By Michael J. Wilson Jr., CIP, CFI · Author of Loving Lions, Interventionist, and Family-Recovery Specialist · Last reviewed June 19, 2026
Quick answer
When trust is shattered by addiction, learn how to protect yourself while leaving room for healing.
Situation Recognition
Trust, once broken by addiction behaviors, doesn't automatically return with sobriety. The lies, broken promises, financial betrayal, and emotional manipulation create deep wounds that require intentional healing and consistent evidence of change.
Michael Wilson's Insight
"Trust is earned in drops and lost in buckets. Rebuilding trust after addiction requires sustained consistency over time, not just good intentions or promises. Your caution is protective wisdom, not a relationship failure."
Comprehensive Guidance
Why trust is difficult to rebuild:
- Addiction taught them to prioritize substances over relationship integrity
- Past broken promises created learned skepticism
- Trust requires emotional vulnerability that feels dangerous after betrayal
- Actions must consistently match words over extended time
- Your nervous system remains hypervigilant to protect against future harm
Rebuilding trust appropriately:
- Trust actions, not words or promises
- Start with small things and build gradually
- Set clear expectations about trust-building behaviors
- Allow time - trust rebuilds slowly after significant betrayal
- Don't rush emotional vulnerability to make them feel better
- Verify rather than blindly believing during early recovery
Implementation Steps
- Acknowledge that broken trust is normal after addiction betrayal
- Communicate your needs clearly: "I need to see consistent actions over time"
- Set trust-building expectations: specific behaviors you need to see
- Start small - don't expect or offer complete trust immediately
- Track patterns - consistent behavior over months, not weeks
What to Expect
Frustration from them about your "lack of faith" - trust broken by addiction takes time to rebuild. Pressure to "move on" or "forgive and forget" - healthy healing includes protective caution. Trust can return with sustained recovery and consistent trustworthy behavior.
Professional Resources
East Point Behavioral Health: (855) 887-6237 - Couples therapy for trust rebuilding in recovery
Individual Therapy: Process betrayal trauma and develop healthy trust boundaries
Support Groups: Connect with others rebuilding trust after addiction betrayal
Key Takeaways
Ask Michael
“I don't trust them anymore”
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Need Personal Guidance?
This scenario provides general guidance. For your specific situation, consider professional support from the East Point team.
This guidance is educational and reflects the author’s lived and professional experience. It is not a substitute for professional medical, clinical, or legal advice. If you or someone you love is in immediate danger, call 988 or 911.