A structured, clinician-guided process in which a partner who has engaged in sexual betrayal or compulsive sexual behavior provides a complete, factual, and time-bounded account of past behaviors that impacted the relationship. The purpose is truth, safety, and stabilization—not punishment, emotional catharsis, or graphic detail. Disclosure is prepared in advance, reviewed by trained professionals, and delivered with clear boundaries so the betrayed partner receives the information needed to regain reality, reduce traumatic ambiguity, and make informed decisions about next steps. As emphasized by Dan Drake and Janice Caudill, ethical disclosure is:
- Clinically guided (not spontaneous or coercive)
- Fact-based and complete (no minimizing, omissions, or trickle truth)
- Trauma-informed (avoids unnecessary sexual detail)
- Stabilization-oriented (supports nervous system safety and informed choice)
In their frameworks, full therapeutic disclosure is a cornerstone of healing because it restores reality, interrupts gaslighting, and creates a foundation for accountability and recovery, whether the relationship continues or not.