After the Affair

Luke Shillings

The ‘After the affair’ podcast with Luke Shillings is here to help you process, decide, and move forward on purpose following infidelity. Let’s explore what’s required to rebuild trust not only in yourself, but also with others. Whether you stay or leave, I can help! and no matter what your story, there will be something here for you.

  1. 5D AGO

    182. It Just Happened. The Myth of the Sudden Affair

    When someone tries to explain a betrayal, one phrase often comes up: “It just happened.” But for the betrayed partner, this explanation rarely brings clarity or peace. Instead, it often creates more confusion. How can something so painful and life-altering simply “happen”? In this episode, Luke explores why this phrase is so common after infidelity and why it often feels unsatisfying to the person who was betrayed. He explains how affairs rarely begin with a single moment of betrayal, but instead develop gradually through small shifts in boundaries, emotional connection, and attention. By understanding the process that leads up to betrayal, couples can move beyond vague explanations and start addressing the deeper patterns that matter for rebuilding trust and safety. Key Takeaways Why the phrase “it just happened” often leaves betrayed partners feeling unsettled How affairs usually develop through a gradual erosion of boundaries rather than a single moment The role emotional intimacy, attention, and validation can play in the progression toward betrayal Why understanding the process behind betrayal is more important than focusing on the final moment How deeper awareness can help rebuild trust and prevent the same patterns from repeating Work With Me If you’re struggling to understand how betrayal happened in your relationship or finding that the past still feels unresolved months or years later, coaching can help you explore those questions with clarity and support. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com Join the After the Affair community at www.facebook.com/groups/aftertheaffaircommunity

    11 min
  2. FEB 18

    178. The First 30 Days After Betrayal: Don’t Make These Mistakes

    The first 30 days after discovering betrayal can feel like emotional chaos. Shock. Rage. Numbness. Obsession. Hope. Despair. All before lunch. In this episode, Infidelity recovery coach - Luke Shillings breaks down what actually matters in the immediate aftermath of discovery, and the common mistakes that can quietly make things worse. This isn’t about long-term healing or whether you should stay or leave. It’s about stabilising yourself when your nervous system is on fire. You’ll learn: Why timeframes can become weapons Why you shouldn’t make permanent decisions in a temporary state The danger of trying to “solve” betrayal like a logic puzzle How to create rules of engagement instead of emotional extremes The subtle way children can become emotional amplifiers Why rushing forgiveness can backfire How to stop searching for certainty and start building stability If you’re in the early days, overwhelmed, unsure, and questioning everything, this episode will help you slow down and take the next right step. Because right now, you don’t need the whole path. You need stability. Key Takeaways You are not failing because you’re emotionally unstable, you’re in shock Don’t use imaginary timelines to measure your progress Avoid making permanent identity decisions while dysregulated Structure should hold your emotions, not replace them Boundaries are about clarity, not punishment Reassurance with children should stabilise, not amplify fear Forgiveness is not a switch, and you don’t need to rush it More information does not equal more safety Choose one or two anchors instead of chasing every new idea Who This Episode Is For Anyone in the first weeks after discovering an affair Betrayed partners feeling emotionally volatile Listeners stuck between “fight for it” and “burn it down” Parents navigating early co-parenting chaos after discovery Reflective individuals who don’t want to make decisions they regret later A Grounding Reminder You don’t need to decide your future in week two. You need to stabilise your present. Healing isn’t about speed. It’s about staying aligned with yourself while the storm passes. Support & Next Steps If you’re in the early days after betrayal and feel overwhelmed by conflicting advice, you don’t have to navigate it alone. Through one-to-one coaching and The After the Affair Collective, Luke helps betrayed partners build stability, clarity, and emotional authority, without rushing decisions or suppressing truth. Learn more at lifecoachluke.com You don’t need certainty yet. You need support that helps you think clearly. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    21 min
  3. FEB 11

    177. Intrusive Thoughts During Sex After Betrayal

    Many betrayed partners experience intrusive thoughts or images when trying to be sexually intimate during reconciliation, often images of their partner with the affair partner. These thoughts can feel shocking, disturbing, and deeply confusing, especially when you’ve consciously chosen to stay and work on the relationship. In this episode, affair recovery expert Luke Shillings speaks directly to this experience. He explains why intrusive thoughts often show up specifically during sex, why this isn’t about jealousy or sexual failure, and how the nervous system responds to betrayal in moments of vulnerability. You’ll learn why “pushing through” intimacy can make things worse, what actually helps safety return, and how to relate to these thoughts without shame or self-blame. This episode isn’t about fixing or forcing intimacy, it’s about understanding what your body and mind are communicating, so healing doesn’t become another place you abandon yourself. Key Takeaways Intrusive thoughts during sex are common after betrayal, especially during reconciliation These thoughts are not a sign of failure, incompatibility, or lack of commitment Sex often becomes the most triggering space because it’s where vulnerability and exclusivity once lived Intrusive imagery is usually a nervous system response, not a sexual desire Pushing through intimacy before safety returns can reinforce the problem Healing intimacy requires agency, permission, and pacing — not pressure Progress is measured by felt safety, not arousal or frequency You are allowed to stop sex the moment it stops feeling safe Who This Episode Is For Betrayed partners attempting reconciliation Anyone struggling with intrusive images or thoughts during intimacy after infidelity Listeners feeling ashamed or confused by their internal reactions during sex Couples trying to rebuild closeness without forcing it A Grounding Reminder Intrusive thoughts are not evidence that something is wrong with you. They are evidence that your nervous system is still learning what safety feels like after a profound rupture. Support & Next Steps If you’re navigating reconciliation and struggling with intrusive thoughts during intimacy, support can help you understand what your body is communicating, without pushing yourself beyond your capacity. Through one-to-one coaching and The After the Affair Collective, Luke helps betrayed partners rebuild safety, agency, and self-trust at a pace that actually holds. Learn more at lifecoachluke.com or reach out directly. You don’t need to force intimacy. You need safety to return. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    11 min
  4. FEB 4

    176. Pacing: Why Rushing Your Healing Slows It Down

    After betrayal, many people feel an intense pressure to move quickly, to decide, to understand, to feel better. That urgency often sounds logical and responsible. But more often than not, it’s fear wearing a sensible disguise. In this episode, Luke Shillings explores the concept of pacing, not as avoidance or indecision, but as a skilful, intentional way of healing. You’ll learn why betrayal disrupts our sense of time and safety, how urgency can masquerade as intuition, and why moving faster than you can integrate often leads to burnout, doubt, and repeated reversals. This episode is about learning how to slow down without getting stuck, and why healing happens at the speed of safety, not pressure. Key Takeaways Betrayal collapses predictability, which creates urgency Urgency often feels like clarity, but it usually comes from fear Pacing is not avoidance, it’s active, intentional restraint Healing fails more often from being rushed than from being slow Decisions made under pressure rarely hold emotionally Intuition is calm; urgency is demanding Slowing down builds self-trust and emotional stability You don’t need certainty to heal, you need safety Who This Episode Is For Listeners feeling pressured to “know” what to do next People who appear functional on the outside but feel internally flooded Anyone worried they’re taking “too long” to heal Those who want to move forward without forcing clarity A Grounding Reminder You’re not behind. You’re not failing. You’re responding to a loss of safety, and pacing is how that safety returns. Support & Next Steps If you’re feeling rushed to make decisions or be “better by now,” support can help you slow the process without stalling it. Through one-to-one coaching and The After the Affair Collective, Luke helps people stabilise, rebuild self-trust, and make decisions from a grounded place rather than fear. Learn more at lifecoachluke.com or reach out directly. You don’t need more urgency. You need a steadier rhythm. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    14 min
  5. JAN 28

    175. What’s Actually Essential After Betrayal

    After betrayal, many people believe healing means doing more: more processing, more understanding, more effort, more tolerance. But what if that belief is what’s keeping you stuck? In this episode, Luke Shillings introduces essentialism as a recovery lens, not as a productivity tool, but as a way to stabilise, simplify, and heal without burning yourself out. You’ll learn why betrayal creates mental and emotional overload, how “trying harder” often backfires, and what actually must be in place for healing to be possible at all. This episode helps you separate what’s essential from what’s just noise, and why subtraction, not addition, is often the real work. Key Takeaways Healing after betrayal breaks down from overload, not lack of effort The nervous system heals through safety and containment, not information Essentialism means identifying what must be present, and letting go of the rest Subtraction is often more stabilising than adding more tools Safety, reality, emotional permission, and choice are non-negotiables You don’t need to understand everything to heal Trying to carry everything often leads to burnout and self-erasure Healing is about becoming more selective, not more capable Who This Episode Is For Anyone feeling overwhelmed by advice or expectations after betrayal Listeners exhausted by “doing all the right things” but still feeling stuck People struggling to know where to focus their energy Those wanting a calmer, more sustainable way to heal Support & Next Steps If healing feels overwhelming, it’s often because you’re carrying too much, not because you’re doing it wrong. Through one-to-one coaching and The After the Affair Collective, Luke helps people identify what’s essential, stabilise first, and rebuild with intention rather than urgency. Learn more at lifecoachluke.com or reach out directly. You don’t need to do everything. You need to do what matters. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    14 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.8
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

The ‘After the affair’ podcast with Luke Shillings is here to help you process, decide, and move forward on purpose following infidelity. Let’s explore what’s required to rebuild trust not only in yourself, but also with others. Whether you stay or leave, I can help! and no matter what your story, there will be something here for you.

You Might Also Like