Every couple is different. With weekly counseling, many feel some relief within weeks, and deeper rebuilding often takes 12โ24 months. With a 2-day intensive plus our focused follow-ups, early calm and clarity can come much faster, and many couples solidify change in 6โ12 monthsโas long as thereโs no โtrickle truth,โ real accountability, and daily practice.ยน ยฒ ยนยน Recovery is non-linear; the goal isnโt to โgo back to normal,โ but to build a better normal. If you’re still in the first 72 hours post affair discovery, get this emergency guide. The full process for getting started with marriage counseling for infidelity is here.
Our program at a glance: A signature 2-day Affair Recovery Bootcamp followed by eight 90-minute follow-ups, designed by Rabbi Shlomo after seeing what consistently helps across thousands of couples. This built-in follow-up sequence is a unique feature of our intensive.
Two common paths to Healing after an Affair
Path A: Weekly counseling
Phase 1 โ Stabilize (2โ8 weeks). Stop ongoing harm, set ground rules, learn how to slow conflict and sleep again.ยนยฒ
Phase 2 โ Understand (1โ3 months). Tell the truth in a structured way, take ownership, explore why it happened without making excuses.ยนยฒ
Phase 3 โ Rebuild (6โ18+ months). Add trust-building habits, better communication, careful steps back into intimacy, and a plan to prevent relapse.
If weekly counseling feels too slow to get over everything, consider a 2-day intensive.
Path B: Intensive first (our accelerated start)
Before the weekend (1โ2 weeks). Ending the affair takes place and a willingness to do the work.
The 2-day intensive (our signature format). A contained space to tell the full truth, take responsibility, learn calmer ways to talk, and start trust ritualsโcreated by Shlomo and paired with eight 90-minute follow-ups that make the new habits stick. This 8×90 minute follow-up sequence is built into our affair recovery intensive.
Weeks 1โ6 after. You lock in the new habits with those eight follow-up sessions (see the sample below). Then months 3โ12 are about getting stronger and steadier.
Why intensives help: Keeping disclosure, accountability, and bonding in one safe container reduces the between-session re-injury that can stall weekly work.ยนยน Compare best models of therapy for infidelity here.
Normal bumps on the road (and what to do)
- โWhy am I angry again?โ (the second wave). After the crisis eases, anger or grief can come back around months 3โ6. Itโs common, not failure.ยณ โถ Why counseling is still worth it when it hits
- Do: name it as the โsecond wave,โ slow down, reflect back what you heard, and keep showing accountability in actions, not just words.
- Avoid: โtrickle truthโโevery new reveal restarts the trauma clock.ยนยฒ
- When thoughts keep resurfacing โ contain, donโt chase. Use this scheduled Q&A approach (part of our emergency guide)
- Time-boxed check-ins (15โ20 min). Give reassurance a container; outside that time, write questions down.ยน ยฒ โธ
- Fight the cycle, not each other (EFT). Name your pursue/withdraw dance and team up against it.โด
- Co-regulate first, problem-solve second. Short breathing/walk/grounding before hard talks helps triggers pass faster.ยณโด
- Planned trigger exposures. Re-enter tough places/apps in small steps, then finish with a repair ritual (walk + two-way reassurance).ยนยฒ
- Forgiveness โ Decision โ Process โ Maintenance. It follows a stretch of truth-telling, remorse in action, and new consistent behaviorโnot a single apology.
Does the pain ever go away?
For most couples who do the work, the pain changes: triggers get less sharp and pass faster as reliable repairs repeat.
Weeks 0โ6 after a 2-day intensive: 8 follow-ups (90 minutes each)
This is a sample of what might come up during the weeks after the intensive. In real life, you lead the agendaโwe focus on whatโs needed that week. Recovery is messy. Thereโs no one-size-fits-all. Our aim is to install safety and positivity until the follow-ups become habits you keep. An affair can be a wake-up call to better patternsโclearer boundaries, calmer talks, daily trust.
Week 0 โ The weekend itself. Full, guided disclosure; a concrete accountability plan; clear time-outs; first trust rituals; a simple trigger plan.
Our differentiator: This eight-session follow-up is built into our intensiveโso change becomes muscle memory, not just a good weekend.
How youโll know itโs working
Fewer blowups, faster cooldowns. You exit arguments quicker.
Triggers change. They still happen, but feel less intense and pass faster.
Repairs land. โCan we restart?โ works more oftenโfor both of you.
Trust deposits happen. Daily/weekly rituals happen without reminders.
Consistency. Plans kept, boundaries honored, no โnew reveals.โ Your body learns itโs safe.
What helps (and what hurts)
Helps:
โข No-contact and transparency (if relevant) shut off the alarm.ยน ยฒ
โข Structured disclosure prevents re-injury and ends โtrickle truth.โยน ยฒ
โข Remorse in action (repeated reliable behaviors) rebuilds trust.ยน ยฒ
โข Gentle dialogues & daily rituals add up.
โข Early de-escalation (IBCT) keeps conflict from spiraling.โต
โข Intensive when stuck preserves momentum.ยนยน
Hurts:
โข Trickle truth/minimizing restarts the clock.ยนยฒ
โข Any contact with the affair partner keeps the alarm on.ยนยฒ
โข Unstructured venting floods everyone; use containers.ยนยฒ
โข Being โneutralโ about dishonesty undermines safety.ยนยฒ
โข Skipping practice lets old patterns return.โทโธ
Quick โif-thenโ guide
If anger spikes again (month 3โ6), call it the โsecond wave,โ do a 20-minute dialogue, and end with one small repair (thanks, follow-through). It teaches your body that conflict can end in connection.
If obsessing returns, use your Q&A window, do one planned exposure this week, and finish with a repair ritual. Your brain learns: trigger โ relief.
If intimacy feels scary, pause; do a bonding exercise + appreciation round; revisit boundaries; add aftercare before trying again.
If youโre stuck 4+ weeks, book a mini-intensive block or longer session to close loose ends and rebuild momentum.
Key Takeaways
โข Weekly counseling often brings relief in weeks; deeper rebuilding commonly takes 12โ24 months. A 2-day intensive + our eight follow-ups can bring calm and clarity in 2โ6 weeks, with many couples consolidating in 6โ12 monthsโwhen truth, safety, and practice are in place.
โข Expect a second wave of anger. Itโs normal. Keep using the plan: gentle dialogue, steady accountability, small daily repairs.
โข Intrusive thoughts are common. Contain them to a daily window, co-regulate first, and use planned trigger exposures with a repair ritual.
โข Forgiveness comes after sustained repair (Decision โ Process โ Maintenance), not a one-time pass.
โข Our intensive was created by Shlomo and refined with thousands of couples; the built-in 8 follow-ups are what make the weekend stick.
Choosing pace matters- see weekly vs bootcamp (hybrid).
Sources
- Baucom, D.H., Snyder, D.K., & Gordon, K.C. (2009). Helping Couples Get Past the Affair. Guilford.
- Snyder, D.K., Baucom, D.H., & Gordon, K.C. (2007). Getting Past the Affair. Guilford.
- Eisenberger, N.I., Lieberman, M.D., & Williams, K.D. (2003). Social exclusion and physical pain overlap. Science, 302(5643), 290โ292.
- Johnson, S.M., & Greenman, P.S. (2006). Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 62(5), 597โ609.
- Christensen, A., Atkins, D.C., Yi, J., et al. (2006). IBCT outcomes & mechanisms. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 74(6), 1122โ1134.*
- Glass, S.P. (2002). Couple therapy after the trauma of infidelity. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 58(11), 1437โ1447.
- Gottman, J., & Gottman, J. (2015). 10 Principles for Doing Effective Couples Therapy. W.W. Norton.
- Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H.L. (2008). Doing Imago Relationship Therapy: A Clinicianโs Guide. W.W. Norton.
- Hendrix, H., & Hunt, H.L. (2019). Getting the Love You Want (3rd ed.). St. Martinโs Griffin.
- Gordon, K.C., & Baucom, D.H. (1999). A synthesized model of forgiveness. Family Process, 38(4), 425โ449.
- Lebow, J., & Snyder, D.K. (2000โ2012). Reviews of time-limited/intensive approaches in couple therapy. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy reviews.