
“Would He Feel the Same If I Gave Myself to Another Man?”
She stood there, trembling, her voice barely a whisper. “Would you feel the same if I gave myself to another man? Would it hurt you like this hurts me?”
Her husband sat on the edge of the bed, his head in his hands. He didn’t answer. The silence in the room wasn’t just heavy; it was suffocating. She wasn’t sure what she expected him to say — Yes? No? Well, I would deserve it? — but it didn’t matter. Whatever his answer might have been, it wouldn’t have changed the storm inside her.
Last week, Michelle was telling me about this exact moment. How she’d sat there, shaking, waiting for an answer that wouldn’t come. How she’d imagined, in vivid detail, what it would be like to make him feel the same devastation she was feeling.
“I even had someone in mind,” she admitted, her voice thick with shame. “Tom from the office. He’d been flirting with me for months. I knew one text would be all it would take.”
She didn’t send that text. But the fact that she’d wanted to — that she’d gotten so close — haunted her almost as much as her husband’s betrayals.
This is the dark truth about infidelity that nobody talks about: how it can make the most faithful person contemplate the unthinkable. Not because they want to cheat, but because they desperately need their pain to be seen, to be understood, to be validated.
I’ve sat with hundreds of betrayed wives in this exact moment. The moment when the pain is so overwhelming that making their husband hurt like they hurt seems like the only possible way forward.
But here’s what Michelle discovered, what all my clients eventually discover: That impulse to make them understand through pain? It’s not really about revenge. It’s not even about evening the score. It’s about something much deeper.
It’s about reclaiming unconditional love. It’s about feeling seen. It’s about healing the part of you that feels like your pain doesn’t matter unless someone else feels it too.
Michelle didn’t send that text. Instead, she did something far more powerful. She learned how to make her pain matter without creating more of it. She discovered how to be truly seen without compromising who she was.
“I realized,” she told me in our last session, “that making him hurt like I hurt wouldn’t actually fix anything. It wouldn’t make me feel more loved. It wouldn’t make me feel more valuable. It would just make both of us broken.”
Today, Michelle and her husband are in a different place. Not because she learned to “get over it” or because she pretended it didn’t hurt. But because she discovered how to channel that desperate need to be seen into something that actually healed instead of hurt.
Their marriage isn’t perfect. But it’s real in a way it never was before. They’ve learned how to hold space for each other’s growth and for unconditional love to flourish with no more betrayal.
If you’re standing where Michelle stood — if you’re carrying that same desperate need to make them understand — I want you to know something: Your pain deserves to be seen. Your hurt deserves to be acknowledged. Your anger is understandable.
But there’s a way to honor all of that without compromising who you are. There’s a path that leads to genuine healing — not just for your marriage, but for your heart.
Click here to watch my webinar - where I share exactly how Michelle and hundreds of other women have transformed their pain into power, and their marriages into something deeper than they ever thought possible.
Remember: Your pain matters. But how you choose to heal from it matters even more.