In this episode (#331), we respond to a betrayed partner who discovered her husband’s ongoing porn use while she was pregnant and has since caught him multiple times in the same painful cycle: he apologizes, promises to stop, briefly improves, becomes defensive, grows distant, and eventually lies again. The most recent betrayal was especially devastating because he told her he no longer watched porn only hours before she discovered the truth. Now postpartum, exhausted, and emotionally wounded, she still loves him deeply and sees him as her best friend, but she does not know how to help him understand that this is no longer “just porn.” We emphasize that regardless of whether he accepts the label of addiction, the deception, defensiveness, minimization, and repeated betrayal are already causing serious damage. We describe the common cycle that many betrayed partners experience: the addict engages in questionable or compulsive behavior, secrecy and emotional volatility increase, the partner senses something is wrong, and then her love, patience, and hope are often used—consciously or not—to keep the pattern going. Over time, the partner may become inconsistent, fearful, self-doubting, or silent in an attempt to preserve the relationship, while the addict becomes more defensive and the coupleship erodes. Trust drops, intimacy becomes unsafe, and both people become better at surviving the relationship than thriving in it. If this continues too long, the relationship can reach a tragic place where love still exists, but the partner can no longer stay. The core invitation to the betrayed partner is to stop putting down the mirror and stop silencing her voice. She cannot force him into recovery, but she can clearly and consistently reflect the impact of his choices: how the porn, lying, gaslighting, defensiveness, and inaction affect her, their trust, and their marriage. She can set boundaries, lower vulnerability and intimacy when trust is low, and build an outside support system that does not depend on him. The message is urgent: do not wait until the relationship has bled out emotionally. If he will not face his porn addiction or compulsive behavior, she must find her own voice now and move forward in truth, safety, support, and self-respect. For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to: If He will NOT face His Porn Addiction—You as a Partner MUST find Your Voice NOW! Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com Find out more about Steve Moore at: Ascension Counseling Learn more about Mark Kastleman at: Reclaim Counseling Services