Understanding Infidelity and Its Impact on Relationships
The discovery of infidelity is one of the most traumatic relationship experiences a person can face. It does not just reveal an action – it retroactively rewrites the history of the relationship, calls into question everything that felt true and safe, and produces a trauma response in the betrayed partner that shares many features with PTSD: intrusive thoughts, hypervigilance to further deception, flashbacks, and the complete disruption of the basic sense of safety in the relationship. The aftermath of infidelity is complex for both partners. The betrayed partner oscillates between rage and grief, between the impulse to leave and the pull toward the relationship. The partner who had the affair navigates shame, the loss of the affair relationship, the task of being present to a partner’s pain they have caused, and often a confrontation with aspects of their own needs and choices that require serious examination. Most couples who come to therapy following infidelity have not yet decided whether they are trying to rebuild or separate – and that uncertainty is appropriate. Therapy does not presume the answer.

Therapists Offering Infidelity and Affairs Support
About Infidelity and Affairs Therapy
Why seek therapy?
Couples seek therapy following infidelity for a range of reasons: to process the immediate crisis of discovery and establish enough stability to make decisions; to understand what led to the affair; to decide whether to attempt to rebuild; to navigate the complex trust repair process if they have decided to try; or when an attempt at repair has stalled and neither partner knows how to move forward. Both partners seeking their own individual therapy alongside couples work is often the most effective approach.
How therapy helps
Couples therapy for infidelity provides the structure and skilled facilitation that this work specifically requires – because the emotional intensity of infidelity typically makes productive conversation impossible without therapeutic support. It creates the conditions for the betrayed partner to express the full impact of the betrayal and for that to be genuinely heard. It facilitates the honest examination of what led to the affair. It supports the decision about whether and how to rebuild. And if the couple chooses to rebuild, it guides the complex, non-linear process of trust repair – which cannot be rushed and requires specific therapeutic skill.
Benefits of Infidelity and Affairs Therapy
Skilled Support for an Impossible Conversation
The conversations that infidelity requires – about the full impact of the betrayal, about what led to the affair, about whether and how to move forward – are among the hardest conversations a couple can have. Therapy provides the structure and facilitation that makes those conversations possible.
A Framework for the Decision
Most couples following infidelity are consumed by the question of what to do. Therapy does not answer that question for you – but it creates the conditions for both partners to make that decision with greater clarity, understanding, and genuine agency rather than from the fog of acute crisis.
A Real Path to Rebuilding – If That Is What Both Partners Choose
Rebuilding after infidelity is genuinely possible – and research on couples who do this work shows that relationships can emerge from infidelity stronger than they were before. But it requires a specific, carefully guided process that most couples cannot navigate without skilled therapeutic support.
Infidelity is one of the hardest things a relationship can face. Skilled support makes a real difference.
Start Feeling Better.
Our Hamilton couples therapists provide specialized, compassionate support for infidelity and affair recovery – conducting more couples therapy sessions per year than any clinic in Ontario. No referral needed. Book online or call (905) 962-2220. Evening and weekend appointments available in person in Hamilton or online anywhere in Ontario.
Our Approach to Infidelity Couples Therapy
Infidelity couples therapy at Empire follows a phased approach specifically developed for affair recovery. The first phase focuses on crisis stabilization: establishing enough safety and structure for both partners to begin processing the discovery without the acute trauma response making all conversation impossible.
The second phase examines meaning: understanding what led to the affair, what needs it was meeting, and what it reveals about the relationship. This is not about excusing the affair – it is about understanding it, which is necessary for any genuine decision about the future.
The third phase addresses the decision: the honest, genuinely informed examination of whether both partners want to attempt to rebuild – and what that would require. Therapy does not push toward staying or leaving; it creates the conditions for a genuine decision.
The fourth phase, for couples who choose to rebuild, is trust repair: the long, non-linear process of rebuilding the safety, transparency, and emotional connection that infidelity has destroyed. This phase requires specific therapeutic skill and cannot be rushed.

Common Questions About Infidelity and Affairs Therapy
Can a relationship actually recover from infidelity?
Yes – and research on couples who do this work shows that those who successfully navigate affair recovery often describe their relationship as stronger and more honest than it was before the affair. This is not guaranteed, and it requires sustained effort from both partners. But it is genuinely possible.
Should I come to couples therapy before I have decided whether to stay?
Yes. Couples therapy is not only for couples who have decided to stay. It is often most valuable in the early period after discovery, when both partners are in crisis and need skilled support to process what has happened before any decisions are made.
The affair ended months ago but I cannot stop thinking about it. Is that normal?
Yes. The intrusive thoughts, the hypervigilance, and the inability to stop imagining details of the affair are hallmark features of betrayal trauma. They are not a sign that you are weak or cannot move on – they are a trauma response that responds to appropriate therapeutic support.
Is a referral required?
No. You can book directly online or by calling (905) 962-2220.
History of Infidelity and Affairs Treatment
Evolution of Treatment
The clinical treatment of infidelity has evolved significantly from approaches that primarily focused on whether to save the marriage, toward more nuanced models that recognize the full complexity of the aftermath – for both partners – and provide structured support for the decision-making and repair process. The recognition of betrayal trauma as a genuine trauma response with features similar to PTSD has been particularly important in shifting therapy from a purely relational focus to one that also addresses the individual psychological impact of infidelity.
A Modern Approach in Canada
Current best practice in Canada approaches infidelity through a phased model that addresses crisis stabilization, meaning-making, decision-support, and – if chosen – trust repair. EFT provides the primary framework for the trust repair work. Both individual therapy for each partner alongside the couples work is increasingly recognized as the most effective approach to infidelity recovery.
Infidelity does not have to be the end of your story. Skilled support helps you write what comes next.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
No referral needed. Our Hamilton couples therapists provide specialized, compassionate infidelity therapy – with more couples therapy experience than any clinic in Ontario. Book online today or call (905) 962-2220. Evening and weekend appointments available in person in Hamilton or online anywhere in Ontario.