Porn, Betrayal, Sex and the Experts — PBSE

Steve Moore & Mark Kastleman

<p>Two sex addicts in long-term successful recovery are ALSO world-class mental health professionals who specialize in porn and sex addiction recovery. Drawing on 40 years of combined personal and professional experience, Mark and Steve get RAW and REAL about HOW to overcome addiction, heal betrayal trauma and save your marriage. If you're struggling with addiction—we get it. Recovery is hard. We've been there. We'll help you take the fight to your addiction like never before. If you're married to an addict—we KNOW what it's like to nearly destroy a marriage! We'll help you understand the world of your husband's addiction and begin healing your betrayal trauma, regardless of what he decides to do. You don't have to stay stuck. You don't have to keep suffering. We've made all the mistakes so you don't have to. Take back your life. Take back your marriage. Let's do this together! This is the PBSE podcast. </p>

  • 40 minutes 8 seconds
    The NECESSITY of Community in Recovery &amp; Healing for Addicts and Betrayed Partners

    In Episode 326, we highlight the critical truth that both addiction and betrayal trauma are fueled by isolation and secrecy, making community an essential part of the healing process. Addicts often withdraw due to shame and fear of judgment, while betrayed partners frequently feel alone, confused, and unable to share their reality with others. This shared isolation deepens pain on both sides and reinforces destructive cycles. However, when individuals step into a supportive recovery community, they begin to break that isolation, realizing they are not alone and that others truly understand their experience.

    Community plays several vital roles in recovery. It normalizes the experience by helping individuals overcome “terminal uniqueness” and recognize shared struggles. It provides accountability, which is nearly impossible to achieve in isolation, and helps individuals stay aligned with their values and recovery goals. It also offers outside perspective, clears distorted thinking, and creates opportunities to learn and practice healthy relational skills. Additionally, connection with others has a direct biological impact, helping regulate the nervous system and reduce stress responses, which is essential for both addicts and partners navigating emotional triggers.

    Perhaps most importantly, community sustains hope when it is most needed. Recovery is a long and difficult journey, and there will be times when individuals feel discouraged or question whether healing is possible. In those moments, seeing others who are further along the path provides reassurance and renewed motivation. Community becomes a place where individuals can borrow strength and belief from others until they can stand firmly again on their own. Ultimately, this article reinforces a foundational principle: true and lasting recovery does not happen alone—it happens in connection.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   The NECESSITY of Community in Recovery & Healing for Addicts and Betrayed Partners

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    31 March 2026, 2:00 am
  • 43 minutes 2 seconds
    Why Does My Heart Keep Moving Further Away . . . Even Though He’s Finally Trying?!

    Episode 325 centers on a betrayed partner who feels increasingly disconnected from her husband, even though he has recently begun making genuine recovery efforts. After ten years of repeated cycles of acting out, partial truth, gaslighting, and temporary repair, her nervous system has adapted to expect instability and harm. When full disclosure revealed that she had only known a fraction of the truth, it shattered her sense of reality and safety. As a result, her emotional distancing is not irrational—it reflects a deeper awareness that love does not equal trust or safety, and that her internal system is now prioritizing protection over connection.

    We explain that what she is experiencing is a combination of delayed trauma processing and the loss of attachment safety. For years, she functioned in survival mode, unable to fully process the magnitude of the betrayal. Now, as her partner begins to show effort, her brain finally has enough space to release what has been suppressed. This can make recovery feel worse in the short term, as deeper layers of grief, anger, and pain emerge. Importantly, recent effort from the addict does not immediately create safety or rebuild trust—those are established only through consistent, lived experiences of honesty, empathy, and reliability over time.

    Ultimately, healing in this relationship is possible, but only under very specific conditions. The addict must create a genuinely safe environment through full transparency and sustained behavioral change, while the partner must prioritize her own healing and boundaries. A critical part of this process is grieving the relationship she thought she had, which allows her to align with reality rather than illusion. We emphasize that her reactions are valid, her distance makes sense, and she is not broken—her heart is responding appropriately to years of harm and is guiding her toward truth, safety, and authentic healing.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:  Why Does My Heart Keep Moving Further Away . . .  Even Though He’s Finally Trying?!

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    24 March 2026, 3:00 am
  • 43 minutes 56 seconds
    Can I or We ever Heal from his Trickled Truths, Multiple D-Days and Ongoing Lies?!

    Many betrayed partners face the heartbreaking experience of trickle truth—when pieces of the truth about sexual betrayal emerge slowly over time instead of all at once. In this episode (324), we respond to a partner who experienced an initial discovery day involving pornography and prostitution, supported her husband’s recovery efforts, and went through formal disclosure, only to later discover evidence that he had lied during that process. The result was another devastating discovery day that left her questioning whether trust or healing could ever truly be possible. We explore how repeated dishonesty compounds trauma and why each new revelation can feel even more painful than the original betrayal.

    We also address several key dynamics present in situations like this, including the severe damage caused by ongoing lying, the role of hypervigilance and trauma triggers, and the importance of understanding why betrayed partners may react strongly to seemingly small behaviors, such as noticing their partner looking at other women. We further emphasize that physical aggression in a relationship is a serious safety issue that must be addressed immediately, because true intimacy and trust cannot exist in an environment where physical or emotional safety is compromised.

    Finally, we discuss what must happen if a couple hopes to rebuild after multiple discovery days. Healing is possible, but only when specific conditions are present: a complete and honest disclosure process, radical transparency, deep empathy from the addict, and consistent long-term recovery work. Trust is not rebuilt through promises or apologies but through reliable patterns of trustworthy behavior over time. When both partners are fully willing to engage in this process, even relationships that have experienced profound betrayal can move toward a future that is more honest, connected, and healthy than before.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   Can I or We ever Heal from his Trickled Truths, Multiple D-Days and Ongoing Lies?

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    16 March 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 55 minutes 26 seconds
    Can Someone Who Lived a Secret Sexual Life for 40 Years Ever be Truly Sober?

    In this episode (323), we address a heartbreaking submission from a betrayed partner who discovered that her husband of over forty years had been living a secret sexual life throughout their entire marriage. After decades of pornography use, strip clubs, and paid sexual encounters—hidden behind a carefully managed public image—she now finds herself asking the question many partners face after long-term betrayal: Can someone who has lived a double life for decades ever truly change? We begin by acknowledging the deep trauma caused by this kind of discovery while also reminding partners that their integrity, devotion, and sacrifices throughout the relationship remain real and meaningful despite the deception.

    We also explore several common dynamics that help explain how someone can maintain this level of secrecy for so long. Factors such as male sexual entitlement, fear of consequences, control of reputation, immature emotional coping strategies, and emotional objectification often play a role in sustaining addiction and deception. These are not excuses, but they can help both partners understand the psychological patterns that allowed the addiction to persist for so many years.

    Finally, we discuss what real recovery actually requires in situations like this. True sobriety is not instant, and claims of having no urges shortly after discovery are often a red flag. Long-term healing typically involves years of work, including formal therapeutic disclosure, deep exploration of the addiction’s roots, radical honesty, and consistent accountability. While the road forward is challenging, both individual healing and relationship recovery are possible when genuine transformation takes place and trust is rebuilt through sustained action over time.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   Can Someone Who Lived a Secret Sexual Life for 40 Years Ever be Truly Sober?

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    11 March 2026, 5:00 am
  • 45 minutes 19 seconds
    Relationship Healing Lives or Dies on "Consistent Transparency!"

    (PBSE Episode 322) In relationships impacted by pornography or sex addiction, the greatest damage often comes not only from the betrayal itself but from the pattern of secrecy and withheld truth that surrounds it. Many betrayed partners find themselves repeatedly uncovering the truth through investigation rather than receiving honesty freely from their partner. Even when couples pursue formal disclosure and verification processes, it is often impossible to know the past with absolute certainty. Because of this reality, healing cannot rely solely on reconstructing every detail of what happened before.

    Instead, trust is rebuilt by observing what is happening now. The key principle that determines whether recovery succeeds or fails is consistent transparency. This means the recovering addict begins volunteering information rather than waiting to be asked, sharing emotional insights instead of just surface-level facts, and openly discussing fears, struggles, and progress in recovery. It also means abandoning a lifestyle of secrecy and choosing to live visibly and honestly within the relationship.

    Consistent transparency also requires actions that match words and immediate accountability for any dishonesty. Over time, these behaviors create observable evidence of change that partners can rely on. As openness replaces secrecy, the relationship gradually becomes a place where both individuals can truly know each other. In this environment, partners can move forward not based on unanswered questions about the past, but on the growing trust that comes from honesty, vulnerability, and consistent integrity in the present.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:  Relationship Healing Lives or Dies on "Consistent Transparency!"

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    4 March 2026, 1:00 am
  • 42 minutes 48 seconds
    Guardrails or Walls? Moving from Sexual Aversion to Healthy Intimacy in Recovery

    Episode 321 addresses a vulnerable question from a man in recovery who fears he may have “overcorrected”—moving from sexual addiction to sexual numbness. After establishing over a year of sobriety, he wonders if suppressing his sexuality has led to aversion rather than health. We explain that this phase is not uncommon. Sobriety is essential, but it is only the beginning. When years of compulsive behavior have rewired the dopamine system, removing intense stimulation can initially feel flat. The brain and body require time to recalibrate, and during that process, desire may feel muted.

    We also explore the powerful role of shame and fear in suppressing healthy arousal. Many addicts carry beliefs that they no longer deserve sexual enjoyment because of the harm they caused. Unresolved shame can shut down vulnerability, which is essential for authentic intimacy. Additionally, medical variables such as stress and hormone imbalance should be ruled out, as libido is influenced by both emotional and biological factors. Healthy sexuality looks very different from addiction-driven intensity—it is relational, emotionally connected, and often built on appreciation rather than urgency.

    Ultimately, the goal of recovery is not sexual suppression but integration. Guardrails—healthy boundaries—are necessary to maintain safety, but walls built from fear prevent growth. As couples move from repair into creation, they can collaboratively define what authentic intimacy looks like for them. With patience, grace, and ongoing emotional connection, sexuality can evolve from something compulsive and destructive into a conscious, shared celebration of closeness and love.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:  Guardrails or walls—Moving from Sexual Aversion to Healthy Intimacy in Recovery 

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    25 February 2026, 12:00 pm
  • 46 minutes 1 second
    He has the Right to Completely Screw Up His Life!

    In episode 320, we address a betrayed partner’s heartbreaking story of separation turning into divorce as her husband’s addiction spirals further out of control. What was supposed to be a wake-up call instead became deeper indulgence, leaving her feeling disrespected, confused, and searching for closure. We explore how addicts can reach a point where fantasy feels “authentic,” and how emotional immaturity, avoidance of discomfort, arrested development, and untreated mental health issues often drive such drastic decisions. While these factors may help explain the behavior, we make it clear: they do not excuse it.

    We then confront the painful but empowering reality that he has the right—through his autonomy and agency—to make destructive choices. Acceptance of that truth does not mean approval or forgiveness; it means recognizing what cannot be controlled. Betrayed partners cannot force recovery, insight, or maturity. Fighting that reality only prolongs suffering. True empowerment begins when the focus shifts from changing him to strengthening oneself.

    Finally, we address the complicated reality of co-parenting after betrayal. When children are involved, complete separation is rarely possible. We emphasize the importance of thoughtful boundaries, structured communication, and protecting children from emotional crossfire. Revenge-driven decisions often create long-term damage, whereas clarity-driven boundaries create stability. Though he may choose to “screw up his life,” the betrayed partner retains the power to heal, protect her peace, and build a stronger future for herself and her children.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:  He has the Right to Completely Screw Up His Life!

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    17 February 2026, 1:00 am
  • 37 minutes 35 seconds
    When Betrayal is Confessed, What are Healthy Boundaries for the Partner &amp; Addict?

    When betrayal is confessed, both partners are immediately forced into territory they never chose. In this episode (#319), we address a powerful submission from a man whose pornography use and delayed disclosure led to the end of a serious relationship. We unpack why betrayal permanently changes a relationship’s landscape and why healthy boundaries for the betrayed partner begin with space, agency, and the right to decide what future—if any—feels authentic. Boundaries are not punishments; they are acts of self-protection and clarity in the wake of shattered trust. 

    We also address a critical but often misunderstood issue: waiting for the “right time” to tell the truth. While many addicts believe delayed honesty is protective, we explain how it actually constitutes integrity abuse and creates layered, complex trauma for the partner. By managing the timing and flow of truth, the addict unintentionally manipulates the relationship and deprives the partner of informed consent. We emphasize that honesty at all costs is not about guaranteeing forgiveness—it is about preserving reality, which is the foundation of any healthy boundary. 

    Finally, we turn to the addict’s side of the boundary equation. Addicts do not get to set boundaries on betrayed partners—but they must establish uncompromising internal boundaries around truth, transparency, and integrity. We discuss what it means to continue recovery when honesty leads to rejection, and why authentic change must eventually be internally motivated rather than driven by fear of loss. Even when a relationship ends, living honestly prepares an addict to become a healthier partner in the future and prevents repeating the same cycle of deception and harm.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   When Betrayal is Confessed, What are Healthy Boundaries for the Partner & Addioct?

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    9 February 2026, 11:00 pm
  • 44 minutes 5 seconds
    Can "Just Looking" Destroy a Marriage: Understanding Visual Sexual Addiction

    In this episode (#318), we respond to a deeply painful and thought-provoking submission from a partner married for fifteen years who discovered her husband’s long-standing pattern of visual sexual behaviors. While he insists he rarely masturbated, his compulsive scanning, voyeurism, and objectification left her questioning whether “just looking” could really constitute addiction—and why it felt so devastating. We outline how repeated denial, trickle-truth, and gaslighting created not only sexual betrayal but integrity abuse, leading to severe betrayal trauma marked by hypervigilance, loss of identity, shame, and emotional exhaustion.

    We then break down why addiction is not defined by orgasm alone. While climax powerfully reinforces behavior, sexual addiction is fueled by much more: anticipation, novelty, entitlement, secrecy, and emotional escape. Visual sexual behaviors can flood the brain with addictive neurochemicals long before orgasm ever occurs, training the brain to seek stimulation without intimacy. We explain how scanning and objectification allow addicts to bypass vulnerability while still receiving powerful neurological rewards, and how edging and prolonged preoccupation can become addictive in their own right.

    Finally, we address why visual sexual addiction often hurts partners more than masturbation. For many partners, “just looking” feels deeply personal—it involves comparison, preference, and emotional pursuit, not just physical release. We emphasize the vital distinction between sobriety and recovery, the necessity of full honesty through formal disclosure, and the importance of dismantling sexual entitlement rather than merely abstaining from behaviors. True healing, we conclude, requires integrity, empathy, and an intentional choice to move out of addiction and fully into relationship.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   Can "Just Looking" Destroy a Marriage:  Understanding Visual Sexual Addiction

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    4 February 2026, 4:00 am
  • 36 minutes 32 seconds
    From Shock to Self–Trust: Reclaiming Your Inner Truth After Betrayal

    In this episode (#317), we address one of the most destabilizing experiences betrayed partners face: the collapse of reality after discovering a partner’s hidden addiction. When betrayal comes from someone who appeared kind, loving, and emotionally present, the trauma can feel especially disorienting. Partners often question their intelligence, intuition, and judgment—but we make it clear that intuition cannot detect information that was deliberately concealed. Betrayal is not a failure of perception; it is the result of sustained secrecy, compartmentalization, and integrity abuse.

    Rather than focusing on whether the addict is truly in recovery or what the future might hold, we invite partners to gently shift their attention back to themselves. Grounding becomes essential in the aftermath of betrayal, as the nervous system is often locked in hypervigilance and survival mode. We explore the importance of pausing—not freezing—so that decisions are not driven by fear, pressure, or urgency. Authentic wants and needs are not ultimatums or selfish demands; they are expressions of self-truth that deserve to be honored, especially after trauma.

    Finally, we discuss what it means to reclaim self-trust. Loving another person authentically requires seeing them as they truly are, not just through hope or potential—but it also requires honoring one’s own authentic limits, capacity, and bandwidth. This episode is not about making the “right” relationship decision. It is about choosing a path that allows the betrayed partner to remain congruent, grounded, and whole. Healing does not require predicting the future; it begins by staying honest with yourself in the present.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   From Shock to Self-Trust:  Reclaiming Your Inner Truth After Betrayal

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    27 January 2026, 12:00 am
  • 47 minutes 9 seconds
    What Does "Proactive Honesty" in Your Daily Life &amp; Relationships Look Like?

    In this episode (#316) we focus on the critical role of proactive honesty in healing relationships impacted by addiction, betrayal, and trauma. Proactive honesty goes far beyond “not lying”—it means leading with truth rather than waiting to be confronted, asked the right question, or forced into disclosure. When honesty becomes reactive instead of proactive, trust erodes, emotional safety collapses, and partners lose the ability to make informed choices. We emphasize that honesty struggles are not limited to addicts; partners can also drift into dishonesty through self-silencing, conflict avoidance, or fear of toxic reactions.

    We examine the many reasons honesty breaks down, including fear of conflict, shame, habitual deception, emotional dysregulation, and attempts to manage or control others’ perceptions. While these patterns may be understandable survival strategies, they are never harmless. Dishonesty—whether through outright lies, partial truths, minimization, or “everything’s fine” responses—undermines accountability, intimacy, and recovery. We explain why clarity equals respect, why intent does not erase impact, and how avoiding the full truth often creates repeated betrayals rather than preventing harm.

    Finally, we outline what practicing proactive honesty actually looks like: catching dishonesty early, naming wrongs clearly, telling the whole truth, acknowledging impact without defensiveness, expressing accountability without shame, backing words with measurable actions, and allowing the other person’s response without trying to control it. We also stress the importance of choosing appropriate environments for difficult conversations—without using that as an excuse to deceive. Proactive honesty is uncomfortable and challenging, but it is essential for rebuilding trust, restoring integrity, and creating relationships rooted in safety, authenticity, and real connection.


    For a full transcript of this podcast in article format, go to:   What Does "Proactive Honesty" in Your Daily Life & Relationships Look Like?

    Learn more about Mark and Steve's revolutionary online porn/sexual addiction recovery and betrayal trauma healing program at—daretoconnectnow.com

    Find out more about Steve Moore at:  Ascension Counseling

    Learn more about Mark Kastleman at:  Reclaim Counseling Services

    20 January 2026, 6:00 am
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