Self-Blame or Responsibility? After Betrayal
Eighty-seven percent of betrayed partners blame themselves. Not because they caused the betrayal. Because self-blame is the mind's most affordable option when the alternative costs everything.
In this solo episode, Dr. Lia Roth breaks down one of the most misunderstood psychological moves people make after being betrayed — the kind that sounds like maturity, feels like honesty, and quietly keeps the wrong person off the hook.
You'll learn why self-blame is not a cognitive distortion but a cost-benefit calculation. Why it protects the betrayer more than it protects you. What the research calls the "psychic reversal" — and what Binary Relationship Theory calls it. And why giving up self-blame does not mean you had no part in the relationship. It means something more precise, and harder.
Dr. Roth also draws a distinction most conversations about betrayal collapse: the difference between self-blame and self-betrayal. Self-blame says "I caused this." Self-betrayal says "I can see where I abandoned myself while trying not to lose the relationship." They are not the same thing. The confusion between them is where most people get stuck.
What you will hear in this episode:
— The function of self-blame and why it is a cost-benefit calculation, not a distortion
— The psychic reversal: how the betrayed person becomes the crime scene while the betrayer becomes background
— The difference between characterological self-blame, behavioral self-blame, and self-betrayal — and why the third is the one worth examining
— How roles (Fixer, Performer, Martyr, Ghost) each produce their own version of self-blame — and what they are all avoiding
— What responsibility actually asks, and what it does not
— When forgiveness enters, and why it is not the goal
This episode draws on the theoretical framework developed in Binary Relationship Theory, found in Get in or Get Out, But Don’t Stay in the Freakn’ Middle, the forthcoming book Not Anymore, and the following works:
Cornish, M. A., Maddikunta, S. R., Grey, C. J., Horton, A. J., & Cabirou, L. O. (2026). Trait responses after interpersonal offending: A dyadic examination of effects on romantic relationship quality. Journal of Family Psychology.
Freyd, J. J. (1994). Betrayal trauma: Traumatic amnesia as an adaptive response to childhood abuse. Ethics & Behavior, 4(4), 307–329. — The 1996 book is also citable: Freyd, J. J. (1996). Betrayal trauma: The logic of forgetting childhood abuse. Harvard University Press.
Goldsmith, R. E., Chesney, S. A., Heath, N. M., & Barlow, M. R. (2013). Emotion regulation difficulties mediate associations between betrayal trauma and symptoms of posttraumatic stress, depression, and anxiety. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 26(3), 376–384.
Hollenbeck, C. M., & Steffens, B. (2024). Betrayal trauma anger: Clinical implications for therapeutic treatment based on the sexually betrayed partner's experience related to anger after intimate betrayal. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy.
Janoff-Bulman, R. (1979). Characterological versus behavioral self-blame: Inquiries into depression and rape. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37(10), 1798–1809.
Pitcho, S. (2026). The perpetrator–others–self (POS) economic model of blame among interpersonal trauma survivors. American Psychologist. [Volume/issue/pages not yet confirmed — verify at APA PsycNet before publication]