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. 2 days ago

    196. What If They Never Change?

    Episode Summary / Show notes: One of the most frightening questions a betrayed partner can ask isn't: "Why did they do it?" Or even: "Can I trust them again?" It's this: What if they never change? What if the progress stops here? What if the conversations keep going in circles? What if the accountability never fully arrives? What if the relationship never becomes what you hope it could be? In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores the fear that sits beneath so much of the uncertainty after betrayal: the possibility that the person you're waiting on may never become the person you're hoping they'll be. You'll discover how hope can quietly transform from a source of strength into a source of dependency, why many betrayed partners unknowingly tie their own healing to somebody else's growth, and how the sunk-cost fallacy can keep people emotionally invested long after they would otherwise have questioned their path. Most importantly, this episode explores what becomes possible when you stop making your peace conditional on another person's transformation. Because healing was never supposed to be a reward for their growth. It was always meant to belong to you. In This Episode You'll Learn: Why the question "What if they never change?" feels so emotionally threatening The hidden fear that often sits underneath hope How hope can gradually become emotional dependency The relationship between betrayal recovery and the sunk-cost fallacy Why waiting can feel safer than facing uncertainty How your wellbeing can become tied to something you don't control The difference between wanting someone to change and needing them to change Why your healing cannot depend entirely on another person's growth How to begin separating your recovery from your partner's behaviour What it means to build emotional stability regardless of the outcome of the relationship A Powerful Question From This Episode "Can you build a life, a sense of self, and a baseline of peace that exists independently of whether they ever fully become who you're hoping they'll become?" Because if the answer is yes, your future is no longer being held hostage by somebody else's choices. And if the answer is no, that isn't a failure. It's simply important information about where your healing work may need to focus next. Key Takeaways ✅ Hope is not the problem. ✅ Hope becomes problematic when it becomes the only thing holding the relationship together. ✅ Many betrayed partners unknowingly attach their future wellbeing to another person's growth. ✅ Waiting for change can become a way of avoiding difficult truths. ✅ The sunk-cost fallacy doesn't just affect money—it affects relationships too. ✅ Time invested does not automatically mean more time should be invested. ✅ Your healing and your partner's healing are two separate processes. ✅ Grief and commitment can coexist. ✅ You can work on a relationship whilst grieving the version you hoped it would become. ✅ Emotional stability becomes much stronger when it's built on your own choices rather than someone else's transformation. Why This Episode Matters After betrayal, it's natural to want reassurance that the pain, effort, and uncertainty will eventually lead somewhere meaningful. Many people find themselves waiting for evidence that their partner's growth will justify their decision to stay. But what happens when that change is slow? Inconsistent? Or uncertain? This episode explores the emotional cost of making your peace dependent on another person's progress and why true healing often begins when you reclaim ownership of your own future. Because the goal isn't to stop wanting the relationship to work. The goal is to stop needing it to work in order to be okay. Resources & Support If you're struggling with the uncertainty that follows betrayal and want support rebuilding trust, emotional stability, and confidence in your own decisions, Luke offers both private coaching and community support. 🌐 Website https://www.lifecoachluke.com 📧 Email luke@lifecoachluke.com 📱 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lifecoachluke 👥 Join the After the Affair Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/aftertheaffair 🤝 The After the Affair Collective The After the Affair Collective is a supportive community designed specifically for betrayed partners who want practical tools, emotional support, and guidance as they navigate recovery after infidelity. Inside you'll find: Live group coaching sessions The Chaos to Clarity recovery framework Practical resources and workshops Support from others who understand betrayal first-hand Ongoing guidance throughout your healing journey Learn more at: https://www.lifecoachluke.com If This Episode Helped... Please consider following the podcast, leaving a rating or review, and sharing this episode with someone who may need to hear it. Your support helps more people find hope, clarity, and direction after betrayal.

    15 min
  2. 17 Jun

    195. Why Do I Keep Checking?

    You check their phone. Their location. Their social media. Their messages. Their tone of voice. The time they arrived home. The way they answered a question. The hesitation before they replied. And even when you find nothing, the urge eventually comes back. So why do you keep checking? In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores one of the most common but misunderstood behaviours following betrayal: the compulsion to monitor, investigate, and search for reassurance. At first glance, checking appears logical. After all, you were lied to. You were blindsided. The person you trusted broke that trust. Of course your brain wants to make sure it never happens again. But what if checking isn't actually creating safety? What if it's doing something else entirely? Luke explores the hidden relationship between checking and uncertainty, why the nervous system becomes trapped in threat detection mode after betrayal, and why the relief checking provides is often temporary rather than transformative. Most importantly, this episode explores the deeper question beneath the behaviour itself: What are you hoping checking will eventually give you? Because understanding the answer to that question may reveal far more about your healing than any phone, message, location history, or social media account ever could. In This Episode You'll Learn: Why checking becomes such a powerful habit after betrayal The difference between safety and uncertainty reduction What your nervous system is trying to achieve when it urges you to check Why finding "nothing" often doesn't make you feel better The hidden emotional cost of constant monitoring How checking can unintentionally reinforce anxiety Why trust and certainty are not the same thing The difference between investigation and anxiety management What checking may be preventing you from focusing on How self-trust becomes an essential part of recovery A Powerful Question From This Episode "What are you hoping checking will eventually give you?" Not what you're looking for. Not what you might find. Not who you're checking. What are you hoping it will give you? Safety? Certainty? Control? Relief? Reassurance? Because once you understand the need beneath the behaviour, you can begin addressing the real problem rather than managing the symptom. Key Takeaways ✅ Checking is a normal response to betrayal. ✅ Your nervous system is trying to prevent you from being blindsided again. ✅ Checking provides temporary relief, not lasting safety. ✅ The brain often mistakes uncertainty reduction for security. ✅ Finding nothing rarely resolves the deeper fear. ✅ Hypervigilance can become exhausting emotionally and physically. ✅ Trust cannot be rebuilt through monitoring alone. ✅ The urge to check does not automatically mean something is wrong. ✅ Recovery involves learning to tolerate uncertainty without immediately acting on it. ✅ The ultimate goal is not trusting them blindly, it is rebuilding trust in yourself. Why This Episode Matters Many betrayed partners spend months, or even years, trapped in a cycle of checking. Checking feels responsible. Checking feels protective. Checking feels like you're doing something. But over time, it can become a prison. Not because you're weak. Not because you're obsessive. But because your nervous system learned a painful lesson and is desperately trying to keep you safe. This episode explores why checking is often an attempt to manage anxiety rather than gather information, and why genuine recovery requires something deeper than monitoring another person's behaviour. Because eventually the question stops being: "Can I trust them?" And becomes: "Can I trust myself?" Resources & Support If you're navigating the aftermath of infidelity and looking for support, guidance, and practical tools to help you move forward, Luke offers both private coaching and community support. 🌐 Website https://www.lifecoachluke.com 📧 Email https://www.lifecoachluke.com

    25 min
  3. 10 Jun

    194. Still Thinking About the Affair Every Day?

    It's been months. Maybe years. And yet somehow, you're still thinking about the affair every single day. You wake up and it's there. You go to bed and it's there. A song, a date, a place, a passing thought, and suddenly you're back inside the story again. Replaying. Analysing. Questioning. Trying to understand. Trying to make sense of something that still feels impossible to fully explain. If that sounds familiar, this episode is for you. In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores why your mind keeps returning to the affair long after discovery and why the constant replaying may not mean what you think it means. You'll learn why the brain mistakes understanding for safety, how rumination quietly becomes a habit, the hidden reasons people continue replaying painful events, and why trying to force yourself to stop thinking about the affair often makes the problem worse. Most importantly, you'll discover the difference between remembering and replaying, and how changing your relationship with your thoughts can become one of the most important turning points in your healing journey. If you've ever found yourself asking: "Why am I still thinking about this?" This episode may give you an entirely different answer than the one you've been looking for. In This Episode You'll Learn: Why your brain keeps returning to the affair The difference between understanding and certainty How the mind tries to use thinking as a form of protection Why many people aren't actually trying to understand the affair anymore The hidden relationship between rumination and control How replaying the affair can become an unconscious attempt to change the past The surprising ways betrayal can become part of your identity Why forcing yourself not to think about the affair usually backfires The difference between remembering and replaying What actually helps you move forward when you're feeling stuck A Powerful Question From This Episode "What am I hoping my thinking will give me?" Not what your partner did. Not what should have happened. Not what you've lost. But what are you hoping all of this thinking will eventually produce? Safety? Certainty? Control? Validation? Justice? A different past? Because the answer to that question may reveal far more about what's keeping you stuck than the affair itself. Key Takeaways ✅ Thinking about the affair every day doesn't mean you're broken. ✅ Your brain often mistakes understanding for safety. ✅ Rumination feels productive but rarely creates resolution. ✅ Many people are no longer trying to understand the affair, they're trying to undo it. ✅ The hidden goal beneath most replaying is certainty, and certainty is impossible. ✅ Healing is not about never thinking about the affair again. ✅ Freedom comes from changing your relationship with the thoughts, not eliminating them. ✅ Remembering is normal. Replaying is optional. ✅ You don't have to believe every thought your mind offers. ✅ Recovery begins to accelerate when your future becomes more compelling than your past. Why This Episode Matters One of the biggest misconceptions in betrayal recovery is that if you're still thinking about the affair, you're not healing. The truth is often far more nuanced. Many people become trapped not by the affair itself, but by their ongoing attempt to find certainty, control, or safety through endless mental replay. This episode explores what happens when thinking becomes a habit, when healing becomes an identity, and when the search for answers quietly turns into resistance to reality. Because the goal isn't to forget. The goal is to stop living inside the event. Resources & Support If you're struggling with the aftermath of betrayal and would like support navigating the emotional, psychological, and relational impact of infidelity, Luke offers both private coaching and community support. 🌐 Website https://www.lifecoachluke.com 📧 Email luke@lifecoachluke.com 📱 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mylifecoachluke 👥 Join the After the Affair Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/aftertheaffair If This Episode Helped... Please consider following the podcast, leaving a rating or review, and sharing this episode with someone who may need to hear it. You never know whose healing journey could be changed by a single conversation.

    26 min
  4. 3 Jun

    193. The Conversation You're Dreading: How to Talk to Your Kids After an Affair

    Few conversations carry more emotional weight than sitting down with your children and explaining that something has changed in your family. After an affair, many parents find themselves caught between two competing fears: saying too much and causing harm, or saying too little and creating confusion. They desperately want to protect their children, but often have no idea where to begin. In this episode of After the Affair, Luke brings together everything explored in the previous two episodes and focuses on the practical reality of having the conversation itself. You'll learn why looking for the "perfect script" is often the wrong place to start, how to regulate yourself before the conversation begins, and the simple framework that can help you approach one of the most difficult parenting moments with greater confidence and clarity. Luke also explores the difficult questions children often ask, including: Why is this happening? Did somebody cheat? Are you getting back together? Whose fault is it? Most importantly, you'll discover why your children don't need perfect answers, perfect parents, or a perfect conversation. They need safety. They need stability. And they need parents willing to prioritise their emotional wellbeing above their own need to explain, justify, defend, or be understood. If you've been dreading this conversation, this episode will help you approach it with more confidence, more compassion, and a clearer understanding of what your children actually need from you. Key Takeaways Children rarely remember exact wording, but they do remember how a conversation felt. Emotional safety matters more than the perfect script. Before having the conversation, it's important to regulate yourself first. The Safe Conversation Framework follows five key stages: Safety Truth Change Stability Space The goal is not to explain everything that happened. Children need clarity about their world, not adult relationship details. Difficult questions can be answered honestly without creating emotional burden. Loyalty conflicts can emerge when children feel pressure to take sides. Repair is more important than perfection if you feel you got something wrong. This is rarely one conversation, it is the first of many conversations over time. The Safe Conversation Framework A practical step-by-step guide for parents navigating difficult conversations with children during relationship breakdown, separation, or the aftermath of an affair. The framework covers: Safety Truth Change Stability Space along with guidance on difficult questions, common mistakes, and age-appropriate conversations. To receive a free copy of the guide, email luke@lifecoachluke.com with the subject line: ‘SAFE CONVERSATIONS’ Work With Luke If you're struggling with the aftermath of infidelity and would like support navigating the emotional, practical, and relational challenges that follow betrayal, Luke offers both private coaching and community support. Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    16 min
  5. 27 May

    192. It’s Over… Now How Do You Tell the Kids After an Affair?

    How do you tell your children that your relationship is over, especially after an affair? This is one of the hardest conversations parents face in the aftermath of betrayal. The relationship has ended. The decision has been made. And now you’re left with the weight of explaining it to the people you most want to protect. In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores how to approach this conversation with clarity, stability, and intention, without overwhelming your children or placing emotional weight on them they’re not equipped to carry. This isn’t about explaining everything that happened. It’s about helping your children feel safe in a moment where their world is changing. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why explaining why the relationship ended can create more confusion than clarity What children are actually trying to understand when they hear “we’re separating” The difference between pain and uncertainty, and why it matters How to avoid creating loyalty conflict between parents What you can say to provide stability and reassurance How to handle the question “Why?” without oversharing Why this conversation is not a one-time moment, but an ongoing process If you’re facing this conversation and worried about getting it wrong, this episode will help you approach it with more confidence, clarity, and emotional steadiness. Key Takeaways Children are not trying to understand the relationship, they’re trying to understand their world Explaining too much can create confusion and emotional burden Reducing uncertainty is more important than removing pain Loyalty conflict can develop subtly and have long-term impact Clarity about routines, safety, and stability matters more than detail Your child’s experience is shaped more by what happens after the conversation than the conversation itself You don’t need the perfect explanation, you need a grounded presence If you’re navigating separation after an affair and feeling unsure about how to support your children through it, you don’t have to do that alone. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    17 min
  6. 20 May

    191. Do You Tell the Kids About the Affair? What They Actually Need to Hear

    Should you tell your children about an affair? It’s one of the most difficult and emotionally loaded questions parents face after infidelity. You want to be honest, but you also want to protect them. You don’t want to lie, but you’re afraid of saying too much. In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores how to approach this conversation in a way that prioritises your child’s emotional safety, without avoiding the truth. This isn’t about full disclosure. It’s about understanding what your children actually need to hear, what they don’t, and how to navigate the balance between honesty, protection, and responsibility. In this episode, you’ll learn: Whether you should tell your children about an affair at all The difference between truth and detail, and why it matters When the timing is right (and when it isn’t) What children are really picking up on, even when you don’t tell them How to avoid oversharing or emotionally burdening your child What to say in a way that creates safety, not confusion Why this is not a one-time conversation, but an ongoing process If you’re worried about saying the wrong thing, damaging your child, or navigating this moment “perfectly,” this episode will help you approach it with clarity, intention, and confidence. Key Takeaways The goal is not to explain everything; it’s to create emotional safety You can be honest without sharing explicit or unnecessary details Children often sense changes before they’re told anything Not telling them can sometimes create more confusion than clarity Oversharing can transfer emotional weight onto your child Timing is about your ability to show up calmly, not waiting for perfection This conversation is ongoing, not a one-off moment If you’re navigating betrayal and struggling with how to show up for your children during this time, you don’t have to do it alone. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    21 min
  7. 13 May

    190. Stuck Between Two Lives? You’re Avoiding the Real Decision

    Why do you feel stuck between two relationships… and unable to move forward? After (or even during) an affair, it’s common to feel pulled in different directions, torn between a long-term relationship and a new emotional connection. Many people describe this as feeling “stuck,” unsure of what to do next. But what if you’re not actually stuck? In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores the hidden dynamic behind indecision after infidelity. Why do people stay in limbo, holding onto two lives at once? What are they really avoiding? And what is the emotional cost of not choosing? This episode breaks down: Why feeling “stuck” after an affair is often decision avoidance The illusion of a “third option” (waiting, delaying, hoping for clarity) The emotional and psychological cost of staying in limbo Why hope can keep you attached to something that isn’t sustainable How avoiding loss actually creates more pain over time What it means to take responsibility for your next step Whether you’re navigating conflicting attachments, struggling to let go, or waiting for clarity that never seems to come, this episode will help you understand what’s really happening, and what needs to change. Key Takeaways Feeling stuck between two lives is often a form of decision avoidance Not choosing is still a choice, and it has consequences Holding onto multiple possibilities delays loss but increases emotional strain Hope can become a trap when it keeps you tied to uncertain outcomes Clarity rarely comes from waiting, it comes from honest engagement Real progress begins when you’re willing to face the cost of choosing If you feel pulled in different directions, emotionally overwhelmed, or stuck in a cycle of indecision, you don’t have to figure this out on your own. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    11 min
  8. 6 May

    189. Does This Really Justify the Affair? - When They Won’t Let Go of Their Story

    What happens when the person who betrayed you rewrites the relationship to justify what they did… and truly believes it? After infidelity, many betrayed partners are faced with a deeply confusing experience: their partner begins describing the relationship as “always bad,” “unfulfilling,” or “broken”, even when that doesn’t match the reality you lived. In this episode of After the Affair, Luke explores why this happens, what it means psychologically, and why it can feel so destabilising. This isn’t always about manipulation, it’s often a defence mechanism designed to reduce guilt, shame, and internal conflict. But when one partner holds onto a rigid narrative, it creates a serious challenge for repair. This episode will help you understand: Why people rewrite the relationship after an affair How self-justifying narratives form and become “truth” The role of shame, guilt, and identity protection in betrayal Why differing versions of reality make reconciliation difficult Whether it’s possible for someone to step outside their story, and what it takes How to stay anchored in your own experience without needing their validation If you feel like your reality is being questioned, minimised, or rewritten after betrayal, this episode will help you regain clarity and confidence in your own perspective. Key Takeaways Rewriting the relationship after an affair is often a psychological protection mechanism, not always intentional manipulation These narratives help reduce internal conflict between “I’m a good person” and harmful behaviour Repeated stories can become deeply believed, even if they are distorted or incomplete True relationship repair requires both ownership and a shared understanding of reality Waiting for your partner to “see it properly” can keep you stuck Your clarity and healing do not depend on their narrative changing If you’re struggling with confusion, self-doubt, or feeling like your reality is being challenged after betrayal, you don’t have to navigate this alone. Connect with Luke: Website: www.lifecoachluke.com Instagram: @mylifecoachluke Email: luke@lifecoachluke.com

    13 min
5
out of 5
13 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.

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