Betrayal Trauma Recovery Podcast Episode:

Healing From Emotional Abuse Quickly Depends on These 3 Things

Here are 3 factors that determine how quickly you'll heal from your husband's emotional abuse.

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Three factors determine how long does it take to heal from emotional abuse. If your husband betrayed you, here are the strategies to speed up the healing process so you can feel peace again.

1. Has His Emotional Abuse Stopped?

The first factor that affects how long it will take to heal from emotional abuse is to ensure that the emotional abuse has stopped. Emotional abuse includes various behaviors that come out of his exploitative privilege. If he thinks his โ€œneedsโ€ and โ€œrightsโ€ are more important than yours, chances are heโ€™s emotionally abusive.

Is he currently doing any of the following?

  • Lying
  • Blaming you for things that arenโ€™t your fault
  • Stonewalling
  • Criticizing
  • Gaslighting
  • Using pornography / infidelity

If the emotional abuse is currently happening, whether you’re still married, separated, or divorced, if his emotional abuse hasnโ€™t stopped or you havenโ€™t put enough distance between you and his abuse, your healing from it canโ€™t begin.

To determine if the emotional abuse has stopped, take our free emotional abuse quiz.

How Long Does It Take to Recover from Your Husband's Emotional Abuse?

2. Have You Learned How to Separate Yourself From His Emotional Abuse?

Healing from emotional abuse takes as long as you learn how to separate yourself from the abuse. If you have the right information, healing time can be significantly reduced.

The good news is, youโ€™re strong and capable. The only thing holding you back has been having the correct framework for whatโ€™s been happening to you. Itโ€™s not your fault. No one teaches the public how to separate from emotional abuse.

The other good news is, youโ€™ve come to the right place. Betrayal Trauma Recovery specializes in teaching women how to recognize emotional abuse and exactly what to do if youโ€™re experiencing it.

The Betrayal Trauma Recovery Workshop teaches victims of abuse exactly whatโ€™s going on and exactly what to do to make her way to emotional safety. It also includes 13 incredibly healing meditations.

Does It Take a Long Time to Recover from Your Husband's Emotional Abuse?

3. Do You Have the Appropriate Support to Heal from His Emotional Abuse?

Healing from his emotional abuse takes time, but the duration of the healing process can be significantly reduced when you have appropriate support.

Appropriate support comes from women who have experienced their husbandโ€™s emotional abuse and developed emotional safety. Itโ€™s validating and empowering.

Youโ€™ll heal faster if the support doesnโ€™t blame you for any abuse or suggests you somehow caused it or enabled it.

Betrayal Trauma Support Group, a daily support for women who want to heal from emotional abuse, is the safest place to both learn about and heal from emotional abuse.

On the Betrayal Trauma Recovery Podcast, emotional abuse expert Anne Blythe shared her insights on how she developed specific strategies to heal from emotional abuse as quickly as possible.

How Long Does It Take to Heal from Your Husband's Emotional Abuse?

How to Recover from Emotional Abuse: The Evolution of My Workshop

Let me give you some background about the origins of my workshop.

I had been divorced, and he was still emotionally and psychologically abusive, like post-divorce for eight years. My life was very difficult. Every day.

I lost a big court case to him. He got more custody. I mean, things were just hard. He was counter parenting. He was cancelling my kids’ medical appointments.

Anne: Many of you have listened to the podcast for a long time, you’ll know my ex wasn’t paying half of what he was supposed to pay from the divorce decree. He justified it through constantly undermining me and our children.

Emotional Abuse Post-Divorce

So those of you who are married, when we were married, he was difficult the whole time, but I didn’t realize it. I thought back then that boundaries meant telling him clearly how upset I was with his behavior. Also, maybe giving him an hour long lecture, which didn’t help me be safer.

He never changed his behavior. We’d go to a lot of therapy. We’d do a lot of addiction recovery stuff, so that didn’t help. As I started BTR, I started thinking, how do we really get to safety? What is the path?

Anytime any woman experiencing emotional and psychological abuse and coercion, if her husband uses exploitative material or if he’s having affairs. If you try to go the therapy route or the addiction recovery route.

Ongoing Emotional Abuse Prolongs Healing

Why This Workshop Helps Heal Emotional Abuse

Over the years, dealing with thousands of women who come to BTR, and just my experience helping people, that doesn’t tend to get us to safety.

In fact, we end up being more and more unsafe. Especially because we’ve been vulnerable with someone who’s just weaponizing our emotions against us. As I’ve been the executive director at BTR for eight years, I’ve been podcasting forever.

I thought, we need clear action steps.

The Betrayal Trauma Recovery Workshop has examples of men who will have the same facial expressions that your husband is giving you. So you can actually see the concepts and process them a little better.

I worked with women over two years personally writing their messages, helping them so that we could see does this work? Yes, it does. I know it works. Any effort we take to get to safety is awesome.

We could resist it in ways that are effective. We can resist it in ways that aren’t effective, but resistance in and of itself is great.

Testing and Proving How To Heal Emotional Abuse

As we try to think, how can I resist abuse more effectively? That’s where strategies come into play.

In the upcoming months, I’m going to have the women I helped write their messages on the podcast, so that you can listen to their stories and the experiences they had. It was an incredible time to be with them on their journey to safety.

The messages they received were traumatizing. I sort of got secondary trauma from being like, wow, how are we going to get you to safety? So it was through their help that we developed this, and so many women are so brave to experiment to try new things.

Effective Resistance Against Emotional Abuse

They tried everything. The therapist had told them they had tried everything that clergy had told them, and there wasn’t anything else to try. This is that. It’s totally different than anything else, because it’s strategic.

I, along with my kids, achieved complete liberation from my ex outside of court, proving it works better than anything else. The other issue is that whenever any woman starts to make her way to safety, the abuser will not like it.

Is Expecting My Husband to Be Honest With Me Too Much To Ask?

No matter what type of strategy you use to resist abuse, the abuse will escalate slightly. The only way it doesn’t escalate is if you’re not actually getting to safety. If he feels like, oh, this is the same thing, I’m still able to exploit her, then it’s not going to escalate that much because you’re not actually getting safe.

He’s still actually just exploiting you. So for many women who think he’s not so bad, he’s good, and then they keep having things happen over and over, and then we start using the Betrayal Trauam Recovery Workshop strategies.

Abuser’s Reaction When You Start Healing From Emotional Abuse

They see a bit of escalation, like wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. I actually can’t exploit her anymore. The women feel better because they’re actually getting to safety.

It is a delicate dance at that point to continue to use those safety strategies through that phase until he finally is like, oh, I’m never going to exploit her again. These strategies are effective while you’re in a marriage.

They are effective after divorce. They are effective if you are separated, and the good news is they’re all in line with just general good person principles. So they’re kind, I want to put kind in quotes. They don’t involve violence.

They don’t involve behavior that society would frown upon. It’s all upstanding behavior. If you have in writing or if they recorded it or somehow documented it, you would look great in court.

Applying the Strategies Across Different Situations

So that’s also really cool. I so appreciate your patience. So many of you have been waiting for this. I just wanted to get it right and so that’s why it took so long. It matters to me that they are tested, that they are proven.

It mattered to me that they would actually work. I know the principles are correct and true principles. My job is to educate you in a way that makes sense. And then there’s the second part, which is application.

The application always gets tricky, because it might be different for everyone in their own situation. Application with any principle is an experiment. As you enroll in the Betrayal Trauma Recovery Workshop, you’ll have a base understanding of these safety strategies, keep in mind that the way you apply it will make a difference.

If you’re having trouble applying it in a way that’s working, then please schedule a session with one of our coaches.

Educating and Applying Workshop Principles

Coach Jen is specifically trained to help women with messages, and then any of the coaches can help with the workshop strategies and in BTR.ORG Individual Sessions.

If you have enrolled in the workshop and would like to come on the podcast to share your experience, or if you enroll and have questions, you want to talk to me about it.

I would love to talk to you about it on the podcast, so that we can keep an open discussion about how to apply it and learn as a group as you guys start applying this stuff.

Learn More about BTR Group Sessions

So please email my assistant at podcast@btr.org if you’d like to talk about it on air with other people, and I can answer your questions. We can talk about your specific situation, enroll, and then email her at a podcast at Betrayal Trauma Recovery, and then we can talk on air, and that will help everybody.

Anneโ€™s Journey from Emotional Abuse Crisis to Expertise

You can go to btr.org/workshop to get more information, and I cannot wait for you guys to enroll. You’ll love it. I also want to talk about social media. When I started BTR, I was crying in my basement. I just felt so much pain, and I was so scared and worried.

In the process of the last eight years, I’ve become an expert on emotional abuse through reading and studying, but also experimenting and applying the principles to my own life, delivering myself and my kids from the abuse.

It’s been so fun to help the other women with their messages. I decided, okay, I’m going to be the one that does the social media videos and start posting. It’s hard. I don’t want to post about what I ate for breakfast.

The Mission to Reach Women Who Need Help Healing From Emotional Abuse

That just doesn’t interest me. I don’t want to share stuff I’m doing personally in my life, apparently besides the most personal parts, haha.

This is serious stuff, I want to reach women who need help. That’s what I’ve always wanted to do for eight years.

It is my personal mission to ensure that every woman who cannot figure out what’s going on, who is praying, who is concerned, who is thinking, what therapist do I go to or what program can I get for my husband.

How can I heal my marriage, so they get correct information about what’s actually going on? My heart is heavy. Thinking about all the incorrect information floating around about emotional and psychological abuse. Especially coercion, especially in the addiction recovery community and couple therapy community, and how they approach this in a way that they just do not recognize the abuse.

Challenges in Addressing Emotional Abuse

(10:52): So I’m on social media doing these videos. If you’re on social media and wouldn’t mind following and sharing the stuff, I would appreciate it. If not, that makes sense. Social media stresses me out.

It’s a little scary, but it has been an awesome opportunity to interact with women all over the world and hear their stories. It’s very humbling to know that there are so many women who need help. I’m grateful that you found BTR.

I’m grateful when any woman shares the message of truth about abuse, about how abusive exploitative materials use in a marriage is, so that we collectively reduce the suffering of women throughout the world.

I would love to save marriages, and make families whole. I used to refer to some men’s programs for abusers. In seeing the aftermath, they weren’t solving that root cause of his abuse, and in so many cases, the men were weaponizing the stuff they learned in these programs.

Anne’s Reflection on How Men’s Programs Donโ€™t Stop The Emotional Abuse

(12:00): You’ll see that if a man wants to change, this is what he’ll do, and you can see it in the workshop clearly. He will of his own free take action after eight years of witnessing women and talking to them about how it went in this men’s program?

How did it go in this type of therapy? How did it go? Usually at first, they think it’s great. Usually at first they’re like, oh, it worked well. And then I talked to him a year later, and they’re like, oh, my word. I didn’t know he was still lying to me.

The therapist said I could trust him and I couldn’t, or in some cases he did a polygraph and passed the polygraph, but they still felt uncomfortable. Then later found out that he lied well because he passed the polygraph, but he was still lying. Women’s emotional and psychological safety is my absolute top priority.

Disillusionment with Men’s Recovery Programs

(12:56): I just don’t recommend men’s programs anymore. It’s just not something that I think a victim of abuse should ever even consider. Rather than think about how I can help my husband be a better person, I need to focus on their emotional, psychological, and sexual safety.

Hopefully, due to her safety, she can observe from a safe distance, and he will realize as he wants to change.

That’s the only route, I wish there was another one. I tried to figure it out for a few years, I did., I thought, can a program do this? I tested it out. It didn’t, and I feel bad about that, but probably all of you were curious too, right?

Marriage vs. Pre-Marriage Counseling Discrepancies

(13:52): All of us were. If I could go back in time, I was hoping so much for a program to save my family, and now I don’t think that ever would’ve existed. The hope is, I hope he figures it out, because when it comes to these behaviors, like, don’t lie to your wife, is pretty low bar.

It drives me crazy when people are like, oh, well, you’ve just set the bar too high. All men use exploitative material, and if you want to be in a marriage, then you have to deal with abuse. I don’t think that’s the case. I don’t think all men are abusive.

It’s not too high of a bar to expect your husband doesn’t lie to your face. I don’t think it’s too high of a bar that you expect your husband genuinely cares about you, and that he’s not just manipulating you to exploit you.

Programs for Emotional Abusers Donโ€™t Work

I mean, that’s the lowest bar to think that these men haven’t heard it somewhere before, like church or therapy or their work harassment training. Really, do we think these men are that ignorant, and if they are, you see the concern there?

I’ve been thinking a lot about how, at least in my faith, they would be like, okay, if he doesn’t treat you well, if he lies to you, if he uses, do not date him anymore. Break up. But if you are in a marriage, then they don’t give the same advice.

They’re like, well, he’s a good guy and he’s trying to get help, or he’s going to get better. I’m wondering why the difference in counsel between pre-marriage and after marriage is mind boggling to me.

Before you’re married, does this guy know that lying is wrong? They’d be like, well, if he doesn’t know it’s wrong, or if he knows it’s wrong and does it anyway, you should not date him anymore.

Dealing with Abusive Behavior Without External Programs

But after marriage, oh, he didn’t learn that anywhere. No one’s ever told him that lying is bad, so he needs to go to a program that’s just not true. He knows, and he’s choosing to do it to exploit you.

These issues are complex. They are long-term. I feel like the strategies in the Betrayal Trauma Recovery Workshop accurately describe what’s happening, and will give you actual action steps that work that don’t put you in danger, and that also leave space for him to change.

They leave space to observe, to see if he wants this? Is this the kind of lifestyle he wants? That was one of the things that was, I think, the hardest for me was when I was observing from a distance. I mean, at first I thought somebody needed to tell him he didn’t know.

A Womanโ€™s Safety From Emotional Abuse as the Central Focus

After a while, I thought, of course he knows, because he would act so awesome sometimes, so he knows what to do. He just doesn’t want to lose his exploitative privilege. It was heartbreaking to watch him continue to make those choices, as I was waiting for him to make different choices, which he didn’t make.

I ended up divorced and then being abused for eight years after. I have heard stories of people who use these strategies, and then he realizes, which is cool. Neither of those scenarios involves trying to get him in a program or trying to help him change.

Center on a woman who is getting to safety from emotional abuse, emotional, and psychological safety, so those workshops give those action steps. Very clear step.

I also wrote the meditations in the Betrayal Trauma Recovery Workshop because there were so many times where I was so stressed out. I was crying and couldn’t stop, or feel anything. The meditations help women feel peace and loved immediately when they need comfort, and they can’t get comfort any other way.

Relief through Meditations

Anyway, sorry. Just a lot of information today, but I’ve had so much going on. I’ve been so busy for three or four years developing these things, testing them, trying them out with women, and I’m actually tired.

I’m really tired. If you’ve been listening for a while and are so inclined, I would appreciate your prayers. Especially as I embark on new things like social media, and I’m almost done with my book. It’s been a hard road, and I’m tired, and as much as I want to rest this second.

I hear a woman in need, or I get a message on social media, or someone emails, or I find out that someone I know in real life is going through emotional abuse. Then my exhaustion sort of gets set aside, and I think, how can I not help?

Appreciation for Support For Healing from Emotional Abuse

There’s no way. There’s no way I could see a woman in pain and need who needs these strategies and not be there. Because I can’t help everybody personally, I developed the workshops, and that’s also why we have coaches here.

They’re so well trained, they’re incredible. I cannot be everywhere at once. I wish I could be though. I’m just of course exhausted. I think you’re probably exhausted too.

Emotional abuse has a way of doing that. As much as it’s very energizing to help emotional abuse victims, it’s also exhausting to deal with abuse all the time, so thank you so much for your prayers.

Thank you so much for your well wishes and your support. It has meant so much to me over the years. I am here, working hard. I will continue to work hard.

Request for Prayers and Continuing the Mission

I’m so glad to finally have the energy, I don’t know. I wouldn’t be here, and I wouldn’t have learned these things, and I wouldn’t have had the time or ability to learn these strategies and then also experiment with them with women.

Had you not supported BTR by listening, so thank you. One of the main ways to help get the word out is by following the podcast, just click follow on Spotify or Apple Podcast.

That helps share social media. If you feel like I do and don’t want any other woman to suffer, those are good ways to help. I love your comments.

It’s not often that I fish for validation, I guess, but I could use your prayers right now. I’ve been in tough spots. It’s you, the listeners, the BTR community who have got me through it.

Gratitude for Listeners Who Are Likely Experiencing Emotional Abuse Themselves

(20:53): You tell me or the coaches. It was BTR that helped me get through this hard time. You helped me get through the hard time of being on the front lines every day, interacting with women all over the world who are going through this.

It’s such an honor to be on these front lines and hear your stories, to sit with you in the pain. It is an honor to know you. It is an honor that you listen, and I’m so grateful that we work together to make this world a better place. Thank you so much.

  • My Husband Won’t Stop Lying To Me – Angel’s Story
  • My Husband Is Paranoid And Angry – Louise’s Story
  • What Does Jesus Say About Abuse? Points From The Bible
  • How To Deal With Narcissistic Abuse In Marriage – Ingrid’s Story
  • Think Shame Is the Cause of Cheating? Think Again.
  • Husband On Phone All The Time? His Online Choices Could Hurt More Than Just You
  • Is Marriage Counseling Going To Help? Here’s How To Know
  • 7 Things To Know When You’re Mad at Your Husband
  • Why Is My Husband Yelling at Me? – Cat’s story
  • What Are The 4 Stages Of Betrayal Trauma?
  • Is Online Infidelity Cheating? – 7 Things The Research Confirmed
  • Psychological Abuse vs Emotional Abuse – What You Need To Know
  • Is It Wrong To Check Your Husband’s Phone? – Jenna’s Experience
  • Stages of Anger After Infidelity – How Anger Protects You
  • What Is Post Separation Abuse? – Marcie’s Story
  • The Long-Term Effects Of A Bad Marriage – Florence’s Story
  • Patterns To Look Out for In Your Relationship with Dave Cawley
  • Warning Signs Your Husband Is Dangerous – Susan’s Story With Dave Cawley
  • How To Protect Yourself Financially If Your Marriage Is Struggling
  • What Is A Therapeutic Disclosure? What You Need To Know If Your Husband Is An Addict

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    • My Husband Won’t Stop Lying To Me – Angel’s Story
    • My Husband Is Paranoid And Angry – Louise’s Story
    • What Does Jesus Say About Abuse? Points From The Bible
    • How To Deal With Narcissistic Abuse In Marriage – Ingrid’s Story
    • Think Shame Is the Cause of Cheating? Think Again.
    • Husband On Phone All The Time? His Online Choices Could Hurt More Than Just You
    • Is Marriage Counseling Going To Help? Here’s How To Know
    • 7 Things To Know When You’re Mad at Your Husband
    • Why Is My Husband Yelling at Me? – Cat’s story
    • What Are The 4 Stages Of Betrayal Trauma?

      The most comprehensive podcast about betrayal trauma, Anne interviewed over 200 women (and counting) who bravely shared their stories. New episodes every Tuesday!

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