Being cheated on does not just break your heart. It breaks something more fundamental than that — your trust in your own judgment, your sense of your own worth, and your ability to believe in the version of the world where you were safe. That is the particular damage of betrayal: it does not just hurt you in the present. It rewrites your understanding of the past and makes the future feel treacherous.
So if you are sitting in the aftermath of finding out, still trying to work out how to rebuild your confidence after being cheated on, know that what you are feeling is not an overreaction. It is a proportionate response to a real wound. And it can be healed — not by pretending it did not happen, but by working through it with honesty and patience.
Step 1: Stop Asking What Was Wrong With You
The first and most persistent thought after being cheated on tends to be: why was I not enough? Was I not attractive enough, interesting enough, available enough, exciting enough? And underneath all of it: what is wrong with me?
Here is what the research is unambiguous about: infidelity is a reflection of the person who chose it, not an evaluation of the person who was betrayed. According to a comprehensive review by the American Psychological Association on infidelity research, the primary drivers of cheating behaviour are internal to the person who cheats — including attachment avoidance, low impulse control, dissatisfaction with the relationship itself, or external opportunity — rather than inadequacy in the partner. This will not stop the question from arising. But having an answer to it matters.
Step 2: Let Yourself Be Angry
There is a tendency — particularly for women who have been socialised to manage their emotions carefully and not to “make things worse” — to skip straight from hurt to either forgiveness or a kind of performative strength. Neither serves you in the early stages.
Anger is an appropriate response to betrayal. It signals that your boundaries were violated. It is a form of self-respect. Suppressing it in favour of appearing composed moves the emotion inward, where it tends to convert into depression and self-blame rather than the outward-directed clarity that anger, when processed, can provide. This is part of what grief after betrayal actually requires — allowing yourself to experience all of it. If you are interested in the physiological dimension of this, understanding what betrayal does to your nervous system can help you make sense of why the physical responses feel so overwhelming.
Step 3: Reclaim Your Narrative
One of the most insidious effects of infidelity is that it rewrites your memories. Moments you remember as safe and real now feel contaminated by doubt. The holiday. The birthday. The ordinary Sunday. You find yourself re-examining everything, trying to find the hidden version of the relationship that was “true.”
Part of how to rebuild your confidence after being cheated on is reclaiming the authority to tell your own story. Your memories of goodness are not invalidated by the betrayal. The love you gave was real. The connection you felt was real. What was not real was their honesty. Those are separate things, even when they feel fused.
Working with a therapist during this period — specifically a trauma-informed one familiar with betrayal trauma — can be invaluable in untangling your own story from the story you are being asked to absorb. Betrayal trauma is a recognised psychological construct, documented by researchers like Dr. Jennifer Freyd at the University of Oregon’s Betrayal Trauma Theory research, and it deserves to be treated with the same seriousness as other forms of trauma.
Step 4: Rebuild Your Relationship With Yourself First
Confidence that existed in the context of a relationship — particularly one that then betrayed you — was conditional confidence. The work of rebuilding your confidence after being cheated on is not restoring what existed before. It is building something more durable: a sense of self that is not dependent on someone else’s faithfulness to remain intact.
This involves returning to yourself. To the things you valued before the relationship consumed your attention. To the friendships that may have contracted. To your own opinions, tastes, and ways of moving through the world. This is not about “finding yourself” in some abstract sense — it is about re-establishing the ground floor of your identity that does not require another person to hold it up. This connects directly to something worth reading slowly: why your relationship with yourself determines every other relationship you have.
Step 5: Resist the Urge to Rebuild Immediately
The instinct to immediately prove that you are “fine” — to start dating, to project joy onto social media, to get into something new before you have processed the old — is understandable but often counterproductive. The new connection absorbs your attention without giving you the time to actually rebuild internally. And when that new connection eventually asks something of your trust or vulnerability, you discover that the wound from before is still open.
Genuine confidence is built slowly. It comes from small, consistent acts of honouring yourself — keeping commitments to yourself, setting and maintaining boundaries, engaging with your own growth rather than someone else’s validation. None of this is fast. But all of it is lasting.
Step 6: Redefine What Trust Looks Like Now
After being cheated on, many people land in one of two places: either hypervigilant and suspicious in every subsequent relationship, or bypassing their instincts entirely because “what is the point of trusting anyway?” Neither is sustainable.
The work of rebuilding your confidence after being cheated on includes rebuilding a more sophisticated relationship with trust — one that does not require you to be naive to be open, and does not require you to be closed to be safe. Trust, rebuilt after betrayal, tends to be more discerning and more robust than the trust that existed before — because it is chosen consciously rather than assumed as the default.
You did not deserve what happened to you. You deserve to know that clearly and repeatedly until it lands somewhere deeper than your mind. The person who cheated made a choice — and it was theirs, not a verdict on your worth. Healing from this is not about returning to who you were before. It is about becoming someone who knows that even the worst betrayals cannot take away what you are made of. That knowledge, once built, is not easily removed.
Rubie Le’Faine is the founder of Rubie Rubie and a writer specialising in emotional well-being, self-identity, and the psychology of modern relationships. She holds a Level 3 Certificate in Counselling Skills and has spent over eight years studying attachment theory, cognitive behavioural principles, and human development — first through formal study, then through lived experience that no course can replicate. After navigating a significant relationship breakdown, an identity rebuild, and the complex terrain of rediscovering herself in her 30s, Rubie began writing to make sense of what she had learned and to offer honest, human guidance to others going through the same. She founded Rubie Rubie in 2022 as a space for women seeking real answers, not platitudes. Based in Surrey, UK, her writing is grounded in research, shaped by experience, and centred entirely on the reader’s genuine wellbeing.







