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC) in Seattle, Washington. They treat Infidelity, Parenting Concerns, Abuse.

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  • Provider QA, Certified Clinical Social Worker (CSW)

    Provider QA

    Certified Clinical Social Worker (CSW), Certified Group Psychotherapist (CGP), Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC), Certified Social Worker (CSW), Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA)

    Remote only

    Provider QA is a Certified Clinical Social Worker (CSW) in undefined, undefined and has been in practice for 4 years. They treat Infidelity, Intimacy Concerns, Athletic Performance.

    Introduce yourself to prospective clients/patients

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  • Lena Ebert, Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC)

    Lena Ebert

    Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC), Certified Clinical Social Worker (CSW)

    4690 Freeport Blvd, Sacramento, California 95822

    Lena Ebert is a Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC) in Sacramento, California. They treat Infidelity, Career, Infidelity.

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  • Doctor Professor, Diplomate in Clinical Social Work (DCSW)

    Doctor Professor

    Diplomate in Clinical Social Work (DCSW), Education Specialist (EdS), Hypnotherapist

    Murdaugh Street, Varnville, South Carolina 29944

    Doctor Professor is a Diplomate in Clinical Social Work (DCSW) in Varnville, South Carolina. They treat Infidelity, Personal Growth, Aging.

    Wiedza zdobywana codziennie po trochu kumuluje się. Z badań wynika, że osoby,

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  • Edward Lucky, Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC)

    Edward Lucky

    Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC), Licensed Master Social Worker (LMSW), Licensed Social Worker (LSW), Marriage and Family Therapist (MFT), Marriage, Family, and Child Counselor (MFCC), Massage Therapist, National Certified Counselor (NCC), Nutritionist, Occupational Therapist, Nurse Psychotherapist, Other

    4735 Merle Hay Road, Des Moines, Iowa 50322

    Edward Lucky is a Certified Addiction Counselor (CAC) in Des Moines, Iowa. They treat Infidelity, Anorexia Nervosa, Infidelity.

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What is infidelity counseling and how can it help after cheating?

Infidelity counseling is a form of therapy that helps individuals or couples navigate the emotional, relational, and psychological impact of cheating. It’s not just about rehashing the betrayal—it’s about understanding what happened, making sense of the pain, and finding a way forward—whether together or apart.

In counseling for infidelity, you can expect support with:

  • Processing overwhelming emotions like shock, anger, shame, or grief
  • Understanding the root causes of the affair
  • Exploring whether and how trust can be rebuilt
  • Clarifying personal and relational boundaries
  • Making informed, non-reactive decisions about the future

A good infidelity therapist won't take sides. Their goal is to help you understand what happened, why, and what needs to happen next for healing—on either side of the betrayal.


Can a relationship truly recover after an affair?

Yes—many relationships can recover after infidelity, but it’s rarely easy or fast. Rebuilding trust, intimacy, and communication takes time and commitment from both partners.

Couples who recover successfully often:

  • Take full accountability (especially the partner who cheated)
  • Commit to transparency and honesty moving forward
  • Learn to process—not suppress—emotions like grief and anger
  • Explore the deeper dynamics of the relationship (not just the affair)
  • Use infidelity counseling as a safe container for rebuilding trust

Recovery doesn’t always mean reconciliation. For some, healing means ending the relationship with closure and dignity. For others, it means rebuilding something stronger than before—with better tools and deeper connection.


How do therapists help rebuild trust after infidelity?

Rebuilding trust after cheating isn’t about quick fixes or promises—it’s about consistency, transparency, and emotional accountability.

A skilled infidelity therapist will help couples:

  • Establish safe, open dialogue about what happened
  • Identify the conditions and vulnerabilities that contributed to the affair
  • Set clear expectations and boundaries for moving forward
  • Practice emotional repair, empathy, and responsiveness
  • Address ongoing behaviors like secrecy, blame, or avoidance

Trust isn’t restored in a moment—it’s rebuilt through repeated actions, honest reflection, and therapeutic support.


Should we go to therapy together or individually after cheating?

It depends. Both individual and couples counseling can be helpful, and many people benefit from a combination of the two.

  • Couples therapy helps both partners process the betrayal together, explore what went wrong, and begin healing relational dynamics.
  • Individual therapy offers space to work through personal emotions, history, guilt, or trauma that may be too raw for joint sessions.

Often, therapists recommend beginning with individual sessions—especially if emotions are highly volatile—then transitioning to counseling for infidelity as a couple when both partners feel ready.


How long does it usually take to heal from infidelity with counseling?

There’s no set timeline, but healing from infidelity often takes months to a year or more, depending on the depth of the betrayal, the health of the relationship before the affair, and each partner’s emotional resilience.

A rough breakdown:

  • Immediate aftermath (first 1–3 months): Shock, anger, grief, crisis management
  • Rebuilding stage (3–6 months): Communication, understanding, emotional processing
  • Long-term healing (6–12 months or longer): Restoring intimacy, developing new trust, evaluating the relationship’s future

An experienced infidelity therapist will help pace therapy to match where you are emotionally—not where you “should” be.


What happens during infidelity counseling sessions?

Each session will look a little different, depending on whether you're attending alone or as a couple, but common themes include:

  • Emotion regulation: Making space for raw emotions without blame spirals
  • Understanding the affair: What led to it—not just what happened
  • Exploring impact: For both the betrayed and the partner who cheated
  • Rebuilding communication: Learning how to talk without defensiveness or withdrawal
  • Clarifying boundaries: Around transparency, emotional safety, and expectations
  • Processing the future: Should we stay together? How do we co-parent or separate?

Therapists provide structure, emotional safety, and insight so you can begin to move through the pain with purpose.


How do I find the right therapist for infidelity or couples counseling?

Finding the right infidelity therapist is crucial. Look for someone who:

  • Has experience working with betrayal trauma and relationship repair
  • Uses evidence-based approaches like Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), Gottman Method, or Trauma-Informed Care
  • Maintains neutrality—supporting both partners without blame
  • Creates a nonjudgmental space for all emotions

You can search through therapist directories, ask for referrals, or explore online therapy platforms. Many now offer counseling for infidelity via video sessions, which can be especially helpful if privacy or schedule flexibility is a concern.


Is emotional cheating treated the same as physical cheating in therapy?

Yes—emotional infidelity is real and often just as hurtful as physical affairs. Emotional intimacy, secrecy, and deception through texting, social media, or apps can deeply damage trust.

Signs it may be an affair—even without physical contact:

  • Hidden messages, deleted chat logs, or secret accounts
  • Flirty, romantic, or intimate exchanges
  • Emotional investment in someone outside the relationship
  • Sharing personal details usually reserved for a partner

While no physical contact may have occurred, the emotional betrayal can cause intense feelings of rejection, grief, and confusion.

A therapist for infidelity will explore the emotional dynamics, transparency issues, and boundary violations with the same depth as a physical affair.


Why do people cheat, even in loving relationships?

Cheating doesn’t always happen because someone has fallen out of love. In fact, many affairs occur in relationships where love is still present. This is one of the hardest realities for betrayed partners to process—and one of the most confusing for the partner who cheated.

There isn’t a single reason people cheat. Infidelity is often the result of a complex mix of emotional, psychological, and situational factors. Some of the most common reasons include:

  • Unmet emotional needs: One partner may feel emotionally disconnected, unseen, or neglected—even if those needs were never clearly communicated.
  • Desire for validation: For some, the attention and attraction of someone new temporarily fills a void or soothes insecurities.
  • Avoidance of vulnerability: Instead of confronting discomfort, conflict, or fears in the relationship, a person might escape into an affair to feel powerful or in control.
  • Impulsivity and opportunity: In some cases, a situation arises (travel, late nights, alcohol, secrecy), and the individual acts without considering long-term consequences.
  • Resentment or retaliation: Some affairs happen in response to feelings of betrayal, emotional abandonment, or unresolved conflict in the relationship.
  • Personal struggles: Low self-esteem, trauma, or mental health issues like depression can distort decision-making and fuel risky behavior.
  • Curiosity or boredom: Even in stable relationships, some people seek novelty or excitement as a way to break free from routine or emotional numbness.

It’s important to understand: cheating is a choice, but the reasons behind it are often rooted in deeper emotional pain or unmet needs—not necessarily a lack of love.

In infidelity therapy, both partners can explore these layers safely, without justifying the betrayal. Understanding the “why” helps shift the focus from blame to healing—and offers clarity for whether and how to move forward.


Can therapy help someone who has cheated understand or change their behavior?

Yes. In fact, many people who’ve cheated enter therapy confused or ashamed, asking themselves: Why did I do this?

Therapy for the partner who cheated can help with:

  • Understanding the deeper motivations and emotional voids behind the affair
  • Unpacking guilt, fear, or trauma that may have fueled the behavior
  • Learning empathy for their partner’s pain without defensiveness
  • Building healthier emotional expression and relational accountability
  • Identifying and changing behavioral or thought patterns to prevent future harm

Change is possible. It begins with honest reflection—and a willingness to do the work.


How can I manage the intense emotions—like anger, grief, or shame—after infidelity?

The emotional fallout from infidelity can feel unbearable. Whether you were betrayed or were the one who cheated, intense emotions like rage, sadness, guilt, or confusion are completely normal. In fact, for many people, the emotional pain mirrors symptoms of trauma.

If you’ve been betrayed, you may feel:

  • Anger that’s explosive or numb
  • Grief for the relationship you thought you had
  • Shame that makes you question your self-worth
  • Obsession with details or the “why” of the betrayal
  • Fear about the future or whether healing is even possible

If you were the one who cheated, you may experience:

  • Overwhelming guilt and regret
  • Fear of judgment or rejection
  • Shame about hurting someone you care about
  • Anxiety about the relationship’s future—or your own choices

These feelings can come in waves. One moment you’re calm, the next you're devastated. That’s part of the process. You’re not broken—you’re in emotional recovery.

Here’s how counseling for infidelity can help you manage these emotions:

  • Name the emotion: A therapist helps you understand what you’re feeling—and why. Sometimes rage is grief in disguise. Sometimes shame is leftover from old wounds.
  • Validate the experience: You don’t need to “get over it” on a timeline. Your emotional pain is real, and it deserves space.
  • Develop coping tools: Learn how to regulate emotions with grounding techniques, breathwork, or self-soothing strategies when you're overwhelmed.
  • Process the betrayal: Talking through the experience in a safe, structured environment helps prevent emotional suppression or long-term resentment.
  • Reconnect with your identity: Infidelity can leave you questioning who you are. Therapy helps you rebuild self-trust and self-worth, one session at a time.

You do not need to carry these emotions alone. A skilled infidelity therapist can guide you through the storm—so your feelings no longer control you, but instead become stepping stones toward clarity and healing.


What if the affair happened online or through texting—does that still count?

Yes—digital infidelity is real and often just as hurtful as physical affairs. Emotional intimacy, secrecy, and deception through texting, social media, or apps can deeply damage trust.

Signs it may be an affair—even without physical contact:

  • Hidden messages, deleted chat logs, or secret accounts
  • Flirty, romantic, or intimate exchanges
  • Emotional investment in someone outside the relationship
  • Sharing personal details usually reserved for a partner

Infidelity counseling can help both partners process the impact of virtual betrayal, set clear boundaries around digital behavior, and decide how to move forward—whether together or apart.

Affairs hurt—but they don’t have to define you. Healing is possible. Whether you're navigating betrayal, guilt, or uncertainty, a trained infidelity therapist can help you explore your emotions, repair what’s broken (or grieve what’s lost), and move forward with clarity and compassion.

Don’t carry this pain alone. Reach out today to start counseling for infidelity—in person or online—and take the first step toward emotional healing, understanding, and peace.

Find care for Infidelity

Remember, recovery is possible. With early intervention, a supportive network, and the right professional care, you can overcome the challenges of Infidelity and build a fulfilling life. We are here to help you find care.

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