Marriage Intervention

Hasani Pettiford

Marriage Intervention is a straight-talking, no-nonsense podcast for couples navigating the most difficult moments in their relationship—especially after infidelity. Hosted by Hasani and Danielle Pettiford, this show goes beyond surface-level advice and weekly therapy conversations. Each episode dives into real questions from real couples dealing with betrayal, broken trust, emotional disconnection, and the uncertainty of whether to stay or walk away. This is not about theory. It’s about intervention. You’ll learn: What to do immediately after discovering an affair Why most couples stay stuck (and how to break the cycle) The difference between remorse and real recovery How to rebuild trust, emotional safety, and connection When a marriage can be saved—and when it cannot If you’re in crisis, feeling lost, or trying to decide your next move, this podcast gives you clarity, direction, and a path forward. New episodes drop weekly.

  1. −2 d

    How to Be Intimate Again After Being Cheated On | Affair Recovery

    Episode Summary Sex is supposed to be the one place where couples feel the closest. After betrayal, it's often the one place where they feel the most alone. In this episode, Hassani and Danielle unpack what actually happens to intimacy after infidelity — the intrusive images that hijack the moment, the pressure to "prove" the marriage is recovering, the body that shuts down before the mind can catch up, and the desperate clinging that masquerades as love. They break down the three sexual patterns most couples fall into after betrayal, why healing can't begin in the bedroom, and what it actually takes to rebuild intimacy that means something. What You'll Learn Why infidelity doesn't just break trust — it contaminates the bedroom itselfWhy the body's shutdown response is protection, not rejectionIntrusive thoughts and images explained: what triggers are and why they're involuntaryWhy you can't touch your way to healing after a betrayalThe tortoise-vs-hare truth of rebuilding physical intimacy after an affairWhy full disclosure matters — and why the wrong details can make triggers worseDuty sex, performance sex, and why "just checking a box" is a warning signThe Intimacy Challenge: what a sex fast actually does for a recovering marriageThe three sexual patterns after betrayal: asexual, hypersexual, and triggered sexWhy healing is measured in safety, not in weeks or monthsWhen wanting your spouse constantly is love — and when it's clinging out of fearWhy sex was never meant to prove the marriage is healing — it's the fruit of a marriage that already is Timestamps 0:00 — Cold open: when touch stops feeling like connection1:03 — Why infidelity contaminates the bedroom, not just the trust1:32 — Body shutdown as protection, not rejection1:53 — When the offending partner needs sex for reassurance2:18 — Deeper betrayals: sex addiction, disease, hidden preferences2:44 — Why rushing back into physical intimacy retraumatizes3:07 — Sex was never meant to prove recovery — it's the fruit of a healthy marriage3:29 — Question 1: Every time we touch, she sees images of what I did3:55 — Working through the trauma vs. pushing past it4:18 — Intrusive thoughts and images: what triggers actually are5:11 — Why healing must begin outside the bedroom6:05 — Reassociating touch after betrayal6:32 — Nonsexual touch with no goal, no agenda7:34 — Patience in the messy middle9:07 — Why the imagination fills the gaps you don't disclose9:53 — How much detail is actually helpful?10:55 — Question 2: We're going through the motions and it feels mechanical12:05 — Duty sex and the transactional bedroom12:35 — The intimacy challenge (a.k.a. sex fast)13:00 — "Sexuality without intimacy feels like rape" — the TD Jakes quote13:18 — Performance mode after infidelity14:20 — Building actual desirability, not just availability15:20 — Why taking sex off the table brings relief for both spouses16:29 — When couples never developed intimacy in the first place17:03 — Question 3: I still can't touch my husband months later17:26 — The body keeps the score18:23 — What "triggered" actually means (and doesn't)19:03 — When it's normal — and when staying there is dangerous19:21 — The three sexual patterns after betrayal: asexual, hypersexual, triggered21:00 — Healing is measured in safety, not in weeks21:23 — Question 4: I want intimacy all the time — am I healing or clinging?21:34 — When wanting sex is fear of losing, not love22:21 — Why sex can't be the tool of restoration22:51 — Sexing your spouse into trust doesn't work23:24 — Getting the real answers instead of putting a band-aid on it23:57 — Closing: watch the next episode on sexual intimacy after betrayal Notable Quotes "When he or she reaches for you and your body shuts down — that's not them rejecting. That's them protecting.""Sex was never meant to be the proof that your marriage is recovering. It's the fruit of a healthy marriage.""You cannot touch your way to healing.""Sexuality without intimacy feels like rape." — TD Jakes"Healing isn't measured on a calendar. Healing is measured by safety.""The body keeps the score.""The tortoise won. The hare was speed racing." Resources Apply for a 3–5 Day Marriage Intensive → couplesacademy.orgJoin the Last Chance Weekend in Atlanta — every second weekend of the month (details in the description)Watch next: Sexual Intimacy After BetrayalSubmit a question for the show: drop it in the YouTube comments Connect With Us YouTube: Marriage Intervention by Couples AcademyApple Podcasts & Spotify: Marriage InterventionWebsite: couplesacademy.org Call to Action If this episode hit home, subscribe so you don't miss what's coming next. If you're rebuilding after a betrayal and your bedroom is where the pain lives loudest, the 3–5 Day Marriage Intensive and the monthly Last Chance Weekend are built for couples in exactly this place — apply at couplesacademy.org.

    24 min
  2. 29 juni

    Why Sexless Marriages Are Dangerous (And How to Fix Yours)

    15 to 20% of marriages are sexless. Some studies put it as high as 40%. And in most cases, the problem isn't physical — it's emotional, relational, and quietly destructive. In this episode, Hassani and Danielle break down why a sexless marriage almost never starts in the bedroom, how resentment, exhaustion, weaponized intimacy, and pornography slowly turn spouses into roommates, and what couples can actually do to find their way back to each other before the marriage hardens into a "cellmate" arrangement neither person knows how to escape. What You'll Learn The clinical definition of a sexless marriage (and why couples don't realize they're in one)Why problems inside the bedroom are almost always rooted outside the bedroomHow resentment kills desire — and why men focused on technique miss the real connection women needWhat's actually happening when a spouse uses sex as a reward or punishmentWhy women can't compartmentalize the way men can, and how the mental load translates directly to physical exhaustionThe "I wanted to want to" reality every depleted wife understands but can't always articulateHow pornography becomes an "easier" replacement for real connection — and why the spouse is never the causeThe three contributing factors behind toxic behavior: personal, relational, and socialWhether a sexless marriage is ever a real reason to leave — and why it is never a reason to step outWhy sex, when present, becomes a protective wall around the covenant of marriage Timestamps 0:00 — Cold open: the bedroom that shut down0:30 — The statistic: 15-40% of marriages are sexless1:35 — Four questions, one topic — let's get into it1:53 — What a "sexless marriage" actually means3:00 — Question 1: I have zero desire because of how he treats me outside the bedroom3:21 — Why bedroom problems start outside the bedroom4:28 — The mutual investment problem6:10 — Emotional investment, physical return: the real exchange6:48 — Question 2: My spouse uses sex as reward and punishment7:10 — Why people weaponize sex — and what it signals8:33 — When the bedroom becomes a transactional table10:42 — Question 3: I have nothing left for intimacy — and he takes it personally11:00 — Why he hears "nothing" and feels like nothing12:25 — Why women can't compartmentalize the way men can14:18 — You're not married to the wife you married16:13 — The compounded weight on women — work, kids, home, hormones19:35 — The real solve: support, not demand22:01 — From blame to solution: how to actually change the dynamic24:26 — Question 4: My husband would rather watch porn than be with me25:31 — When pornography is an addiction27:30 — Why porn is "easier" for many men29:19 — Always a reason, never a justification31:11 — Pressure produces the fruit already in you32:25 — The three factors behind toxic behavior35:38 — Question 5: Is sexless marriage a real reason to leave?37:30 — Sex as a need — not gender-specific38:36 — Sex as a protective wall around the marriage39:33 — When to have the honest future conversation40:35 — When "go get it" becomes an affair41:14 — Soulmate to cellmate: the marital prison42:34 — Closing: it doesn't have to end like this Notable Quotes "If there's a major problem inside the bedroom, it's because there's a major problem outside of the bedroom.""When a woman's emotional cup is full from her husband, she will find the capacity to serve in another way.""I wanted to want to.""There's always a reason — but it's never justified.""Pressure produces the fruit that's already in you.""From soulmate to cellmate — you're trapped in a marital prison." Resources Apply for a 3–5 Day Marriage Intensive → couplesacademy.orgSubmit a question for the show: drop it in the YouTube comments Connect With Us YouTube: Marriage Intervention by Couples AcademyApple Podcasts & Spotify: Marriage InterventionWebsite: couplesacademy.org Call to Action If this episode hit home, subscribe so you don't miss what's coming next. If you're living in a marriage that's gone quiet and you're ready to do the work with real guidance, the 3–5 Day Marriage Intensive is built for couples in exactly this place — apply at couplesacademy.org.

    44 min
  3. 22 juni

    What Healthy Communication After Infidelity Actually Looks Like

    Show NotesEpisode Summary After an affair, couples are doing a lot of talking — but most are no longer truly communicating. Betrayal doesn't just break trust; it breaks safety, and once safety is gone, communication drops into survival mode. In this episode, Hassani and Danielle unpack three of the most common patterns that quietly re-break a marriage every time the couple tries to talk: the screaming match that hits every time, the spouse who goes silent and disappears, and the affair being used as the trump card in every unrelated argument. They walk through the seven levels of communication, explain why couples collapse to the surface after betrayal, and give the rules that make hard conversations productive instead of destructive. What You'll Learn Why betrayal breaks safety (not just trust) — and how that changes the way couples communicateThe seven levels of communication and why most couples drop to "cliché level" after an affairThe number one rule of post-affair communication: never share your feelings when you're in your feelingsHow to stop a hard conversation from escalating into a three-hour screaming matchWhy your spouse goes silent — and the difference between protecting themselves and protecting youHow to set ground rules and schedule difficult conversations so neither of you gets ambushedThe "sufferer marital pattern" — using the affair as the trump card in every unrelated argumentHow to separate affair problems from marital problems so both can actually get resolvedWhy personal transformation, on both sides, is the key to real restoration Timestamps 0:00 — Cold open: the conversation patterns that keep destroying marriages after infidelity0:30 — What we're tackling today: communicating about the affair0:50 — Communication defined: the transfer of meaning1:17 — The seven levels of communication — and why couples collapse to the surface after betrayal2:20 — Are you communicating to survive, or learning to communicate to heal?2:40 — Question 1: Every conversation ends in a screaming match. How do we talk about the affair without reliving it?3:19 — Why emotional flooding wrecks every conversation before it begins4:30 — The 20-minute break and how to come back to the table5:39 — Why the discovery phase makes every conversation a difficult one6:43 — Question 2: My husband shuts down and goes silent. How do I get him to talk?7:12 — Is he physically gone, or present but checked out?8:46 — The shame the unfaithful spouse carries — and why it shows up as silence10:46 — Ground rules and scheduled conversations: how to stop ambushing each other12:09 — When videos and books aren't enough: how a 3–5 day intensive accelerates the work13:12 — Question 3: Every time he brings something up, I throw the affair back in his face13:31 — The sufferer marital pattern and the "trump card" that ends every argument14:45 — Separating marital problems from affair problems15:28 — The victim mentality, personal responsibility, and why both can be true at once17:00 — The key to marital restoration: personal transformation18:28 — Subscribe, drop your questions, and join the community Notable Quotes "Never share your feelings when you're in your feelings.""Betrayal doesn't just break trust — it often breaks safety. And when safety is broken, communication goes into survival mode.""Are you living in a relationship where you're communicating just to survive? Or are you learning to communicate so you can heal?""Once trust is broken, every conversation about the affair can either remake it or re-break it. And most couples simply don't know what they're doing.""The key to your marital restoration is your personal transformation." Resources Apply for a 3–5 Day Marriage Intensive → couplesacademy.orgSubmit a question for the show: drop it in the YouTube comments Connect With Us YouTube: Marriage Intervention by Couples AcademyApple Podcasts & Spotify: Marriage InterventionWebsite: couplesacademy.org Call to Action If this episode hit home, subscribe so you don't miss what's coming next. If you're going through this and ready to do the work with real guidance, the 3–5 Day Marriage Intensive is built for couples in exactly this place — apply at couplesacademy.org.

    19 min
  4. 15 juni

    Can Men and Women REALLY Just Be Friends?

    "We're just friends" is how most affairs begin. A coworker you've never heard of. A phone turned face down. A work trip that lines up a little too conveniently. An old flame who resurfaces on Facebook. Almost no affair starts as an affair — it starts as a friendship nobody thought needed a boundary. In this episode, Hasani and Danielle get honest about opposite-sex friendships in marriage: why your gut is giving you data even without proof, where the danger zones actually live, and why "we're just friends" is an assumption, not a boundary. What we cover: What a "friendship" actually is after attraction enters the picture — and why platonic connection can quietly out-compete the marriageThe danger zone of workplace chemistry, and how the labels "friend," "coworker," and "colleague" become coverWhy your gut gives you data even when you have no hard evidence — and the smoke-and-fire test for knowing when to lean inThe single question that exposes any outside friendship: what is its function?Why old flames have to go — and how social media reignites them faster than people thinkSetting boundaries after betrayal: the season of "no," rebuilding trust, and building a relational code of ethics The questions we answer: "My husband swears his female coworker is just a friend. Why does my gut say otherwise?""Is it okay for my husband to meet up with an opposite-sex friend on a work trip?" (call-in from Julie)"My husband stays close with an ex he only sees as a friend now. Is a friendship with an old flame ever actually safe?""He cheated with a friend before. Am I wrong to say no to opposite-sex friends now?" Timestamps: 00:00 — Cold open: almost no affair starts as an affair00:52 — The age-old question: can men and women really just be friends?01:15 — Why every relationship runs on some form of attraction01:37 — The danger zone: when "platonic" gets blurry02:25 — Q1: "My husband swears his coworker is just a friend"04:03 — Smoke and fire: trusting your gut when there's no evidence06:51 — The question that exposes it all: what's the function of this friendship?08:57 — Q2 (call-in, Julie): meeting an opposite-sex friend on a work trip11:14 — Why work trips are a danger zone: is it wise? does it honor the marriage?14:55 — "Friend," "coworker," "colleague": how the label hides the risk17:04 — Q3: Is a friendship with an old flame ever actually safe?20:25 — Social media, old flames, and how fast things rekindle21:36 — Bonus Q4: "He cheated with a friend before — am I wrong to say no?"24:37 — Danielle's alcoholic analogy: boundaries that protect your weak spots27:04 — The takeaway: build a relational code of ethics for your marriage Got a question you want answered on the show? Drop it in the comments — we pull next week's questions from there. If this hit home, subscribe so you never miss an episode. You can also catch us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Ready for more than a video? We created the 3, 4, and 5-day private marriage intensives to walk you through personal healing and marital restoration. Book a free consultation → https://couplesacademy.org/

    28 min
  5. 8 juni

    How Do I Stop Getting Triggered After My Spouse's Affair?

    The affair ended, but your body didn't get the memo. A text at night. A phone turned face down. A song on the radio. A white bikini at the pool. After infidelity, the nervous system goes hypervigilant, and suddenly anything can reactivate the pain. In this episode, Hasani and Danielle get raw and real about triggers — why they happen, why they're not a choice, and why healing them is a journey couples have to take together. What we cover: What a trigger actually is — and why it's about what the moment represents, not the moment itselfPISD (Post Infidelity Stress Disorder) and its four expressions: intrusion, hypervigilance, emotional numbing, and arousal/reactivityWhy "I was triggered" can't become a permanent excuse — and where personal responsibility comes inThe role of the unfaithful spouse: full transparency, patience, and becoming "a student" of your partnerPractical grounding tools and the "create a new memory" strategy for anniversary dates The questions we answer: "Every time his phone buzzes, my stomach drops. How do I stop reacting to a sound?""The affair anniversary is coming and I'm already spiraling. How do I get through dates that haunt me?" (call-in from Victoria)"When I get triggered, my husband sighs like I'm being dramatic. How do I explain a trigger isn't a choice?" Timestamps: 00:00 — Cold open: the boiling water analogy01:13 — What triggers really are after infidelity02:46 — PISD and its four expressions04:20 — Q1: "Every time his phone buzzes, my stomach drops"11:13 — Q2: Surviving the affair anniversary and haunting dates22:10 — Q3: "My husband sighs like I'm being dramatic"23:58 — Becoming a student of your spouse25:40 — How we can help: the private marriage intensive 📖 Mentioned: Triggered by Betrayal — a roadmap for couples to understand triggers and rebuild trust. Got a question you want answered on the show? Drop it in the comments — we pull next week's questions from there. If this hit home, subscribe so you never miss an episode. You can also catch us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Ready for more than a video? We created the 3, 4, and 5-day private marriage intensives to walk you through personal healing and marital restoration. Book a free consultation → https://couplesacademy.org/

    26 min
  6. 2 juni

    Why Does My Spouse Keep Lying About the Affair?

    Relapse is more common than people admit — and recoverable. In this episode we look at what's really happening underneath a relapse and how to break the patterns and habits that keep dismantling a marriage. Three questions, one topic, real answers. What we cover: Q1 — "I relapsed and reached out to the affair partner after months of no contact. Is there still hope?" Why saying there's no hope slams the door in the face of God, and what's happening internally that drives a relapseHALT-B: the five internal mood states (hungry, angry, lonely, tired, bored) borrowed from addiction recovery — and why unregulated emotions drive us back into behaviors we swore offSoul ties and attachment: how the brain romanticizes a toxic person once you leave, highlights the "good days," and pulls you back — and why those attachments are often rooted in unmet childhood needsWhy recovery can't be one-dimensional: combining counseling, psychology, and spiritual work — EMDR, spiritual fasts, and the reality of a "heart detox"Why men tend to oversimplify moving on, how men and women attach differently, and why this work is ultimately not gender-specificQ2 (caller Julie) — Betrayal discovered six weeks before a vow renewal: does the timing matter? Why timing matters immensely, and how it adds a second offense — deception layered on top of betrayal"Death by a thousand cuts": how the circumstances surrounding an affair (a pregnancy, a season of transition, a job loss, an affair with a colleague or family member) deepen the woundPISD — post-infidelity stress disorder, intrusive thoughts, hyperarousal, and how the calendar itself (anniversaries, Valentine's Day, New Year's) becomes a recurring triggerQ3 — "How do I know the difference between a slip and a pattern?" Recognizing minimization, the "moments before the moment," and the micro-decisions that lead to betrayalSetting boundaries to protect yourself from yourself — severing access, blocking and deleting, and the difference between a true slip and premeditated actionWhy your eyes look outward, not inward — and why owning your story ("if you don't believe you, nobody else will") is the turning point If you've experienced a relapse and feel like all hope is lost but you want to get back on track, this is exactly what we specialize in. Weekly sessions often aren't enough — recovery this deep requires going further. Reach out for a free discovery call at couplesacademy.org to see how we can be part of your marriage story. Resources & next steps: Free discovery call / consultation at couplesacademy.org3-Day Private Marriage Intensive (affair-focused), 4-Day (individual healing), and comprehensive 5-Day Intensive (marriage restoration)Our book, Moving Forward After Infidelity — a tool for evaluating what led to the affair in the first place Listen wherever you get your podcasts — Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all streaming networks. Have a burning question for a future episode? Drop it in the comments — we read and respond to every one.

    22 min
  7. 2 juni

    How to Tell If He's Actually Changed After Cheating.

    Relapse is more common than people admit — and recoverable. In this episode we look at what's really happening underneath a relapse and how to break the patterns and habits that keep dismantling a marriage. Three questions, one topic, real answers. What we cover: Q1 — "I relapsed and reached out to the affair partner after months of no contact. Is there still hope?" Why saying there's no hope slams the door in the face of God, and what's happening internally that drives a relapseHALT-B: the five internal mood states (hungry, angry, lonely, tired, bored) borrowed from addiction recovery — and why unregulated emotions drive us back into behaviors we swore offSoul ties and attachment: how the brain romanticizes a toxic person once you leave, highlights the "good days," and pulls you back — and why those attachments are often rooted in unmet childhood needsWhy recovery can't be one-dimensional: combining counseling, psychology, and spiritual work — EMDR, spiritual fasts, and the reality of a "heart detox"Why men tend to oversimplify moving on, how men and women attach differently, and why this work is ultimately not gender-specificQ2 (caller Julie) — Betrayal discovered six weeks before a vow renewal: does the timing matter? Why timing matters immensely, and how it adds a second offense — deception layered on top of betrayal"Death by a thousand cuts": how the circumstances surrounding an affair (a pregnancy, a season of transition, a job loss, an affair with a colleague or family member) deepen the woundPISD — post-infidelity stress disorder, intrusive thoughts, hyperarousal, and how the calendar itself (anniversaries, Valentine's Day, New Year's) becomes a recurring triggerQ3 — "How do I know the difference between a slip and a pattern?" Recognizing minimization, the "moments before the moment," and the micro-decisions that lead to betrayalSetting boundaries to protect yourself from yourself — severing access, blocking and deleting, and the difference between a true slip and premeditated actionWhy your eyes look outward, not inward — and why owning your story ("if you don't believe you, nobody else will") is the turning point If you've experienced a relapse and feel like all hope is lost but you want to get back on track, this is exactly what we specialize in. Weekly sessions often aren't enough — recovery this deep requires going further. Reach out for a free discovery call at couplesacademy.org to see how we can be part of your marriage story. Resources & next steps: Free discovery call / consultation at couplesacademy.org3-Day Private Marriage Intensive (affair-focused), 4-Day (individual healing), and comprehensive 5-Day Intensive (marriage restoration)Our book, Moving Forward After Infidelity — a tool for evaluating what led to the affair in the first place Listen wherever you get your podcasts — Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all streaming networks. Have a burning question for a future episode? Drop it in the comments — we read and respond to every one.

    20 min

Om

Marriage Intervention is a straight-talking, no-nonsense podcast for couples navigating the most difficult moments in their relationship—especially after infidelity. Hosted by Hasani and Danielle Pettiford, this show goes beyond surface-level advice and weekly therapy conversations. Each episode dives into real questions from real couples dealing with betrayal, broken trust, emotional disconnection, and the uncertainty of whether to stay or walk away. This is not about theory. It’s about intervention. You’ll learn: What to do immediately after discovering an affair Why most couples stay stuck (and how to break the cycle) The difference between remorse and real recovery How to rebuild trust, emotional safety, and connection When a marriage can be saved—and when it cannot If you’re in crisis, feeling lost, or trying to decide your next move, this podcast gives you clarity, direction, and a path forward. New episodes drop weekly.