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Recovery Articles

January 27, 2026 By Castimonia

A Supportive Resource for Wives Navigating Betrayal Trauma

With care and respect for each family’s journey, we wanted to share a resource that may be supportive for some wives during this season.

Lisa Archinal is a trauma-informed coach who works specifically with women healing from betrayal trauma. Her work focuses on emotional stabilization, navigating trauma triggers, preparation for disclosure, and helping women rebuild safety, clarity, and self-trust after discovery.

Lisa is APSATS-trained and works under the clinical supervision of Dr. Jake Porter, integrating best practices for betrayal trauma recovery. She brings both professional training and lived understanding to her work.

At this time, Lisa is opening space for a limited number of women and is offering free or reduced-rate coaching for ministry families who may need additional support. There is no obligation – women are invited to reach out, ask questions, and discern for themselves whether coaching feels like a good fit.

If interested, wives are welcome to connect directly for more information. Lisa can be reached at lisa@ourrelentlesspursuit.com.–

Lisa Archinal

Founder, Our Relentless Pursuit

Certified Professional Life Coach
APSATS Trainee
Certified Coach with Daring Ventures
Podcast: Emotional Health for Christian WomenInstagram

Filed Under: Sexual Purity Posts Tagged With: addiction, christian, porn, pornography, recovery, sex addiction

January 27, 2026 By Castimonia

Castimonia Purity Podcast Episode 132: Interview with Rick Reynolds

https://castimonia.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Episode-132-Interview-With-Rick-Reynolds.mp3

Today on the Purity Podcast, Chris is interviewing Rick Reynolds, LCSW, founder and president of AffairRecovery.com. Rick brings more than three decades of clinical experience helping individuals and couples heal from the devastation of infidelity, along with the weight and credibility of his own story of betrayal and restoration that began in 1984. As the pioneer behind the first anonymous, online group recovery programs for affair recovery, Rick has counseled thousands of couples and guided many more through structured, hope-filled pathways toward healing. His work is marked not by shame or blame, but by honesty, accountability, vulnerability, and a deep belief that real transformation is possible even after profound relational trauma.
Key Resources:

  • Affair Recovery Analyzer – free assessment to start recovery. (Affair Recovery)
  • First Step Bootcamp – 7-day introductory healing pathway. (Amazon Web Services, Inc.)
  • Recovery Library – extensive articles, videos, Q&A with Rick. (Affair Recovery)
  • Harboring Hope – 13-week course for betrayed partners. (Affair Recovery)
  • Hope for Healing – 17-week course for unfaithful spouses. (Affair Recovery)
  • EMS Online – 13-week couples healing course. (Affair Recovery)

Filed Under: podcast, Podcasts, Purity Podcast, Sex Addiction Podcast, Sexual Purity Posts

January 26, 2026 By Castimonia

Words Mean Things

originally posted at: https://sexuallypuremen.beehiiv.com/p/words-mean-things-5af8

By Dr. Eddie Capparucci

It breaks my heart when I sit across from couples whose healing journey has already been made more difficult—not only because of the deep wound of betrayal, but because of the careless words spoken by those they trusted to help them.

Over the years, I have listened to betrayed partners and struggling spouses repeat statements they have heard from therapists, coaches, or group leaders. Words like:

  • “He is the worst sex addict I have ever encountered.”
  • “I can tell by what he said that he loved his affair partner deeply.”
  • “These men never get better.”
  • “You will have to worry about his relapsing for the rest of your marriage.”
  • “If I was you, I would never trust him again.”
  • “You will never know if he is really telling the truth.”

Can you imagine hearing these words when your world is already in pieces? Instead of offering hope and direction, such statements slam the door on possibility. They stack the odds against reconciliation, planting seeds of fear, doubt, and despair.

To Hurting Couples

If you are a betrayed spouse who has heard words like these, please know this: those statements do not define your marriage, your partner, or your future. Healing is already a difficult road; you do not need to carry the unnecessary burden of a clinician’s personal bias or careless remark.

Yes, betrayal trauma is real and life-altering. Yes, rebuilding trust is one of the hardest journeys any couple can face. But no one—no therapist, coach, or leader—has the authority to declare with certainty that your marriage is doomed or that your spouse is incapable of change. Growth and restoration are possible. I have witnessed them time and time again.

For the betraying spouse: careless words from a professional may have made you feel hopeless or beyond redemption. Do not believe that lie. If you are willing to do the hard work—facing your brokenness, developing emotional maturity, and learning to engage with empathy—you can change. You are not defined by your worst mistakes.

To Professionals

We must remember that our words mean things. Every statement we make has the potential to either breathe life into a hurting couple or drive the wound deeper.

We are not prophets. We are not judges. We are guides on a very painful journey. Yes, it is our duty to speak truth, and at times that means naming destructive patterns clearly—especially if abuse or manipulation is present. But truth can be spoken without pronouncing hopeless verdicts.

I met with a client who had previously worked with a therapist widely recognized as a leader in the betrayal trauma field. Despite never meeting or speaking with the client’s partner, this therapist met only with the client and, after just a few sessions, declared: “Based on the information you’ve shared about your husband, I would say he is a full-blown narcissist.” Hearing this left the client devastated and hopeless about the future of her marriage.

We must avoid making broad assumptions about individuals we have not personally met. It is both unprofessional and unethical to evaluate a spouse’s character, intentions, or potential for change—regardless of whether we interact with them directly. Such practices violate our ethical responsibility to ‘do no harm’.

Why This Matters

I am writing this article because I am grieved by the additional pain that careless words inflict on couples already carrying unbearable anguish. Betrayed partners are desperate for safety. Betraying spouses often sit in shame and self-loathing. Both need careful guidance, steady truth, and compassionate direction.

When we as professionals speak with cynicism, despair, or reckless certainty, we risk crushing the fragile hope that may be the only thing holding a couple together. And when betrayed spouses internalize such comments, they may abandon hope before the real work of healing ever begins.

A Call for Care and Compassion

If you are a couple walking through betrayal:

  • Hold fast to the truth that healing is possible
  • Do not let someone else’s words define your journey; their story is NOT your story
  • Seek out safe people who will walk with you in truth and grace
  • Challenge serious claims made by professionals and ask for clarification of how they came to that assumption

If you are a professional:

  • Slow everything down and think carefully about what you say
  • Avoid assumptions and resist the temptation to make pronouncements about a marriage’s outcome
  • Speak truth with compassion, humility, and a recognition of the power you hold in someone’s most vulnerable moment
  • Be sure to keep your own biases out of sessions

Bottom Line

Words mean things. And when spoken to those dealing with betrayal trauma, words can either plant weeds of despair or seeds of hope. As professionals, we must never forget the power we hold. And as couples, you must remember: no single statement from another person has the right to determine your story.

Hope is real. Healing is possible. And while the journey is difficult, with care, accountability, and compassion, restoration can be pursued.

Eddie Capparucci is a licensed professional counselor in Texas and the creator of the Inner Child Model™ for treating addictive behaviors. He is the author of numerous book including Going Deeper: How the Inner Child Impacts Your Sexual Addiction. He can be reached at innerchildmodel@gmail.com.

Filed Under: Sexual Purity Posts Tagged With: addiction, recovery

January 23, 2026 By Castimonia

New Castimonia Meeting in Ohio – Starting February 2nd

I am humbled to announce that we will officially be starting a new Castimonia meeting on Monday nights at Five Lakes Church Life Center on Monday, February 2nd.  This is exactly how God’s ministry should grow.  A member that attended the Step Group in the Katy, TX via Zoom and was brave enough to take it to his location answering, “Lord send me!”  I am very grateful for this man’s bravery and for his faithfulness to the Lord.

Monday Nights
6:30pm – 8:00pm
Five lakes Church – Life Center
4765 N McCord Rd
Sylvania, OH 43560
Starting on February 2, 2026

Praise be to God, the father of our Lord Jesus Christ, for all He has done to grow His ministry!

Filed Under: General Meeting Information Tagged With: addiction, christian, porn, recovery, Sex

January 22, 2026 By Castimonia

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Filed Under: Sexual Purity Posts Tagged With: addiction, recovery, Sex

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This site is intended for individuals who struggle with maintaining sexual purity. This information is posted for individuals at various stages in their recovery, year 1 to year 30+; what applies to some, may not apply others. Spouses are encouraged to read this blog with the caveat that they may not agree with, understand, or know the reason for some items posted. As always, take what you like and leave the rest.

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