From Betrayal To Breakthrough

Dr. Debi Silber

The betrayal of a family member, partner, friend, etc. can create physical, mental and emotional challenges. If left unhealed, it impacts us personally and professionally. The From Betrayal to Breakthrough podcast shares insights from the best therapists, coaches, healers, thought leaders and everyday people, combined with the findings of a recent Ph.D. study on betrayal to help you move forward and heal...once and for all.

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    471: How to Be a Friend in an Unfriendly World

    What does it actually take to be a good friend — to others and to yourself? In this rich conversation, Dr. Debi sits down with award-winning filmmaker, Columbia University faculty member, and author Barnet Bain to explore the surprising truth about why so many of us struggle in friendships: we never learned how. Drawing from his course on relationships taught at Columbia and his new book How to Be a Friend in an Unfriendly World, Barnet unpacks the invisible programming we carry from childhood, the neuroscience of emotional imprinting, and the practical steps toward becoming someone who can truly show up — for others and for yourself.  Guest: Barnet Bain  Barnet Bain is an award-winning Hollywood filmmaker, author, and educator who served on the faculty at Columbia University, where he taught a master's-level course called Artistry and Personal Spirituality — a deeply relational and psychological exploration of how we connect with others. His work spans film, writing, and teaching, all rooted in a lifelong inquiry into what it means to be in authentic relationship.  📖 Book: How to Be a Friend in an Unfriendly World — available in bookstores and online, including Amazon   🌐 Website: www.barnetbain.com  What You'll Hear in This Episode  Why no one actually taught us how to be a friend We learned to say please and thank you. We learned to compete and succeed. But nobody ever sat us down and said: here's what to do when feelings are hurt, here'show to stay connected when things are awkward, here's how to not quietly drift apart from people you love. Those foundational relational skills were simply never taught.  The "hand-me-down" beliefs running your relationships From infancy through school and beyond, we absorb beliefs, opinions, and emotional patterns — not through deliberate instruction, but by osmosis. Most of us have never questioned whether these beliefs are actually true or originally ours. Barnet describes the startling realization that one of his first original thoughts was simply: has any thought I've ever had actually been my own?  Molecules of Emotion and in-utero imprinting Inspired by Dr. Candace Pert's groundbreaking work, Barnet explains how emotional patterns can be imprinted before birth. A mother's inner emotional life — her fears, her relationship to the father, her feelings about becoming a parent — all have biochemical correlates that are shared with her unborn child. Add to that the research on generational trauma (the famous cherry blossom/mouse study gets a mention), and it becomes clear: we are carrying far more than our own story.  State-bound experiences: why we react from the past, not the present One of the most compelling concepts in this episode. A state-bound experience is when a present-day stimulus — a song, a smell, a tone of voice — instantly calls up an emotional state from long ago, triggering an old response in a new situation. Most of our reactions to difficult moments in relationships aren't really about now — they're old programs running on autopilot.  The sunburn analogy When you have a sunburn and someone slaps you on the back, your reaction isn't really about them — it's about the unhealed wound. The same is true emotionally. An outsized reaction to something someone says or does is almost always a signal: there's a sunburn here that hasn't healed. The path forward isn't to blame the person who touched it — it's to tend to the wound.  Reactions vs. responses A reaction is automatic, coming from the sunburn. A response is what becomes possible when you slow down enough to recognize: this isn't about now. That pause — that moment of awareness — is where choice enters.  You can't be a better friend to others than you are to yourself This one lands differently when you hear it in the context of betrayal healing. Many of us have been great friends to others while running a brutal inner monologue toward ourselves. That kind of friendship isn't sustainable — and it often has less to do with love and more to do with trying to feel worthy. Real friendship starts inside.  The ingredients of genuine friendship  Safety first — not bubble wrap, but the kind of safety where vulnerability isn't weaponized. Can your friend say something honest and messy about you without you flinching, deflecting, or lashing out? That's a growth edge worth paying attention to.  Consistency over intensity — friendships fade when left to convenience. Like a rose garden, they require regular tending. A simple text: "Thinking of you — no reply needed."  Undivided presence — put down the device. Look someone in the eye. Be with them. Your presence, undistracted, is one of the greatest gifts you can offer another human being.  Making friends as adults It's harder — not because people are less friendly, but because the organic conditions that once created connection (same classroom, same playground) no longer exist. Building friendships in adulthood requires the same intentionality you'd bring to anything else that matters.  A Note from Dr. Debi  This episode carries a special resonance for anyone healing from betrayal. So much of what Barnet describes — the unquestioned beliefs, the state-bound reactions, the sunburn — shows up directly in the aftermath of being hurt by someone you trusted. Healing isn't just about moving on from what happened. It's about becoming conscious of the old programming so you can choose differently. That's exactly the work.  Resources Mentioned  Molecules of Emotion by Dr. Candace Pert  The Biology of Belief by Dr. Bruce Lipton  Barnet Bain's website: www.barnetbain.com  How to Be a Friend in an Unfriendly World by Barnet Bain — available wherever books are sold  The PBT Institute: https://thepbtinstitute.com/  Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe to From Betrayal to Breakthrough and leave a review — it helps more people find their way from betrayal to breakthrough.

    38 min
  2. 20 APR

    470: The Wall That Protected You Is Now Your Prison

    TRIGGER WARNING: CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE In this powerful and important episode, Dr. Debi sits down with Chris Yadon, Executive Director of Saprea, a nonprofit dedicated to the prevention of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) and healing for survivors. Chris shares his own journey — growing up amid instability, learning to emotionally numb as a child — and how that personal experience became the foundation for his professional mission at Saprea.  Together, Dr. Debi and Chris explore why childhood sexual abuse is such a uniquely devastating betrayal: in 80% of cases, the perpetrator is someone the child knows and trusts. They unpack the psychology of trauma bonding, betrayal blindness, and why survivors often don't recognize the abuse as abnormal until young adulthood. Chris explains the three forces that keep CSA under-reported — shame, trauma bonding, and perpetrator threats — and why these silencers persist well into adulthood.  They also discuss the lasting impacts of unhealed childhood sexual abuse, including sobering statistics: 85% of survivors who don't address their trauma will develop a mental health disorder by age 30, and survivors are three times more likely to attempt suicide than the general population. From substance use to eating disorders, anxiety to depression, the cost of not healing is profound — and it shows up at work, in relationships, and in every corner of life.  Chris shares Saprea's prevention model, the role parents and caregivers play in reducing risk on both sides, and how healing can begin at any age. He closes with a beautiful, hope-filled story of Kaya Noah — a survivor whose emotional walls came down in a snowfall — and three memorable takeaways about connection, community, and courage.  If you or someone you love is a survivor, this episode carries a clear and compassionate message: healing is possible. And the resources are free.  🔗 Learn more: saprea.org   📌 Find Chris on LinkedIn or Substack: search "Yadon"    Dr. Debi sits down with Chris Yadon of Saprea to explore childhood sexual abuse — what makes it so psychologically damaging, why it stays hidden, how it shows up in adult relationships and the workplace, and most importantly, how healing is possible at any age.

    33 min
  3. 13 APR

    469: What Do You Want to Be When You Grow Up?

    In this reflective solo episode, Dr. Debi Silber shares an unexpected gift that came from a two-week battle with pneumonia — the forced stillness to ask herself one of life's most enduring questions: What do you want to be when you grow up?  With her daughter's wedding just days away, Dr. Debi opens up about how illness slowed her down enough to take stock of what she's outgrown, what she's still settling for, and what she truly wants in this season of life. The result is a warm, honest, and deeply practical conversation about becoming more intentional — with your time, your energy, your relationships, and yourself.    In This Episode, You'll Hear:  Why the question "What do you want to be when you grow up?" deserves a second (and third) look — at every age  What a recent unprepared interview guest taught Dr. Debi about standards and saying no  The "Sit in the Seat" game Dr. Debi played with her family — and what it revealed about how she actually shows up  The yes/no confusion that keeps so many of us stuck — and how to start untangling it  How to use your body as a meter for who and what is truly good for you  The "cake ingredients" framework: what you're putting into your life, and why the outcome makes perfect sense  Why we become more of whatever we already are as we age — and why that's both a warning and an invitation    Reflection Questions from This Episode:  What have you outgrown?  What are you still settling for?  What do you want your life to look, feel, and sound like now?  What are you saying yes to — and what does that force you to say no to?  If your highest and best self were watching, what would she say?    Key Insight:  "It starts with awareness. The next step is action."    Connect with Dr. Debi Silber:  🌐 thepbtinstitute.com 📲 Follow on social: @DebiSilber 🎙️ Subscribe to From Betrayal to Breakthrough wherever you listen to podcasts    If this episode resonated with you, Dr. Debi would love to hear from you — what do YOU want to become more of as you grow?

    20 min
  4. 6 APR

    468: From Stuckness to Self-Love: A Journey Through the Stages

    In this deeply personal episode, Dr. Debi Silber is joined by her daughter Camryn for a candid, behind-the-scenes conversation about what it really looks like to get stuck in Stage Three — not because of a betrayal by someone else, but through our own patterns, thoughts, and avoidance. Camryn's story is one of extraordinary intelligence, world travel, and deep self-awareness ultimately leading to the most important journey of all: inward.  If you've ever wondered what Stage Three looks and feels like from the inside — or suspected that your coping strategies might actually be keeping you stuck — this episode is for you.  Meet Camryn  Holds a Master's degree with a background in psychology  Multilingual and a seasoned world traveler  Deep empath with a gift for feeling collective emotion  Now living in Asia — a move born from genuine inner clarity, not escape    Camryn has always been the kind of person who sees the world differently — comfortable in spaces of authenticity (nature, animals, children, the elderly) and deeply uncomfortable with the masks and performance of social life. As a teenager, she deleted social media entirely because of how it made her feel. That instinct, long before it was a cultural conversation, tells you everything about who she is.  Key Themes & Takeaways  What Stage Three Really Looks Like  Stage Three — that place of surviving but not thriving — doesn't always look like suffering from the outside. Sometimes it looks like adventure. Camryn's version of Stage Three involved living in different countries, absorbing languages and cultures, sleeping in hostels, spending every dollar on experiences. From the outside: impressive. From the inside: a beautifully camouflaged method of avoiding herself.    Dr. Debi draws a powerful parallel: just as some people numb with TV, alcohol, or overwork (all things that can look productive), Camryn's distraction was world travel — something that genuinely fed her AND kept her from staying still long enough to look inward.  The Belief That Starts It All  Dr. Debi shares one of her most-used teaching examples: a little boy with exciting news, shushed by his mother on the phone. In that moment, he might decide: "I don't matter." From there, everything confirms it — the car that cuts him off, the door that closes in his face. That core belief shapes who he dates, what he accepts, what he tolerates.    The takeaway: we all carry a story. The work is finding out what story we've been telling ourselves — and whether it's true.  Escaping Yourself (And Why It Doesn't Work)  No matter where you go, you take your thoughts with you. Camryn describes the experience of arriving somewhere new — forced to think differently because the environment demanded it — and then slowly, inevitably, watching the same unhealed patterns creep back in. The breakthrough moment came before a planned move to New Zealand. A quiet, honest question: What do you think New Zealand is going to do for you?    The answer was nothing. And that nothing was everything.  The New Zealand Moment: Recognizing the Pattern  This is the kind of moment that changes things. Not dramatic. Not loud. Just a pause, a look between mother and daughter, and a recognition that the pattern had been named. That's the beginning of Stage Four — when the fog lifts just enough to see what's been happening.  Fear vs. Intuition: How to Tell the Difference  One of the most practical and powerful parts of this conversation: how do you know if a decision is coming from your gut or from your fear?    Camryn shares her process — sitting with a decision, asking whether the pull is expansive or constricting, whether it comes from the head (noisy, arguing, rationalizing) or something quieter and steadier underneath. The mind can convince you of anything. Intuition doesn't need to argue.    She also shares the question she comes back to when facing a big decision: What would my oldest self have wanted? That question cuts through the noise of other people's opinions, social pressure, and fear.  Honoring Others' Opinions — Without Being Ruled by Them  When Camryn decided to move across the world from a close, loving family, there were feelings. Dr. Debi shares honestly that it wasn't "don't go" — it was "we'll miss you." And Camryn learned to hold that with love, express gratitude for the input, take her time, and then follow her own inner compass anyway.    This is self-love in action. Not selfishness. Knowing yourself well enough to trust what you know.  Being an Empath: Gift and Challenge  Camryn is a deep empath — someone who doesn't just sympathize but actually feels the emotional energy of people around her, including collective pain. This explains so much: her comfort with children and animals (no judgment, no masks), her discomfort with performative social environments, and her need to move, process, and release what she absorbs.    Dr. Debi reflects on her own journey to understanding empathy — not realizing she was an empath until 50, spending decades thinking she was "too sensitive." Camryn's empathy is even more acute, and learning to recognize what's hers versus what she's absorbing from others has been part of her healing.    The flip side: empaths feel highs as intensely as lows. A bird. A rainbow. A baby laughing. Brought to tears of pure joy. That's not weakness — that's a gift, when it's understood and channeled.  Ripping Off the Band-Aid  Camryn's approach to fear has always been extreme: if something scares her, she goes straight at it. No gradual exposure — full immersion. It's how she processes. It's not the only way, but it's hers, and it works precisely because she knows herself well enough to trust it.    She also has a clear filter: she won't do something just because it challenges a fear. The fear has to be worth facing. The experience has to align with who she is. That discernment is Stage Five wisdom.  Quotable Moments  "We put ourselves in a stage three trap — sometimes through betrayal, sometimes through our own doing."  "You take the same thoughts, the same everything with you — except you'd be forced to think differently because you were in a new culture."  "What do you think New Zealand is going to do for you?"  "My oldest self would have wanted this."  "The mind can put you in a prison — and convince you the only escape is to escape."  "It's all a journey to self-love. Moving through betrayal completely, the five stages, overcoming whatever it is — it's all a journey to self-love."  The Five Stages Connection  This episode is a real-life illustration of the Five Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™ — not as something that happens only after someone hurts you, but as a map for anyone who has gotten stuck in survival mode:    Stage 1 — The Setup: The beliefs and patterns laid down early that shape how we move through the world  Stage 2 — The Breakdown: The moment something cracks open — could be a betrayal, could be a quiet realization  Stage 3 — Survival: Functional on the outside, stuck on the inside — sometimes disguised as productivity, adventure, or achievement  Stage 4 — The Shift: A moment of honest recognition — like the New Zealand conversation  Stage 5 — Healing & Thriving: Living from a place of genuine self-knowledge, self-trust, and self-love  Resources & Next Steps  Learn more about the Five Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™ framework: https://thepbtinstitute.com   Share this episode with someone who seems to be "thriving" on the outside but you sense is stuck on the inside

    40 min
  5. 30 MAR

    467: Healing Betrayal Through the Subconscious Mind

    From Betrayal to Breakthrough with Dr. Debi Silber | Guest: Peter McLaughlin    About Peter McLaughlin  Peter McLaughlin is a certified hypnotherapist and founder of Blue Sky Hypnosis. After being diagnosed simultaneously with Lyme disease and leukemia 23 years ago — and given just 10 years to live — Peter embarked on a profound healing journey that led him from Wall Street and a 50-person security company in Westchester, New York, into the world of mind-body medicine and hypnotherapy. Trained through a program founded by a former paramedic and focused on the medical applications of hypnosis, Peter also served as a volunteer firefighter and EMT, giving him a unique frontline perspective on trauma, shock, and the human response to crisis. Today he helps clients heal from emotional trauma — including infidelity, betrayal, and abuse — using hypnotherapy, havening, and subconscious reprogramming.    Episode Overview  In this episode, Dr. Debi sits down with Peter McLaughlin to explore the profound and often hidden role the subconscious mind plays in betrayal recovery. Peter shares his remarkable personal story of survival, and then dives deep into the tools and techniques — including hypnotherapy, the pendulum, the sway test, havening, and hypnotic regression — that can help betrayal survivors release the trauma stored in the body, update the subconscious mind, and finally break free from the cycle of chronic stress and pain.    Key Topics Discussed  Peter's life-altering dual diagnosis of Lyme disease and leukemia — and the journey it sparked  Why the body is a feedback mechanism and how it signals unresolved trauma  The subconscious mind, the autonomic nervous system, and the "safe vs. dangerous" classification system  How betrayal gets lodged in the subconscious with no concept of time — and why healing requires updating that  The power of epigenetics: how chronic stress upregulates dangerous genes, and how healing can reverse that  What hypnotherapy is and how it differs from what most people imagine  Havening: a rapid, EMDR-adjacent technique for releasing trauma — and when it doesn't work  Hypnotic regression: going back to the moment of trauma to reprocess, reframe, and re-heal  Working with guilt and shame as the root cause of blocked healing  The pendulum and the sway test as tools for accessing subconscious wisdom  How every major decision is ultimately emotional — and what that means for recovery  The spiritual dimension of healing: trauma as a wake-up call, not a life sentence  What it looks and feels like when you've truly healed: the body stops being hijacked    Memorable Quotes  "The diagnosis of leukemia wasn't the title of the book of my life. It was a chapter in there."  — Peter McLaughlin  "Every single decision we make is ultimately an emotional decision — and then our conscious mind steps in to justify it. The conscious mind is basically like a lawyer."  — Peter McLaughlin  "The subconscious mind has no concept of time. It could have happened 30 years ago and it's still treating it like a clear and present danger."  — Peter McLaughlin  "Toxins don't just take a physical form. They also take an energetic or emotional form. When you suffer a trauma, it gets lodged within you and begins exerting its effects."  — Peter McLaughlin  "You are not broken. You are already magnificence, endowed by God with a magnificence inside of you. None of this is a litmus test of your worth."  — Peter McLaughlin  "If I didn't go through my betrayals, I never would have entered the PhD program. The five stages would never have been discovered. That's trauma well served."  — Dr. Debi Silber    Key Concepts Explained  Havening  A therapeutic technique similar to EMDR that uses gentle touch on specific areas of the body to help release trauma stored in the nervous system. Peter finds it highly effective and fast-acting — but notes it doesn't work when a client is carrying unresolved guilt or shame, which blocks the subconscious from accepting relief.  Hypnotic Regression  A technique in which the therapist guides the client back — hypnotically — to the original moment of trauma. From there, the client can reprocess the event, release guilt, and even "negotiate" with the younger part of themselves still holding the pain. Often, an adult client works with their own younger self to provide the wisdom, protection, and reasoning that wasn'tavailable at the time.  The Pendulum & The Sway Test  Both are ideomotor tools — ways of accessing the body's subconscious signals. A pendulum amplifies micro-movements in the hand to indicate yes/no responses. The sway test involves standing and noticing whether your body leans forward (toward something safe or true) or backward (away from something negative or false). These tools can help identify buried emotions, assess the intensity of trauma, and track healing progress.  Epigenetics & Healing  Epigenetics refers to the way our environment — including our emotional state — turns genes on or off. Chronic stress upregulates genes associated with disease. Releasing emotional trauma and shifting out of fight-or-flight mode can change genetic expression in a healing direction.  What Healing Looks Like  According to Peter, you know you've truly healed when:  The physiological "hijacking" stops — your heart no longer races, your palms no longer sweat when you think about what happened  Intrusive thoughts fade and nightmares diminish  You can be in the same circumstances that once triggered you without the same emotional response  The emotional charge is gone — not repressed, but genuinely resolved  The pendulum registers a zero on the intensity scale where it once showed a 10    Connect with Peter McLaughlin  Website (relationship focus): PeterMcLaughlin.com  Website (hypnosis & broader topics): BlueSkyHypnosis.com  YouTube: 250+ free videos on hypnosis, hypnotherapy, overcoming infidelity trauma, divorce trauma, and more    Resources from Dr. Debi & The PBT Institute  Learn about the PBT Certification Program for coaches, therapists, and practitioners  Get the book: UNSTUCK — The Practitioner's Guide to Moving Betrayal Clients from Survival to Transformation  Subscribe to the From Betrayal to Breakthrough podcast for more expert conversations like this one    If this episode resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear that healing is possible — and that what happened to them is not permanent, and not a reflection of their worth.

    32 min
  6. 23 MAR

    466: Turning 60: What Six Decades Taught Me About Betrayal, Life & Becoming

    This is a milestone episode — Dr. Debi is celebrating her 60th birthday, and she's marking the occasion by sharing six of her greatest life lessons, one for each decade. Whether you're in the thick of healing from betrayal or simply looking for some wisdom to carry you forward, these lessons are deeply personal, hard-won, and universally relatable.  What You'll Hear in This Episode:  Lesson 1: Hard Now, Easy Later (or Easy Now, Hard Later — Take Your Pick) The philosophy Dr. Debi has lived and taught for 34+ years. Every choice falls into one of these two categories. Choosing the hard path now — whether it's healing, setting new boundaries, or making difficult changes — creates the ease later. Skipping it just means carrying the weight longer.  Lesson 2: Trust Your Gut — It Never Lies From founding the PBT Institute to going back for her PhD at 50 to knowing her family wasn't complete, Dr. Debi's biggest leaps of faith have all followed her intuition. People may think you're crazy. Trust the knowing anyway.  Lesson 3: Fear of the Unknown vs. Shoulda, Coulda, Woulda Dr. Debi has trained herself to find the regret that stings less — and for her, that's always trying something and failing over never trying at all. Life is short. Her mom passed at 57, and this year marks the third year Dr. Debi has outlived her. That puts everything in perspective.  Lesson 4: Health Is Everything This is the only body you have. Dr. Debi shares her long-standing commitment to movement, nutrition, sleep, meaningful relationships, and sun — and gets real about the one area she's still working on: stress and rumination. Progress, not perfection.  Lesson 5: Integrity Doing the right thing even when no one's looking. It makes life simpler — fewer lies to track, fewer masks to wear, and the deep peace of knowing your word means something. As Dr. Debi puts it: 100% is easier than 99%.  Lesson 6: Be a Lifelong Learner — Try Things On If you see something you admire in someone else, try it. If it fits, make it yours. If it doesn't (like "Deborah"), drop it with zero guilt. Dr. Debi shares how she became a hugger and learned to make people feel like the only person in the room — both borrowed from people she deeply admired.  Bonus Lesson: Stop Being So Hard on Yourself Be your own best friend. Your best is good enough. And if you find yourself doing the same frustrating things you've always done? Simply adorable. (She means it.)    Mentioned in This Episode:  UNSTUCK: The Practitioner's Guide to Moving Betrayal Clients from Survival to Transformation — Dr. Debi's newest book  The PBT (Post Betrayal Transformation) Institute  The PBT Certified Coach/Practitioner Program  The Five Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™  National Forgiveness Day — September 1  Dr. Debi's two TEDx talks (combined 2M+ views)  The From Betrayal to Breakthrough podcast (460+ episodes)    Connect with Dr. Debi:  Website: thepbtinstitute.com  Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn: @debisilber    Loved this episode? Share it with someone who needs it, and let Dr. Debi know which lesson resonated most — she'd genuinely love to hear from you.  Dr. Debi Silber celebrates 60 with six hard-won life lessons — one per decade — on intuition, integrity, health, fear, lifelong learning, and why hard now always beats easy later.

    37 min
  7. 16 MAR

    465: From Tragedy to Transformation — Jarrod Barakett's Story of Resilience, Healing & the Power of Frequency

    What happens when life keeps knocking you down — job loss, divorce, the death of a child, a failing business, a spinal crisis — and you keep getting back up anyway? In this powerful episode, Dr. Debi sits down with Jarrod Barakett , President of Light Systems, to explore one of the most remarkable resilience stories you'll ever hear. Jarrod Barakett's journey is a masterclass in accountability, forward-focused thinking, and the healing power of frequency — and his message will stay with you long after the episode ends.  About Jarrod Barakett   Jarrod Barakat is the President of Light Systems, a global wellness technology company with centers in dozens of countries worldwide. Jarrod has rebuilt his life multiple times through tragedy, betrayal, and loss. He's a passionate advocate for personal accountability, intentional living, and the body's innate capacity to heal.  What You'll Hear in This Episode  How a jealous boss ended Jarrod's 30-year career in golf — and what he did the very next morning that set the tone for everything that followed  Why Jarrod refused to ask "why me?" and instead asked "what's next?" — and the visualization practice his father taught him at age 8 that made this possible  The devastating loss of his 12-year-old daughter in a boating accident in 2018, and how he found the will to keep going  How a business partner's addiction cost Jarrod what was meant to be his retirement — and why he still refuses to see himself as a victim  The spinal crisis that left him facing potential paralysis, and the technology that helped him return to the gym at week 10 (when doctors said wait six months)  Why Jarrod tried three therapists and found that his support network of close friends and family served him better — and what that teaches us about finding the right healing path for you  The concept of personal accountability as a healing tool: how Jarrod came to understand that the frequency we put out shapes everything around us  Key Takeaways  Betrayal doesn't have to define your trajectory. Jarrod was fired by a jealous boss after a 30-year career. His response: shower, get dressed, go to the "office" — even when the office was an unfinished basement. He never stopped showing up.  Forward focus is a decision. The lesson Jarrod taught his daughter — and lives himself — is to stop thinking about what was and start thinking about what will be. It sounds simple. It isn't. It's a daily, intentional choice.  Grief doesn't have a timeline, but responsibility doesn't pause. After losing his daughter, Jarrod returned to work within two weeks — not because he was healed, but because his family needed him. He shares this honestly, without pretending it was the right call, but with deep insight into what kept him moving.  Your support system is everything. When tragedy strikes, the people you've invested in over a lifetime show up. Fifty friends flew in from Montreal and Boston for his daughter's funeral. That network was decades in the making.  You are 100% accountable — and that's actually empowering. Jarrod's most powerful insight: if you are fully accountable for every outcome in your life, then you are also fully capable of changing your future. The power is yours.  The body responds to frequency. After emergency spinal surgery, Jarrod discovered Light Systems technology — and went from excruciating post-surgical pain to training in the gym at week 10. The body knows how to heal when we give it what it needs.  Resources & Links  Find Jarrod on Instagram: @ JarrodBarakett   Learn more about Light Systems technology and find a center near you: lightsystems.com  If This Episode Resonated With You...  If you've experienced betrayal — whether by a person, a business partner, or life itself — and you're wondering how to find your way through, this conversation is proof that the human spirit is more resilient than we imagine. Share this episode with someone who needs it today.  When life delivers blow after blow — job loss, divorce, the death of a child, business betrayal, spinal surgery — how do you keep getting back up? Jarrod Barakett shares his raw, remarkable story of resilience, accountability, and healing through the power of frequency and forward-focused thinking.

    31 min
  8. 9 MAR

    464: Why Betrayal Is a Different Type of Trauma (And Why It Needs a Different Way to Heal)

    Dr. Debi Silber breaks down exactly why betrayal hits differently than other types of trauma — and why understanding that difference is the key to actually healing from it. Drawing on her PhD research and work with over 100,000 people, Dr. Debi explains the three discoveries that changed everything, why so many people suffer in silence, and how coaches and practitioners can better serve clients who've been betrayed.  Key Topics Discussed  The Three Discoveries from Dr. Debi's PhD Research  Betrayal is a different type of trauma that requires a different way to heal  There is a specific collection of physical, mental, and emotional symptoms so common to betrayal it's now known as Post Betrayal Syndrome®  Healing is proven and predictable — there are Five Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™, and we know what happens at every stage and what it takes to move through each one  Why Betrayal Is Different from Other Traumas  With other traumas, you grieve and rebuild your life. With betrayal, you must rebuild both your life and yourself — your sense of identity, safety, confidence, worthiness, trust, and belonging are all shattered.  The person who caused the harm is typically the same person you would have turned to for support — making betrayal uniquely isolating.  Unlike other traumas that draw community support, betrayal often brings silence, minimization, or abandonment from those closest to you.  Many betrayed people suffer alone — embarrassed, humiliated, and ashamed over something that was done tothem.  The Trust Shattering Effect When the person you trusted most proves untrustworthy, it doesn't just damage trust in them — it destroys your entire internal system for discerning trustworthiness. You stop trusting yourself. This is why telling betrayal survivors to "just trust in a low-stakes situation" misses the mark entirely.  What This Means for Coaches and Practitioners  Post Betrayal Syndrome® and the Five Stages were not part of your coaching, therapy, or somatic training — and it's not your fault.  Your most resistant, cycling, or plateau-ing clients may be betrayal clients — even if they're coming to you for something completely unrelated (weight, gut issues, anxiety, leadership struggles, business blocks).  Stage Three looks like "I'm fine" — but fine is functional, not transformed. Knowing the language of each stage helps you recognize when a client is ready to move deeper rather than exit the process early.  47% of people who've been betrayed have a weight issue. 45% have gut or digestive issues. Healing the root (betrayal) heals the symptoms.  Resources Mentioned  UNSTUCK: The Practitioner's Guide to Moving Betrayal Clients from Survival to Transformation — Dr. Debi's newest book, available now with bonuses at thepbtinstitute.com/unstuck: https://thepbtinstitute.com/unstuck/   PBT Certification Program — the #1 betrayal recovery certification for life, business, health, and leadership coaches (ICF-approved): https://thepbtinstitute.com/get-certified/   Waitlist for working with a certified PBT Coach: thepbtinstitute.com  Connect with Dr. Debi   Website: thepbtinstitute.com https://thepbtinstitute.com    Podcast: From Betrayal to Breakthrough

    23 min

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The betrayal of a family member, partner, friend, etc. can create physical, mental and emotional challenges. If left unhealed, it impacts us personally and professionally. The From Betrayal to Breakthrough podcast shares insights from the best therapists, coaches, healers, thought leaders and everyday people, combined with the findings of a recent Ph.D. study on betrayal to help you move forward and heal...once and for all.

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