TakingupSpace, I can’t quite read the tone of the therapist so it could be both terrible or extremely good advice.
The thing is if it’s about rebuilding you, then the key is positive.
Our relationship is over the moment our partner betrays us.
We lose ourselves to the point of wondering what can we do to fix, how can we change.
The truth is nothing.
Relationship is dead, it was "me and you " and our partner made it "them and someone else " .
There’s no coming back from that. There’s nothing you could have done. There’s nothing you can do.
To fix it. Because is too late.
Simple.
What can be done?
Build something new. If the partner regrets what they destroyed. If they move mountains.
Then maybe build a new relationship becomes possible, not certain, but feasible.
This brings us to the only thing we can truly change. Mindset.
We are the prize that someone must deserve, not the second choice, not the participation ribbon, not unworthy.
So focusing only on you it’s the best advice possible.
Never give a fuck about what the cheater feels or think about you reclaiming your agency and value. If they truly are reformed or reforming that should be what they want for you to heal anyway (wether you stay or you leave)
And that’s an example a reformed wayward would follow for themselves, to heal and become worthy of a second chance.
The biggest gift a partner could ever receive, because nobody deserves a second opportunity after betrayal