02/19/2026
“Are you ever going to get over this?”
That question shows up in a lot of relationships after betrayal.
One partner is trying to name the hurt that still lives in their body.
Not to punish.
Not to keep score.
But to feel understood.
The other partner starts to deflect.
Redirect and ask when this will finally be done.
Here’s the hard truth:
That question is rarely about healing.
It’s about shame.
When someone has a fragile sense of self, their partner’s pain doesn’t land as “I’m hurting.” It lands as “You’re a bad person.”
So instead of responding with tenderness, the nervous system shifts into self-protection.
That’s when we hear:
“I’ve already apologized.”
“How long are we going to talk about this?”
“Why can’t you move on?”
Those aren’t heartless statements.
They’re defensive exits.
But betrayal doesn’t heal through explanations, timelines, or pressure to be done.
What heals is a safe, steady response...especially when the pain shows up again.
Here’s what that actually sounds like:
“I can hear how much this still hurts.”
“It makes sense that this comes back up.”
“I know this pain exists because of what I did.”
“I’m here. You don’t have to carry it alone right now.”
No arguing.
No correcting.
No asking when it will end.
When shame is running the show, empathy disappears.
And when empathy disappears, repair can’t happen.
A relationship cannot heal when one partner needs the other to stop hurting in order to feel okay about themselves.
Low self-esteem doesn’t always look insecure.
Sometimes it looks like impatience, shutdown, or demanding closure.
Healing doesn’t come from moving on.
It comes from staying present, again and again, until the nervous system learns it’s safe.
And that requires more than remorse.
It requires inner security:
The ability to face what you did and remain emotionally available.
If the pain keeps coming up, it isn’t failure.
It’s the moment trust is still asking for your warm, tender presence.