REPORT: Jazz Coach Quin Snyder Resigns After Eight Seasons

Jazz Coach Quin Snyder has reportedly resigned after leading Utah for eight seasons from the sidelines.

Synder’s decision comes just days after it was reported he was mulling his future as the head coach of the Jazz. In his eight-year tenure, Snyder had a 62.3 percent winning percentage over the past six seasons, third-best in the League according to ESPN Stats and Info. He was 372-264 overall in his eight seasons. Snyder leaves as the second-winningest coach in Utah history behind the legendary Jerry Sloan.

The Jazz could not reach the Western Conference Finals despite reaching the semifinals twice in the past five postseasons. They were also eliminated in the first round in the last two seasons.

Snyder stepping down has also reportedly left franchise cornerstone Donovan Mitchell “unsettled, unnerved, and wondering what it means for the franchise’s future,” according to Adrian Wojnarowski. Wojnarowski further reported that Snyder played a significant part in Mitchell’s decision to sign his five-year extension in 2020. Suffice it to say Mitchell was “surprised and disappointed” that the only NBA head coach he’s had decided to leave so abruptly.

Per Woj, the three-time All-Star has accepted Snyder’s resignation but will be taking time to process what Snyder’s loss means in the bigger scheme of things for Utah and himself. Meanwhile, Utah is expected to start its coaching search expeditiously.

Mitchell has four years left on his contract, including a player option on the final season of his deal.



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Xbox GoldenEye 007 Remaster Looks Closer Than Ever After Achievements are Spotted

A GoldenEye 007 remaster on Xbox appears more and more likely, as Microsoft now has the game’s achievements listed on its official website.

As spotted by Video Games Chronicle, industry insider @Wario64 on Twitter shared the achievements (below) and a link to their listing online, with the webpage still functioning as normal as of the time of writing.

Both single and multiplayer objectives are listed for the beloved game – which was originally released on the Nintendo 64 in 1997 – with GoldenEye 007 granting players 1,000 Gamerscore in total, as is the norm for fully-fledged games.

A remaster has been long-rumoured, and all but confirmed time and time again – most recently in January when Xbox achievement tracking website TrueAchievements also listed the game. An updated version of the original GoldenEye 007 was confirmed to be in development for the Xbox 360’s Live Arcade at developer Rare but was cancelled due to licensing issues, and files for the game leaked online in February 2021.

It’s been a long time since we received a fully-fledged Bond game, but we seem to be seeing a loosening of the famously tight restrictions on the license. Along with a seeming return to GoldenEye, Hitman developer Io Interactive is also working on Project 007, a totally original new story for the super-spy. We think the developer is a perfect fit for the franchise.

Ryan Dinsdale is an IGN freelancer who occasionally remembers to tweet @thelastdinsdale. He’ll talk about The Witcher all day.



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Jazz have given ‘a firm no’ to trade inquiries about Donovan Mitchell

Photo: webthethao.vn

Recently a report appeared suggesting that Donovan Mitchell is ‘unsettled’ after long-time Jazz head coach Quin Snyder stepped down.

There is plenty of interest around the league in the 25-year-old star with the Knicks being mentioned frequently ir trade rumors.

However, it seems that Utah is committed to keeping Mitchell for the foreseeable future as they have rebuffed all trade inquires from other teams about the shooting guard.

Via Tony Jones of The Athletic:

“League sources say multiple teams have called the Jazz to inquire about the trade availability of Mitchell, only to be given a firm no. The Jazz have made it clear they intend on building a roster around Mitchell. The only thing that could possibly pry Mitchell from the Jazz at this point is a monstrous offer. They simply don’t have the intention of trading him.”

This past season Mitchell averaged 25.9 points, 4.2 rebounds and 5.3 assists in 33.8 minutes per game. Team-wise it was a disappointing year that ended with the Jazz being eliminated by the Mavericks in the first round of the playoffs.

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Latest Stock Market and Business News: Live Updates

Credit…Jade Gao/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Beijing residents eagerly indulged in a privilege that they had not enjoyed in weeks: dining inside a restaurant.

The Chinese capital relaxed pandemic rules at midnight on Monday, including a ban on dining in, after a partial lockdown that lasted more than a month. Although the closures were not as strict as in Shanghai, the authorities in Beijing had suspended some public transportation, forced some people to quarantine, and enforced work-from-home in much of the city.

Yet even as schools and offices are opening in waves and public transportation is being restored, other measures remained in place to prevent the spread of the highly transmissible Omicron variant of the virus. Everyone must wear a mask, have their temperature check, and take P.C.R. tests for everyday activities like riding the subway or going to work.

The measures underscore the commitment of Chinese authorities to stamp out the virus completely, despite curbing economic growth and fueling anger among citizens. The steps have triggered limited and small protests. Still, some cities plan to carry out regular mass testing even in the absence of a local outbreak.

On Saturday, Liu Xiaofeng, deputy head of Beijing’s municipal disease prevention and control center, said at a news conference that the city’s overall epidemic situation was improving. But he warned that “decisive measures” were necessary to avoid a resurgence of cases.

The authorities said there were six confirmed cases on Sunday in Beijing and 86 reported across the country, down from over 29,000 new daily infections at the height of this year’s outbreak in mid-April. The majority of the cases during the peak were in Shanghai.

It is unclear how long the relief may last, with cases re-emerging in Shanghai as it struggles to reopen after two months of harsh lockdown. On Sunday, the city reported three local community infections, prompting health officials to send a warning to its 25 million residents.

“The risk of epidemic rebound still exists,” Wu Jinglei, Shanghai’s health commissioner, told a Sunday news briefing. “We cannot relax yet, but must be highly vigilant.”

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I Am Groot Release Date Set for August 10 on Disney+ Hotstar, First Look Poster Out

I Am Groot release date and first look poster are out. On Sunday, Disney+ announced that the series of animated shorts I Am Groot, a spin-off from the Guardians of the Galaxy​ movie series, will debut August 10 on the streaming platform. This means those in India will be able to watch it the same day on Disney+ Hotstar. Disney+ and Marvel Studios also shared the I Am Groot first look poster to pique the curiosity of fans. In it, we see Baby Groot sporting sunglasses, as he unwinds with his headphones on. We also get a good look at two, four-eyed penguin-like creatures, who appear to be staring at him.

The Marvel.com post for the I Am Groot first look poster does not specify the number of episodes. Nor does it reveal whether all episodes will be out together, or drop on a weekly basis. Expect these details to be revealed closer to the release date. Given the Marvel Cinematic Universe live-action series She-Hulk: Attorney At Law premieres a week later on August 17, and the fact that previous Disney+ animated spin-off shorts series have dropped all at once, the former seems likelier.

Vin Diesel is set to voice the titular character, just as he has on the Guardians of the Galaxy movies. No word on the rest of the I Am Groot cast. The animated series will be directed by Canadian filmmaker Kirsten Lepore, who is best known for directing the “Bad Jubies” episode from the fantasy animated TV series Adventure Time. Ryan Little serves as the head writer on I Am Groot. As previously revealed, I Am Groot will revolve around “Baby Groot’s glory days growing up, and getting into trouble among the stars.”

MCU fans were introduced to Groot in 2014 when the first Guardians of the Galaxy movie released in cinemas. Baby Groot — his pocket-sized variant — subsequently appeared on our screens in 2017’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 and soon emerged as one of the MCU’s most loved characters. Groot has since grown into an adolescent form, as seen on Avengers: Infinity War, which makes I Am Groot a prequel of sorts.

So, will I Am Groot add a new dimension to the walking flora’s popularity? We’ll find out when the series debuts August 10 on Disney+ and on Disney+ Hotstar wherever available.


Coming to

  • Release Date 10 August 2022
  • Genre Animation, Superhero
  • Cast

    Vin Diesel

  • Director Kirsten Lepore
  • Producer Kevin Feige, Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Kirsten Lepore, James Gunn
  • Production Marvel Studios

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Nokia X, G-Series Smartphones With Snapdragon 480+ 5G SoC Launching in H2 2022: Report



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Baker Mayfield and Browns, Deebo Samuel staying and more

The Cleveland Browns put themselves in a bind at quarterback, and the way out likely includes a long road including more of Baker Mayfield.

In March, a football team traded three first-round draft picks and paid a record $230 million guaranteed for a quarterback currently facing two-dozen civil suits for alleged sexual misconduct, all while the real possibility exists of starting the quarterback they were so desperate to replace that this sentence is somehow fact and not fiction.

Meet the 2022 Cleveland Browns.

Two months ago, the Browns were out of the bidding for Deshaun Watson, with the Atlanta Falcons and New Orleans Saints as the finalists to acquire him from the Houston Texans.

Then, suddenly, Watson picked the Browns.

The company line from Watson’s camp was him realizing what’s important for his career. The reality is Cleveland had alienated Baker Mayfield with its pursuit of Watson, and general manager Andrew Berry decided to go all-in to make sure he wasn’t starting a glorified backup come Week 1.

Ultimately, money talks. Especially a record-breaking amount.

This isn’t how a competent organization does business. It doesn’t panic itself into $230 million guaranteed for a player who could be suspended for some or all of the upcoming season, depending upon what NFL commissioner Roger Goodell decides to do this summer.

And the recent news is all bad for Cleveland and Watson.

The Browns claim they did their due diligence, and it’s impossible to prove the statement either way. Yet last week, two more civil suits have been brought against Watson in the aftermath of HBO’s Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel and its interviews with accusers of the quarterback. Then there’s lawyer Tony Buzbee, who represents each plaintiff, saying Watson offered each of the first 22 accusers $100,000 to settle their cases, provided they signed non-disclosure agreements. Ultimately, no cases were settled.

So here the Browns are. They have a star quarterback being paid a fortune who might not be eligible to play for some time. Meanwhile, Mayfield remains on the roster as Berry has been unable to move him.

Now what?

With training camp steadily approaching, it appears Mayfield and his team-high $18.85 million cap hit will be in Berea come late July. And while Mayfield certainly wants out, and Cleveland would love to offload his money, it’s hard to see both happening in conjuncture.

Somehow, the best scenario for the Browns is holding onto Mayfield, waiting for the league to bring its discipline on Watson, and then trying to coax Mayfield into playing until Watson returns. And for Mayfield, channeling his anger and hurt feelings into the best football of his life is the right move as well for his future.

All this would create what might be the most bizarre situation the NFL has seen in decades; Mayfield playing for a team who wants no part of him, and he no part of them. And yet for both, they need to succeed, helping the other simultaneously.

The Browns entered this offseason not wanting to rely on Baker Mayfield.

Incredibly, in some ways, they now need him more than ever.

Power rankings

Top 10 AFC quarterbacks entering 2022

1. Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs – Self-explanatory
2. Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills – All-Pro, 2x division titles, dual-threat
3. Justin Herbert, Los Angeles Chargers – Pure passer, elite arm talent, mobility
4. Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals – Accurate, great chemistry with awesome weapons
5. Russell Wilson, Denver Broncos – The biggest wild card in football this year
6. Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens – Electric, can make plays, but weapons?
7. Deshaun Watson, Cleveland Browns – Possible suspension looms large
8. Matt Ryan, Indianapolis Colts – Durable, former MVP, captain running the offense
9. Derek Carr, Las Vegas Raiders – A top-12 quarterback in the wrong conference
10. Ryan Tannehill, Tennessee Titans – Competent passer, can’t do it alone

Quotable

“Well, we haven’t traded him, and — I’ve used the word fool — I’d be a fool to trade him, so yes, Deebo will be part of the 49ers this season.”

– San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch on receiver Deebo Samuel

After a few months of speculation regarding Samuel’s future, we now have clarity. Lynch strongly showed his stance last week, and it’s the right one. Samuel is signed for this season and then can be tagged for two more, should San Francisco want to go that route.

If Samuel holds out on the tag next offseason, Lynch can reevaluate his position and go from there. However, money talks. If the Niners give Samuel a bit more say in his role and then offer him a fortune, there’s plenty reason to believe the marriage works.

Podcast

Random stat

Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders played 10 NFL seasons. He never ran for less than 1,000 yards, and made the Pro Bowl in each campaign.

In 1998, his final year, Sanders rushed for 1,491 yards before calling it quits.

Info learned this week

1. Aaron Donald could retire, but his contract — and money — probably sway him

No matter how rich you are, $76.5 million talks.

Aaron Donald is perhaps the rare man willing to walk away from such a figure, but he’d be one of the few. Last week, Donald spoke about his situation on the I Am Athlete podcast and said he’s at peace if he walks away.

Donald, 31, is coming off his first Super Bowl win and although the Los Angeles Rams have him signed for the next three years at the aforementioned $76.5 million. With the Rams willing to re-work his contract, Donald could be in line for additional money, giving him an enormous windfall into his mid-30s.

For Los Angeles, Donald is worth whatever it takes to bring him back. In eight seasons, Donald is an eight-time Pro Bowler and seven-time First-Team All-Pro. There’s a great argument to make he’s the best defensive tackle in NFL history.

But what would it take to keep Donald playing? Probably a few more incentives and guaranteed money loaded into the next few seasons.

For Los Angeles, that’s worth the further investment.

2. McLaurin is skipping Washington’s OTAs, Commanders should prepare to pay

Terry McLaurin isn’t working out with the Commanders right now. And if they want to keep him long-term, they need to accept reality.

McLaurin is entering the final year of his rookie deal, one he has vastly out-performed. The 26-year-old has played with different starting quarterbacks every year and still amassed a pair of 1,000-yard seasons, easily becoming Washington’s best offensive threat.

While it’s near impossible to successfully hold out into training camp under the Collective Bargaining Agreement, McLaurin can show up and refuse to do much, as we’ve seen from others such as Steelers’ edge rusher T.J. Watt.

For the Commanders, it’s either pay McLaurin now or tag him next offseason at roughly $26.85 million based off current receiver deals. For McLaurin’s agent, Buddy Baker, the negotiation starts at the cost of two tags, which is $59 million over 2023 and ’24.

A month ago, we saw the Eagles give A.J. Brown four years and $100 million with $57.22 million guaranteed. Their stats are strikingly similar through three seasons:

Brown: 185 receptions, 2,995 yards, 24 TDs, 16.2 yards/reception
McLaurin: 222 receptions, 3,090 yards, 16 TDs, 13.9 yards/reception

Based on tag numbers, comparable players and age, expect McLaurin to eventually land a deal similar to Brown… in Washington or elsewhere.

3. Kyler Murray shows up for OTAs, showing good faith

After skipping the initial OTAs for the Arizona Cardinals, quarterback Kyler Murray has returned. For Murray, who has publicly wanted an extension this offseason, it’s a smart move.

While teams don’t get shaken by a player skipping some offseason work, Murray showing up helps him win public support. Instead of holding out and causing friction both with the organization and fanbase, the former No. 1 overall pick is showing commitment and a willingness to extend his hand, something which will play with fans. The public relations battle is underrated, and although it doesn’t guarantee anything, it helps put pressure on the team.

For Arizona, the prudent decision remains to make Murray play his fourth season before negotiating a long-term extension. The Cards have all the leverage, and they can watch to see if Murray progresses, stagnates or even declines due to injury or otherwise.

Still, for Murray, his best chance at getting extended this summer is to do exactly what he did this week. Show up, work hard and keep trying to get rewarded through private talks and public support.

4. Madden ’23 will see an iconic face, have familiar voice

The EA Sports’ Madden series is the most popular sports video game franchise of all time. This year’s version might be the capstone.

After the passing of John Madden in December at the age of 85, the Hall of Fame head coach, broadcaster and Madden face will be honored with the cover of Madden NFL ’23 along with having his remastered audio clips inserted into the game. There will be three covers in total, all depicting Madden in different portions of his football journey.

When you add up the contributions of Madden on the field, in the booth and as a video game icon, there’s a real argument nobody has made a deeper impact on the sport. This is a fitting tribute to one of the sport’s most-important figures.

5. Bucs sign Hicks, meaning Suh is moving on

In with Akiem Hicks, out with Ndamukong Suh.

Last week, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed veteran defensive tackle Akiem Hicks to a one-year deal worth $2.39 million against the cap. By doing so, it spells the end for Suh, who plays the same position and remains a free agent.

At 35 years old, it’s almost certain Suh will be playing on one-year deals until the end, likely on contenders looking for help. There’s a slew of teams who make sense for the five-time Pro Bowler, including the Saints, Kansas City Chiefs and Las Vegas Raiders, among many others.

But is Hicks an upgrade over Suh? The numbers say no.

As for Hicks, the question is health more than ability. Hicks, 33, has only played 29 games over the past three years, racking up eight sacks and 35 QB hits over that span. For comparison, Suh notched 14.5 sacks and 46 QB hits while missing zero games.

Two cents

Ryan Fitzpatrick retired on Thursday, and the NFL lost one of its true characters with the news.

Fitzpatrick had an incredibly circuitous route for his football life, beginning at Harvard before being a 2005 seventh-round pick by the St. Louis Rams. From there, it was two years with the Rams, two more with the Bengals, a four-year stop with the Bills which included a $59 million deal, and one-year stays with the Titans and Texans. Then, in 2015, another run of two-year jaunts with the New York Jets, Buccaneers and Miami Dolphins before finishing up in Washington.

All told: 17 seasons, nine teams, 223 passing touchdowns, 34,990 passing yards and the incredible-but-true feat of leading the Dolphins in rushing yards at 37 years old.

Fitzpatrick will always be remembered as a terrific backup with a great beard, better personality and colorful shirts. A fun legacy, to be sure.

Inside the league

Few players have been more respected over the past 13 seasons than Alex Mack. Yet for Mack, it’s time to walk away.

The longtime center for the Falcons, Browns and 49ers is retiring after a long career in the NFL arena. It’s a body of work which could land him in Canton. Mack racked up seven Pro Bowls and was named to the 2010s All-Decade Team.

Making All-Decade is usually a precursor to getting a gold jacket. Dating back to the 1960s team, the only centers to be on the list and not become a Hall of Famer are the Dallas Cowboys’ Mark Stepnoski and Olin Kreutz of the Chicago Bears, both who were named as Second-Team members. Unlike Mack, both were All-Pros, but each had fewer Pro Bowl selections.

Regardless, Mack leaves the game after having one of the best careers we’ve seen from a center.

History lesson

After taking over a one-win team in 1959, Green Bay Packers head coach Vince Lombardi led his squad to the NFL Championship Game one year later, losing to the Philadelphia Eagles.

In the aftermath of defeat, Lombardi said he’d never lose another postseason game. He never did. Lombardi won five championships in the next seven years, including three consecutive from 1965-67.

Parting shot

Mike Tomlin has never endured a losing season. This might be his first.

Pittsburgh has a terrific defense — specifically up front — but the offense is one of the league’s weakest. The Steelers have more questions than answers at quarterback, a lousy offensive line and decent weapons but none which are elite at their respective positions.

Factor in a second-place schedule and a brutal division in which the Bengals, Browns and Ravens are all solid bets to win double-digit games, and it’s going to be a long road for Pittsburgh to finish above .500.

One could argue Tomlin did his best coaching job last year, reaching the playoffs at 9-7-1 despite having a quarterback who struggled to throw with any velocity.

To get there again, he may well have to be even better in 2022.



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Debi Silber on Stop Sabotaging Yourself and Healing From Betrayal

Child: Welcome to my Mommy’s podcast.

 

This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley – a company that is near and dear to my heart. I really like all of their products and my family especially loves their 100% grass fed beef sticks, which are a clean, gut-friendly protein snack option. They never last long in my house because my kids enjoy them so much, and I love how seriously Paleovalley takes creating healthy and environmentally friendly products. Paleovalley Grass fed beef sticks are the real deal. They are sourced from 100% grass fed and finished cows that are never fed grains or harmful antibiotics. And they come from small, family owned farms right here in the USA that practice rotational grazing, meaning farmers literally rotate the pastures in which their cows graze. So they aren’t feeding on the same soil forever, depleting its nutrients.  This means the cows are helping increase the nutrient density in the soil and put carbon back in the soil where it belongs. Another important difference- Virtually every other meat snack on the market is made with a processing agent called encapsulated citric acid (ECA). Companies use this in order to guarantee a long shelf life for their products but one study from The University of Illinois at Chicago found ECA can cause: Joint discomfort caused by stiffness and swelling, muscle aches, upset stomach, and shortness of breath! Instead, Paleovalley Beef sticks use old world methods of fermentation, which gives the beef sticks a long shelf life without the use of harmful acids and chemicals. They’re also free of Brominated Vegetable Oil, hormones, and MSG and the natural fermentation process means they are a good source of probiotics.  Check out the amazing beef sticks and all of their products at paleovalley.com/mama and use code mama15 at checkout for 15% off your order!

 

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Katie: Hello, and welcome to the “Wellness Mama Podcast.” I’m Katie from wellnessmama.com and wellnesse.com. That’s wellness with an E on the end and I am here today with Dr. Debi Silber about how to stop sabotaging yourself and healing from betrayal. She’s done a lot of work about how unhealed betrayal impacts our health, our work, and our relationships and not just betrayal in adult relationships. She had two painful betrayals by her family and then by her husband.

And at age 50 with four kids and six dogs, she enrolled in a Ph.D. program in transpersonal psychology and did a study on betrayal and what holds us back. And we go deep on that today talking about the different types of betrayal, the physical and emotional impact they have, the three groundbreaking discoveries she made while studying this, what post-traumatic stress is versus post-traumatic growth and her system for moving into healing after experiencing a betrayal. Lots and lots of interesting and fascinating info in this one. I know you will learn a lot. So, let’s join Dr. Debi. Debi, welcome. Thanks so much for being here.

Debi: Looking forward to our conversation. Thank you.

Katie: Me too. And we’re gonna jump in and talk about something that you’ve done a whole lot of really fascinating research on. But before we do, I have a note in my show notes that you have four kids, I have six, you understand mom life, and that, when they were little and you were trying to get workouts in, that you had two in a stroller and two on your body. And I just have to hear this story because I think it’s so relatable to so many moms.

Debi: You know, you know what it’s like when you have to get your workout in, you wanna get your workout in, but you need to take care of the kids. So, I had my 5 and 6-year-old in a double jogger, I had my toddler in a backpack, and I had a newborn in one of those BabyBjörn snugly things. And I actually had a mirror that I would keep in my pocket so I could look at my toddler and see how she was doing on my back. And and I became known in the neighborhood as, “The fit mom who wears all those kids.”

Katie: I love that, that’s so fun. And good for you because I think it’s easy at that phase to just be like, “Oh, it’s too hard to even get a workout in.” And I’ve had those kids at those ages and I know how much energy is required. That’s awesome that you did that. Well, you’re an expert on actually many things, and there’s so many directions you could go, but the one I’m really excited to dive in and talk to you about today is really about betrayal. And I know that there’s a whole lot of layers of even foundational understanding to start to unpack this, although I think that word probably has a visceral feeling for people who have experienced it. So, let’s talk on a broader level, when we’re talking about betrayal in this context, kind of like what does that mean?

Debi: You know, I define it as the breaking of a spoken or unspoken rule, and every relationship has them. You know, the way it works though is the more you trust and the more you depend on someone, the deeper the betrayal. So, a child, for example, you know, where they’re completely dependent on their parent, the parent does something awful, that’s gonna have a different impact than, let’s say, your best friend sharing your secret. Still a betrayal, different level of cleanup left in the wake.

The way it works is, you know, think about it, this was the person or these were the people you trusted the most. So, and it completely shatters any sense of safety and security. So, when the person you trusted the most or the people you trust the most shatter that sense of safety and security, who do you trust? That’s why it has such a big impact.

Katie: And especially kids, that makes complete sense, because they are so dependent on parents. And I’ve heard it said by other psychiatrists on this podcast, actually, that kids will cut off love to themselves before they’ll cut off love to a caregiver because they are so dependent on the parents for survival. And it makes sense that this would, obviously, have rollover and have an impact in kind of all areas of life when someone’s experienced that kind of shattering of trust at a core level. But when you’ve researched this, does this play out in like personal relationships and work relationships, like where are the effects of this seen?

Debi: It affects us on every single level. Well, first of all, if this starts in childhood, then think about it, you move into your relationships and, you know, you move into these relationships not that they’re good, they’re so familiar. It’s like, “Okay. Oh, I know that, I know how that works.” But an unhealed betrayal, and here’s the thing, even if it happened decades ago, it can affect our health, our work, or relationships. For example, in relationships, I see it in one of two ways. The first way is in a repeat betrayal, the face has changed but it’s the same thing, keep going from, you know, partner to partner to partner, friend to friend to friend, boss to boss to boss. You say, “What the heck, is it me?” Yes, it is. Not in that it’s your fault, in that it’s your opportunity. There’s a profound lesson waiting to be learned that you are lovable, worthy, and deserving, you need better boundaries in place. Whatever it is. Until and unless you get that, you will have opportunities in the form of people to teach you.

The other way we see it is in relationships. The big wall goes up. You know, you’re like, “Been there, done that. That was way too painful, I don’t wanna take the chance of that again,” so, we keep everyone at bay. And yes, you know, you’re keeping out the bad ones, you’re keeping out the good ones too. And we think it’s coming from a place of strength, it’s not, it’s coming from fear. In health, we see it in, you know, people go to the most well-meaning amazing doctors, coaches, healers, therapists to manage a stress-related symptom, illness, condition, disease. So often at the root of it is an unhealed betrayal. We’ve seen it work too. You know, people wanna ask for that razor promotion, they deserve it, but the person they trusted the most proved untrustworthy. How do they trust that boss, that co-worker? Right? Or, you know, their confidence was shattered and they don’t have the confidence to ask. Or they wanna be a collaborative partner but they’re terrified. It shows up everywhere.

Katie: And I think that’s important in context as well because often it seems like the word “betrayal” gets linked only to, like, infidelity in relationships. And I know that you, in your research, there’s many many ways this plays out, especially in children, having such a big impact. And I know you’ve studied this, so, what were some of the discoveries you made during your study of this?

Debi: Yeah. And, of course, you know, no one studies betrayal because you like the topic, you know, you study it because you have to. And I had a really painful betrayal from my family and then thought I did the work I needed to do to heal and, a few years later, it happened again, this time it was my husband. So, I got him out of the house and looked at the two experiences, thinking, “Okay, well, what’s similar to these two? Of course me, what else?” And I realized boundaries were always getting crossed, never took my needs seriously. So, here I was, you could relate to this one, four kids, six dogs, a thriving practice. I’m like, “I’m going back for a PhD, that’s it.”

And it was in transpersonal psychology, the psychology of transformation, human potential. I was changing so much, I didn’t even understand what was happening. He was too, on his own, wasn’t ready to look at that. And then it was time to do a study, so, I studied betrayal, what holds us back, what helps us heal, and what happens to us physically, mentally, and emotionally when the people closest to us lie, cheat, and deceive. That study led to three groundbreaking discoveries which changed everything, I mean, my health, my work, my family, and my life.

But to answer your question, so, the first one, the first discovery was…you know, originally, I was studying betrayal and post-traumatic growth. And for those who aren’t familiar, post-traumatic growth, I kind of call it like an upside of trauma. Whatever that crisis is, death of a loved one, disease, natural disaster, leaves you with a new awareness inside perspective you didn’t have. But I had been through death of a loved one and I’ve been through disease, and I was like, “No, betrayal feels so different.” But I didn’t wanna assume it was the same for everybody else. So, I asked all my study participants, I said, “If you’ve been through other traumas, does betrayal feel different to you?” Unanimously, they said, “Oh my gosh, it’s so different.” Here’s why. Because it feels so intentional, we take it so personally. So, the entire self is shattered and has to be rebuilt. Rejection, abandonment, belonging, confidence, worthiness, trust…all have to be rebuilt.

So, it didn’t quite qualify as post-traumatic growth, it was like, “Yeah, you need to rebuild your life but you also need to rebuild yourself.” So, I coined a new term, “post-betrayal transformation,” the complete and total rebuild of your life and yourself after an experience with betrayal. That was the first discovery.

Katie: And I think I resonate with your idea that, unfortunately, many of us don’t get into the thing that ends up being our passion in life because of an easy experience. And for me, that was why I got into health and nutrition was I’ve heard people say, you know, “You get into therapy because you’re trying to figure out what is inside of you.” And for me, that was health. And I hear that over and over from practitioners who had their own journey that then led them to be able to help other people. And it sounds like that very much was yours as well.

I remember reading, “The Body Keeps the Score,” and having this kind of light bulb moment of how the physical body can store and express trauma. And is there a similar thing, you mentioned there could be physical effects of disease that follow betrayal, do you see that in betrayal as well, like the body manifesting physical expressions of that?

Debi: You led me into the second discovery so perfectly, this was the second one. What we learned was there’s actually a collection of symptoms so common to betray it’s known as “post betrayal syndrome.” We’ve had thousands and thousands of people take our post-portrayal-syndrome quiz to see to what extent they’re struggling. Every so often I pull the stats from the quiz. I’d love to share them, if that would serve…okay. So, now imagine, figure 60,000, 70,000 people, men, women, just about every country’s represented, almost every age. Ready? Seventy eight percent constantly revisit their experience, 81% feel a loss of personal power, 80% are hyper vigilant, 94% deal with painful triggers, and those triggers can take you right down. Here are the most common physical symptoms, 71% have low energy, 68% have sleep issues, 63% extreme fatigue, your adrenals have tanked, that’s what’s going on there, 47% have weight changes. So, in the beginning, you can’t hold food down, later on you’re using food for comfort. 45% have digestive issues. And that can be anything from Crohn’s, IBS, diverticulitis, constipation, diarrhea, you name it.

The most common mental symptoms, 78% are overwhelmed, 70% are walking around in the state of disbelief, 68% are unable to focus, 64% are in shock, 62% can’t concentrate. So, now imagine you can’t concentrate, you have a gut issue, you’re exhausted…you still have to raise your kids, you still have to work. That’s not even the emotional issues. Emotionally, 88% experience extreme sadness, 83% are very angry, it’s really common to bounce back and forth between those two emotions. 82% feel hurt, 80% have anxiety, 79% are stressed, just a few more, 84% have an inability to trust. And that affects everything. 67%  prevent themselves from forming deep relationships because they’re afraid of being hurt again. 82% find it hard to move forward. 90% wanna move forward but they don’t know how.

You wanna know the craziest thing about those stats? You didn’t hear me read anything that said, “20%, 30%,” those statistics, 70%, 80%, 90 plus percent from some of those different things isn’t necessarily from a recent betrayal. It could be from something that happened decades ago. So, imagine here someone did something back when you were a kid, or a little kid or a teenager, they may not even know, care, or even remember. And here we are walking around with the gut issue, the anxiety, the hyper vigilance for decades. That’s the part that, to me, is so tragic.

Katie: Yeah, I can think back to my own experience. And I had a very specific acute trauma in high school that I at least knew about and I realized that could be very much a part of things I was dealing with. But when I started doing the work and therapy and then even, like, hypnosis, they would ask me questions that I thought I knew cognitively the answer to. And the answers that actually came from my subconscious often went back to, like, early childhood. And it wasn’t something that on paper seemed like it could’ve been a super significant thing, it wasn’t like I was abused as a child. And that was really eye-opening for me to realize, like you just said, these can be outside of really extensive physical, emotional, verbal trauma, these can be actually what seem like smaller but very significant things. And that meaning that we attach to them and the whole process after them seems like it can really…and without even that conscious awareness. Which makes me wonder, so, it seems like all of us probably have examples of this in our life, some we may not even be aware of, how does one start to become aware of the roots of these?

Debi: You know, there are so many things we need to do, but one thing I also wanna mention about the quiz also, you know, we’ve all heard, “Time heals all wounds.” I have the proof, when it comes to betrayal, that’s simply not true. There’s a question that says, “Is there anything else you’d like to share?” and people write things like, “my betrayal happened 40 years ago, I can still feel the hate,” “my betrayal happened 35 years ago, I’m unwilling to trust again,” “my betrayal happened 10 years ago, it feels like it happened yesterday.”

But to answer your question, you know, first of all, we need to know, and I would love to get to the third discovery, but you wanna know if you’re numbing, avoiding, distract…I mean, there are so many things we do that prevent our healing. In fact, there were actually three groups in the study who did not heal. And so, this is something that may have been a huge betrayal or even a micro betrayal, something that you wouldn’t think is so significant but it shows up and our healing is prevented if we do one of these three things. Ready?

The first group, this was the group that refused to give up their story. They had their story, they were sticking with it, and so they did at the expense of healing. The second group, this was the group that was numbing, avoiding, distracting. They ran to the doctor who put them on a mood stabilizer, anti-anxiety medication. They started emotionally eating, drinking, numbing in front of the TV. May have made the day a bit easier to get through, not without a price.

The third group, I found this so interesting, this was the group where the betrayal really had very little consequences. So, whether it was out of not wanting to break up a family, financial fear, religious reasons, that was a big one, they just did all they could to turn the other cheek, try to put it behind them. I saw two things with this group. The first was a further deterioration of the relationship. The second thing was, by far, this group was the most physically sick. Your broken heart just can’t handle that.

But what so many people are afraid of is they’re so afraid of the death and destruction of the old. But that’s the only way you rebirth the new. Whether that’s just a new you…you know, and here’s the thing, rebuilding is always a choice. Whether you rebuild yourself and move on, and that’s what I do with my family, it just wasn’t an option to rebuild with them. Or if the situation lends itself, if you’re willing, if you want to, you rebuild something from the ground up, brand new with the person who hurt you. That’s what I did with my husband.

So, not long ago, as two totally transformed people, we married each other again. New rings, new vows, new dress, and our four kids is our bridal party. Never in a billion years would I have done anything like that if I wasn’t totally different and, for sure, if he wasn’t totally different. But betrayal will show you who someone truly is. It also has the potential to wake them up to who they temporarily became. And then, you know, you have a choice what you wanna do with that.

Katie: Wow, that’s amazing. I didn’t actually know that part of your personal story. Congratulations, that’s beautiful. Before we move on, I do wanna talk about the third discovery though just so we have those all three in the tank to move on to.

Debi: So, for me, this was the most exciting, this third discovery. And what we learned was, while we can stay stuck for years, decades, lifetime, and so many people do, if we’re going to fully heal, and by “fully heal” I mean symptoms of post betrayal syndrome, to that whole healed place of post betrayal transformation where we’ve rebuilt ourselves and our lives after betrayal, we’re gonna move through five now proven and predictable stages. And what’s even more exciting about that is we know what happens physically, mentally, and emotionally at every stage and we know what it takes to move from one stage to the next. Why is that good? Healing is entirely predictable. If someone is willing, they’re just willing to move through the stages, we got the rest.

So, I would love to share the five stages. Okay. So, the first stage is if you can imagine a setup stage, and I saw this with every study participant, me too, if you can imagine four legs of a table, the four legs being physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual, what I saw with everybody was this real heavy lean on the physical and mental thinking and doing and kind of neglecting the emotional and the spiritual, feeling and being. So, you know, that’s not to say, “If you’re busy, you’ll be betrayed,” but it was the profile profile I saw. So, if you can imagine four legs of a table and only two are there, well, it’s easy for that table to topple over, and that’s us.

Stage two, by far the scariest of all of the stages, and this is shock, trauma, D-Day, discovery day. And it’s the breakdown of the body, the mind, and the world of you. Right here you’ve ignited the stress response, you’re headed for every single stress-related symptom, illness, condition, disease. Your mind is in a complete and total state of chaos and overwhelm. You cannot wrap your mind around what you just learned, this makes no sense, and your world view has just been shattered. Your world view is your mental model, it’s the rules that prevent chaos that govern you, “Don’t go there. Trust this person. This is how life works.” And in one earth-shattering moment, everything you’ve known to be real and true is no longer…the bottom has bottomed out and the new bottom hasn’t been formed yet.

So, it’s terrifying. But think about it, if the bottom were to bottom out on you, what would you do? You’d grab hold of whatever you could to stay safe and stay alive.

And that’s stage three, survival instincts emerge. It’s the most practical out of all of the stages. “If you can’t help me, get out of my way.” How do I survive this experience? Where do I go? Who can I trust? How do I feed my kids? Here’s the trap though, stage three by far is the stage that we all get stuck in, and here’s why. Once you’ve figured out how to survive your experience, because it feels so much better than the shock and trauma of where you just came from, we’re like, “Okay, this is good.” And because we don’t know there’s anywhere else to go, we don’t even know there’s a stage four, stage five. Transformation doesn’t even begin until stage four. But because we don’t know there’s anywhere else to go, we start planting roots here. We’re not supposed to but we don’t know that. And four things happen.

The first thing is we start getting all these small self benefits. We get to be right, we get sympathy from everyone we tell our story to, we get someone to blame, we get a target for our anger, we don’t have to do the hard work of learning to trust again, “Should I trust you? Can I trust you? Ah, forget it, I’m not trusting anybody.” So, we plant deeper roots. Again, we’re not supposed to but we don’t know that. Now, because we’re here longer than we’re supposed to be, the mind starts doing things like, “Well, maybe you deserved it. Maybe you’re not all that great.” So, we plant deeper roots. Now, because you’re here a while and these are the thoughts you’re thinking, this is the energy you’re putting out. And like-energy attracts like-energy. So, now you start calling situations and circumstances and relationships towards you to confirm, “Yep,” this is where you belong, “it gets worse but I’ll get you out of here.”

Because it feels so bad but we don’t know there’s anywhere else to go, right here, we resign ourselves, we’re like, “This stinks but I better find a way to be okay with it.” So, right here is where we start using food, drugs, alcohol, work, TV, keeping busy, whatever, to numb, avoid, and distract ourselves from what’s so painful to feel or face. So, think about it, you do it for a day, a week, a month. Now it’s a habit. A year, 10 years, 20 years. And I can see someone 20 years out and say, “That emotional eating you’re doing, that numbing in front of the TV, do you think that has anything to do with your betrayal?” And they would look at me like I’m crazy, they would say, “It happened 20 years ago,” all they did was put themselves in stage three and stay there. Does that make sense? Yeah, that’s why it’s the most common place to get stuck. And then they stay there. And then the longer you’re there, the more deeply you’re grounded, the harder it is to leave.

Anyway, if you’re willing, willingness is a huge word right here, if you’re willing to let go of the small self benefits, grieve, mourn the loss, a bunch of things you need to do, you move to stage four. Stage four is finding and adjusting to a new normal. So, here’s where you acknowledge, “I can’t undo my experience but I control what I do with it. Right there, in that decision, you start turning down the stress response. You’re not healing just yet but you stop the massive damage you’ve been causing in stages two and stage three.

I always use the example of, if you’ve ever moved to a new house, office, condo, apartment, that’s kind of the feeling of stage four. It’s not quite cozy yet, you don’t know your way around but it’s going to be okay. And that’s the feeling. But also think about it, if you were to move, you don’t take everything with you. You don’t take the things that don’t represent who you wanna be in that new space. And what I found was, if your friends weren’t there for you, right here you’ve outgrown them. You don’t take them with you from stage three to four. And people ask me all the time, “What the heck, I’ve had these friends 10, 20, 30 years. Is it me?” Yes, it is, you’re undergoing a transformation. And if they don’t rise, they don’t come. Very common. And if you don’t know that, it could be really alarming. You’re like, “What’s happening?” That’s what’s happening.

Anyway, when you’re in stage four, you’re making it cozy, you’re making it home mentally, you move into the fifth most beautiful stage. And this is healing, rebirth, and a new world view. The body starts to heal. Self-love. Self-care. Eating well. Exercise. You didn’t have the bandwidth for that earlier, now you do. The mind is healing. You’re making new rules, you’re making new boundaries based on the road you just traveled. And you have a new world view based on everything you see so clearly now. And the four legs of that table, in the beginning, it was all about the physical and the mental, by this point, we’re solidly grounded because we’re focused on the emotional and the spiritual too. Those are the five stages.

Katie: Yeah, I love how clearly you mapped them out. And I can feel, having gone through some of those myself, for a long time, I was very much, especially in the physical, trying to, like, heal everything physically and very focused on what I was eating and all of the physical steps. And it wasn’t until I addressed the emotional and spiritual, like you said, feeling and being, that the others even resolved without nearly as much effort as I thought. But I remember that feeling, and I guess would’ve been kind of that jumping into stage four, of it being so scary. Because it was that feeling of like, “Well, I am starting to feel like a different person, and I’m afraid this is gonna mean letting go of parts of my life and people in my life that have represented something very important until now.” And I can see why that would be a hard jump. Are there things that help people to be willing? You said willingness is a huge key to be willing to step into stage four.

Debi: You know, one of the things that I found so helpful is, first of all, the wrong support does more harm than good. We have so many people coming into the PBT Institute with therapy trauma. If that therapist isn’t highly skilled in betrayal, it actually does more harm than good. And it’s also, you know, people seek support but, if, let’s say, it’s like the “ain’t it awful club,” you know, and it’s almost like, when you heal, you don’t belong, but what I found is, if you have those growth-minded like-minded friends to move towards, it makes that transition and that transformation a little bit easier. Because this way you don’t put pressure on your friends, the ones you are outgrowing, and they’re doing the best they can.

Because here’s the thing, it’s not them, it’s us. We’re undergoing this transformation. So, if we have sort of our people who are already there, who are doing the work that we’re working towards, it actually is one of the things that prevents sabotage. Because we don’t wanna be on our own, we don’t wanna be, you know, totally without any support or anybody that understands this. So, if we have those people kind of in place, we can move towards it without feeling, “I’m totally on my own.”

Now, that’s not to say transformation isn’t a very personal process, it is, it’s not lonely, it’s very personal. And because this is a time period where you are clearly rewriting the rules, you’re writing a new script, betrayal lends itself to creating an entirely new identity. You take all the parts of you that you love, you leave behind everything that no longer serves, and you create a version of you that never would’ve had the opportunity to exist had that not happened. That’s trauma well served.

Katie: And it seems like I hear from a lot of people, and I’ve seen this pattern, where we might have a betrayal or a trauma as a child and then, you mentioned, like, we play this out over and over in our adult lives until we resolve it. Which, of course, would seem scary to a lot of people in a relationship because, if your relationship was kind of trauma-bonded in the beginning, both people then have to do the work to create a new system that’s based on trust and not playing out those patterns. Are there any tools that you found are helpful? Especially, if I can think of examples where maybe one partner is wanting to do that and the other is like, “No, I like the system that we have,” and that seems like it could cause quite a bit of stress.

Debi: Absolutely. You know, that reminds me of…I’m big on analogies, let me give you one right here. People tell me, you know, they ask me all the time about trust, and I don’t think trust can be repaired. It can be rebuilt, it takes a lot of work though. Here’s what I see, I look at trust like a brick wall. You know, the only way I know of a brick wall being built is brick by brick by brick. And that’s why it takes time. Now, imagine the person who built that brick wall in one earth-shattering moment, series of moments, tears the whole thing down. The person whose trust has been shattered can look at the rubble of bricks and say, “I don’t have the least bit of interest in watching that thing get rebuilt.” However, if they are willing, that would be their role. If they’re willing to watch that brick wall be rebuilt, the other person has to be a really good bricklayer. And it goes up the same way it went up the first time, brick by brick by brick. Every opportunity they have to show that they’re trustworthy, that’s one brick in that new brick wall.

But here’s what I see. The wall has been built, the person who built it shatters the whole thing, that person’s not really all that interested in rebuilding the brick wall. So, the person whose trust has been shared, they’re like, “Okay, I’ll build it.” Well, that’s why they never feel safe. That’s why they always have that heightened level of anxiety. You know, we also teach how do you know if it’s safe and in your best interest to heal and rebuild or heal and move on. And this way you know what you’re working with. I mean, I’m happy to share that if it would serve…

Katie: Absolutely, yeah.

Debi: Okay. Because here’s the thing, you know, after you’ve been betrayed and after trust has been shattered, it is really a solo job. And the idea is this is that opportunity for you to just rebuild yourself and, if we are so committed to that other person, what happens is, as we do the work, we sabotage ourselves because we’re afraid of outgrowing them. We don’t wanna outgrow them. So, the idea is we need to be okay with that because, once we do that growth, that other person can step it up or we’ve outgrown them, that’s just the way that works. But here’s how to know…and this is gonna be, I know a lot of people right here, they’re, “I know what’s coming.” So, I mean this in the best way because I want you to know who you’re working with.

I’m gonna teach you something, we call it the window of willingness. How do you know if it’s safe and in your best interest to heal and rebuild or heal and move on? Imagine a window, and the window is the widest open meaning, the greatest opportunity to heal and rebuild with someone. And then we’re going to get to all the way where it’s totally closed. Again, this isn’t to say you have to, this is just if you want to. Window is the widest open with this level one. And it’s remorse, apology, you know, regret, restitution. It may sound something like this, “I am so sorry for the pain I caused you. I can’t even imagine what that feels like. What in the world can I do to make it up to you?”

Now, of course, with betrayal, it takes a lot more than that but at least you’re off to a good start, that person is taking full and complete responsibility and ownership. You can feel the window closing a little bit with this next one. And you know it’s coming, this level two, you know it’s coming when you hear the word because. “Well, I did it because…” “I said it because…” Right? You still may be willing to listen but it doesn’t feel as good as that level one. Right? Okay, you know you can feel the window closing even more with this level three and you know it’s coming when you hear the word you. “I did it because you…” “I said it because you…” I call this the two-sided slap. Here you get betrayed, that’s slap on one side, and then you get blamed for it, that’s a slap on the other. This is crazy making and this is like gaslighting 101.

Level three is very close cousins with level four, you know it’s coming when there is zero responsibility, the window is sealed shut. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. You’re crazy, you really need help.” Right? So, that’s the way that goes. So, here’s the thing, if you’re working with a level one or a level two, you have something to work with here. And then it’s totally up to you. If you’re working with a level three and level four, for sure you have many of those symptoms of post betrayal syndrome. At this point in their current level of consciousness, they are not able or willing to do the work. You don’t have anything to work with here. Here’s where you rebuild yourself and you move along.

Katie: That’s helpful to understand the languaging around each of those different ones so that you can pay attention. And because, like you said also earlier, I would guess there are a lot of people who, for the kids or for societal ideas they were raised with or religious ideas, in a sense, almost like that’s not an option, so, they are like only focused on rebuilding. But both people have to be in that place of willingness in order for that to happen.

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Let’s talk a little bit about boundaries and trust, because you used those words quite a bit. So, maybe after a betrayal, what are some tangible examples of boundaries. Like, how can, knowing each of us only has our own experience and our own actions to work from, what are some things someone can do to put healthy boundaries in place?

Debi: You know, this is a time where you really decide what boundaries you need for yourself, for that other person. Here’s the thing too, forgiveness is all about us. We’ve all heard, you know, “Forgiveness is for us.” When it comes to reconciliation though, that has so much to do with the other person, but you get to rewrite that script right here. And here’s where people are so, and I hear this all the time, “Well, you know what, I feel so bad being like this. I mean, I wish I didn’t have to…” Well, of course. And the rules have to be really really strict in the beginning. And what I always recommend is you make them as super strict as you need to so that you feel safe. And you can always, like, you know, when someone works in a new place, maybe there’s a three-month evaluation, well, it could be the same thing, make those rules super strict in the beginning and reevaluate as time goes on.

And here’s where, whatever it was that made you feel so uncomfortable, you think about it and then start there. Like, if someone was gonna be late, right now either that’s unacceptable or you need to know. And maybe they have to make a phone call or, in the beginning, maybe even a picture of where they are. And I know people are thinking, “I wish I didn’t have to be like this.” Of course not, this is what betrayal does and it’s gonna do that until you feel safe again.

But here’s the thing, if the other person isn’t willing to honor these new boundaries, it’s telling you something. So, the boundaries are super strict in the beginning, you know, until that foundation is rebuilt again. And you can always loosen things up and always reevaluate as you begin to feel a bit safer, as you begin to trust again. You know, there’s also a four-step trust rebuilding process, I could teach you that too.

Katie: Let’s talk about that briefly because I think it seems like trust is a huge key and often maybe a point most people have trouble getting past.

Debi: Yeah, and here’s the thing. If you don’t rebuild it from the ground up, you always feel shaky and unstable. And one of the things that a lot of people have a hard time with is their inability to trust themselves. Because think about it, the person they trusted the most proved untrustworthy, and then the next response is, “How did I not see? How did I not know? Where was I?” So, then they lose trust in themselves. So, think about it, if the person you trusted the most proved untrustworthy and now you don’t trust in yourself either, well, how in the world can you trust in anyone and anything? So, there’s such a ripple effect.

So, I like to build it, and this is what I teach, it’s from the ground up because that’s where it got shattered. So, it sounds so ridiculous but you do need to rebuild the foundation. So, start with something so simple. I’m talking like, “Will the sun rise?” When trust is shattered, you don’t even know. So, you go out, you test every morning, “Oh, what do you know, there it is.” And you pick whatever it is until you have a foundation upon which to stand. That’s your first ground level.

The next stage of that, the next step of that would be trust in your gut, trust in your higher wisdom. You know, it’s like we have that gut feeling and then our mind talks us out of it. So many people who’ve been betrayed, when you speak with them, they’re like, “You know, something didn’t feel right.” But what did we do? We would override it and go with our mind, with “the gut knows.” So, to rebuild that intuition, you know, strengthen that wise inner guide, think about…you wanna create two scenarios. What’s the scenario that represents trust for you? Maybe it’s two babies giggling, right? Maybe it’s, you know, your dog wagging his or her tail. What is it that represents trust for you? Get a felt sense of that. Where do you feel it? How do you feel it? That’s trust, right? You’ll feel it in your body. Open, expansive. Whatever it is for you, get a sense of where you feel it.

Then go back to D-Day, discovery day, or when you saw, you realized someone was lying to you. How did that feel? What did it feel like? Get that felt sense. Did it feel like constricted and tight? Was there a color or a texture? Whatever it was that represents a lack of trust. Now, as you move through your day, which does it feel closer to, right, the sense of trust or the lack of trust? And you need to strengthen that. And here’s the thing, you’re looking for congruency. When people are trustworthy, the energy, the thoughts, behaviors, actions, mannerisms are all lined up. Everything is congruent. When there’s a lack of congruency, it doesn’t feel right. You know, when someone’s saying one thing but their eyes or their mannerisms are saying something else, trust that. Trust that.

Once you’ve rebuilt that sense of, you know, your gut, strengthen your gut a little bit, you kind of feel like you have a sense of safety and security around you a bit. Then you go to that next level, the next level is learning to trust in yourself again. Because that’s been shattered, we lose self trust. How do you do that? You give yourself little tasks and then you do them. “I’m gonna drink that glass of water,” and then you do, “I’m gonna go to the gym,” and then you do, “I’m going to not call my ex,” and then you don’t, whatever it is for you. And what you are teaching yourself is that, “My word is law. If I say something, it’s truth.” And you’re learning, you’re reteaching yourself that you are trustworthy.

So, think about it. You know, you have your foundation upon which to stand. You trust your gut, that wise inner guide. You trust yourself. And from this place, you slowly, carefully, and cautiously can start to trust in others. We bypass the first three levels. We go right for that trusting in somebody else again, and that’s why we feel so shaky and uncertain.

Katie: That makes sense. And the language you use, I love that example of feeling where something is in your body and then trying to feel, “Does it have a color, a smell, a texture?” When I first encountered that in therapy, I remember thinking like, “This is so obscure and random,” like, “what are you talking about? Of course it doesn’t have a color.” And then I started actually paying attention, like, “Oh, I was ignoring sensations in my body that probably could’ve been telling me things.” And now it’s something I try to incorporate with my kids. It’s like, when they’re feeling a strong emotion, rather than me naming their emotion and saying like, “Oh, are you feeling mad? Are you feeling…” asking them and saying, “what are you feeling right now? Where are you feeling it? And if you were gonna draw a picture, what would it look like, of this feeling that you’re having?” just help them to have that, hopefully, body awareness.

And I think about how, from reading a lot of parenting books, it seems like many core wounds in childhood go back to those core questions of, “Am I lovable? Am I worthy? Am I…” And so, I think, as parents, we also have this window with our children to help them establish some of these foundational things early on. So, maybe they are more aware and they have these cues earlier in life that I had to learn them as an adult. But it makes me wonder, have you looked into it with kids at all, like as parents? Are there any things we can do to help them feel safe, of course, and also to learn to trust themselves and to have that kind of healthy relationship with others?

Debi: I love that you’re asking that question because, well, first of all…and I’m a big believer in every parent knows best for their own kids. Having said that, my husband was the one who told my kids…so, could you imagine four teenagers looking at him like, “You did what to mom?” If anything is gonna have you fall from grace, wake up, and realize what matters, it’s losing everyone that mattered. And that was probably what made it for him such a powerful wake-up call. Having said that, what they saw in me was they saw mom crash but they saw mom rise. And I can tell you, they are four best friends, and now we have two bonus daughters, you know, girlfriends who came in. All six of them are best friends, it’s like they’ve been through war together.

So, they’ve learned resilience skills that they may not have been able to learn had they not seen me go through what I went through. And both of us go through what we went through. You know, that’s the first thing. What I also see is sometimes, let’s say, after betrayal, there’s a breakup and that’s it. And let’s say one parent, and it could be either one, one parent really isn’t taking the responsibility in making sure the kids are okay. Well, you know what, that leaves the other parent needing to double down and representing, “This is what safety and security looks like, this is what truth and trust looks like. It looks like me. And I’m not gonna be my best all the time but, you know, I will never be untrustworthy, I’m always gonna tell you the truth. I love you with every cell of my being, I’m doing the best I can. It’s not always gonna be great but this is what trust and truth looks like.”

Katie: Yeah, and it seems like there’s a big aspect of modeling there, of course, with anything we’re talking about, parenting, but also it seems like a very common theme that is the core need of children is to feel safe. And, of course, societally, it seems easiest if that’s in a marriage with two parents who are both happy and harmonious but also, like, if that’s not the case in a family, there’s still many ways to make sure that children feel safe. And I’ve even heard from people who say like, as children go through their parents getting divorced, the main question they have in their head is still, “Am I safe?”

And so, hopefully both parents are working together to make sure the children feel safe, even as they’re going for their own process. And I would guess, for your children, it was probably amazing for them to get to see you model and have truth around like, “This is really hard and I’m not gonna do this great every day,” and also, “I’m gonna get up every day and I’m here for you and I’m gonna show up. And sometimes we go through hard things, and also we can get stronger because of them.”

And you talk about the idea of not just post traumatic growth, which I still love that term because it’s such a great reframe to post traumatic stress, but even beyond that, the transformation side post this and how your greatest crisis can become, in a sense, your greatest strength. And that’s the thing, I didn’t understand until I actually felt it myself of looking back and going, “Wow, I would never choose it. I wouldn’t choose it now, I wouldn’t choose it for my kids,” and also, “I wouldn’t change the fact that I was sexually assaulted in high school because it taught me so much and I’ve become a version of myself I might never have had the chance to become had I not gone through that. So, I actually have gratitude for the growth that happened.” But let’s talk about that because I think maybe that’s also a sticking point people get stuck in the, like, pain and the sadness and the victim side of something. Which, like you explained, is a perfectly reasonable thing because you’re trying to feel safe. And also then you sometimes miss out on this beautiful even better phase that can come after but sometimes you just can’t even see it in the beginning.

Debi: It’s so true. It’s so painful, but you can look at it saying, “Am I simply the poster child for this crisis, whatever it is I went through?” or, “am I meant to do something really good with something really painful?” And I’ll tell you, I remember going through the study and I really just wanted to heal. Like one book wasn’t getting me out of this, a whole PhD was needed to help here, but I remember thinking to myself, “If I can heal from this, I’m taking everybody with me.” And there’s something about that where your purpose is revealed to you as you move through it.

And we see this, this is so common to stages four and five, if I tell you how many new businesses we’ve seen birthed, you know, in that stage five or new relationships or new levels of the health, you didn’t have access to any of that earlier. But, as you are moving through it, there are a few things going on. One is, “Well, if I could get through this, I could do anything,” that’s the first thing. And when that old life really has crashed and burned, that’s when the downloads start coming through where, you know, you just get these insights and these opportunities. And I can assure you, the PBT Institute wasn’t even anything close to anything I was ever thinking until I was in stage four, stage five. But, I mean, how many people do you know who’ve had a major health crisis and now here they are, sharing it? Or they’ve had a financial crisis and they’re helping others? You know, you can be the poster child for it or you can travel a path. And then I kind of feel like we owe it to people to teach them that road that we just traveled, the shortcuts we got, you know, that were created because of it.

Katie: Yeah, I think that’s a beautiful reframe. And also just even having that as a hope and to know, like, that I can help other people makes that journey more bearable, especially in those tough days. You’ve also mentioned the word, like, numbing, avoiding, distracting. And I know there are some ways we can pay attention because, often, it seems like, in that phase, you may not even realize you’re doing those things, which is the whole purpose of those things is to distract you from the fact that you’re doing them. So, how can someone become aware that they might be doing some of those coping things?

Debi: Yeah. You know, here I’m gonna invite everybody to write down these four questions. That’s my way of saying write those down. Because this is how you’ll see, “Am I numbing, avoiding, distracting?” Ready? The first question, “Am I numbing, avoiding, distracting?” If so, how, right? Do you walk into the kitchen, you’re not the least bit hungry, and you find yourself in the cabinets? Do you go into a room and you put on the TV to desperately drown out the sound of your own thoughts? Call yourself on it.

The second question, “What am I pretending not to see?” Am I pretending not to see that health issue that needs my attention? Am I pretending not to see, “I hate my job.”? Am I pretending not to see that relationship issue, right, that needs my attention?

The third question, “What’s life gonna look like in 5 to 10 years if I do nothing?” Play it all the way out, we don’t wanna do that, play it all the way out. Take that health issue that you’re ignoring, 5 to 10 years, what does it look like? Take, you know, the job issue, 5 to 10 years, play it out. What does it look like? You know, whatever the issue is, 5 to 10 years, what does that look like if you do nothing?

And the fourth question, “What can life look like in 5 to 10 years if I change now?” I’m not saying it’s easy but transformation begins when you tell yourself the truth.

Katie: I think for me my coping mechanism was hiding in work. And then, as I started unpacking and letting go of things, I had a phase of going, “Am I gonna lose my edge if I let go of this compulsion that comes from this place of pain?” And what I realized that I couldn’t realize until I had gotten through it was, “Oh, you don’t lose your edge, you just get to choose when you pick up the sword and you can choose to put it down sometimes.” But in the moment, I felt like I can’t let go of this because what if…so, that’s helpful to have those questions as a guide. And I would guess there are a lot of people listening who are resonating with definitely certain parts of what we’ve talked about and might have the question in their mind of, “Okay, if I know I’m in one of these stages,” or, “if I’ve identified that maybe there’s this thing that’s causing problems and I hadn’t linked to them before, where do I start to heal, if I am willing?” Like, what are the steps where…I know you have resources for this but where do I begin?

Debi: Yeah, well, the first step is knowing what stage you’re in. So, you know, I shared the stages. So, if you realized you’re in a stage two or stage three, especially stage three, it is easy to stay stuck there for life. So, knowing what stage you’re in is a great first step. You can’t change what you’re not aware of. So, knowing what stage, you know, where you say, “Wow, I had no idea there were even all these five stages, I’m only in stage three, how do I move to stage four?” I mean that’s at least, “I know where I am.” Check your willingness too because there are a lot of benefits for staying stuck. Check how willing you are to move through the stages and then if there’s a road map.

Katie: And where can people keep learning more from you? I know you’ve done TED talks on this, I’ll link to those in the show notes, you have resources on your website, but where would you point people as a good jumping-in point?

Debi: You know, the best thing we have thepbt, as in post betrayal transformation, thepbtinstitute.com, that has everything there. There, we have two quizzes. One is the post-betrayal-syndrome quiz and one is the healed or hardened quiz. And that’ll show you, you know, exactly what stage you’re in, they just find that at healedorhardenedquiz.com.

Katie: I’ll make sure there’s links for all of you listening while you’re exercising or driving, that’s wellnessmama.fm, you can find all the links of everything we’ve talked about. And a couple questions I love to ask, a little bit unrelated, at the end. The first being if there is a book or a number of books that have profoundly influenced your life, and if so, what they are and why?

Debi: You know, I would say the book that absolutely changed my life was “Conversations with God, Book 1,” Neale Donald Walsch. Game changer.

Katie: I love that. And then any last advice to leave with the listeners today. It could be related to everything we’ve talked about or something entirely unrelated.

Debi: You know, there’s two things that are coming to mind. One is, first of all, I know how painful it is. I know that pain, it’s a pain like no other. And if you have to say this a million times to yourself, it’s worth it. And even though it happened to you, it’s not about you, it’s not about you. Believe that.

The second thing I would say is, this is a mantra I’ve been using for my 30 years in business, it applies to every area of life, and it’s this, “Easy now, hard later. Hard now, easy later. Take your pick, it’s one of the two.” And what most people do, especially when it comes to just really anything, is easy now. But the hard later is always there. Healing from betrayal is 100% a case of hard now, easy later.

Katie: I love that, it reminds me of Naval Ravikant saying, “Easy choices, hard life. Hard choices, easy life.” Yeah, I love that. That’s a beautiful place to wrap up. I know this is a tough and emotional topic, and I think you’re doing amazing work on helping people tangibly work through it and move to healing. I also know how busy you are, so, I’m very grateful for your time today and for all the research you’re doing and all the people that you’re helping. Thank you for being here.

Debi: Thank you so much for the opportunity and for the amazing work you do.

Katie: And thanks, as always, to all of you for listening and sharing your most valuable resources, your time, your energy and your attention, with us today. We’re both so grateful that you did. And I hope that you will join me again on the next episode of “The Wellness Mama Podcast.”

 

If you’re enjoying these interviews, would you please take two minutes to leave a rating or review on iTunes for me? Doing this helps more people to find the podcast, which means even more moms and families could benefit from the information. I really appreciate your time, and thanks as always for listening.

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Blockchain-based move-to-earn app Stepn under DDoS attacks after upgrade

Solana-based move-to-earn application Stepn has reported multiple denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks in the aftermath of the platform proceeding with a major anti-cheating upgrade.

Stepn took to Twitter on June 5 to report that the platform has suffered a number of DDoS attacks causing recovery maintenance and associated improper performance.

According to the statement, Stepn was expecting to secure and recover the servers in up to 12 hours but has not posted an update for 20 hours by the time of writing.

“Our engineers are working hard to fix the problems. We will announce here once recovery is complete. Thank you so much for everyone’s patience,” Stepn wrote.

The attacks came shortly after Stepn introduced its anti-cheating system referred to as “Stepn’s Model for Anti-Cheating,” or SMAC, on June 3. The system aims to eliminate fake users from the platform as well as to prevent fraudulent motion data on the Stepn app in an attempt to gain unfair profit from the platform.

“SMAC system specifically targets the movement simulation by amending real walking/running data, thanks to our machine learning algorithm,” the anti-cheating system’s description reads.

Stepn reported on major platform issues soon after proceeding with the upgrade, with SMAC mistakenly identifying some genuine users as bots. Other problems included network issues caused by a “25 million DDOS attack” as well as the temporary inability to track any bots on the platform.

“We are deeply sorry for the inconvenience caused to users. The anti-cheating update may seem small, but it is actually an important cornerstone of Stepn’s long-term development,” Stepn said.

Despite the platform’s DDoS issues, Stepn’s native token, the Green Satoshi Token (GST), has not seen any critical decline over the past several days. On the contrary, the GST is up around 10% over the past 24 hours, trading at $1.04 at the time of writing. The token’s market capitalization amounts to $624 million, according to data from CoinGecko.

Green Satoshi Token seven-day price chart. Source: CoinGecko

Related: People want to be paid crypto to exercise in the Metaverse: Survey

Launched in December 2021, Stepn is a major move-to-earn mobile nonfungible token (NFT) game allowing users to earn tokens by walking, jogging or running outdoors with an NFT sneaker. The game has a dual token system, including the GST token and the Governance Token (GMT).

The news comes as Stepn prepares to limit its platform’s availability for users in mainland China by mid-July.



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RHOA Alum Porsha Williams Shares Her Amazon Summer Essentials

We included these products chosen by Porsha Williams because we think you’ll like her picks at these prices. Porsha is a paid spokesperson for the Amazon Influencer Program. E! has affiliate relationships, so we may get a commission if you purchase something through our links. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!. Prices are accurate as of publish time.

“There’s no better way to get ready for the summer than to do it with Amazon,” Porsha Williams declared on Amazon Live. She admitted, “There are always plenty of boxes coming to my door from things I’ve ordered.” The Real Housewives of Atlanta alum even shared how her Amazon shopping might affect her relationship with Simon Guobadia, explaining, “He’s just gonna have to get used to me being the person that always orders stuff from Amazon. It just doesn’t stop. I just may hide some of the boxes here and there, but it is what it is. We know how it goes with Amazon.”

This time around, the Bravo star shared her favorites for summer, including swimwear, grilling essentials, outdoor décor, and beauty products. Check out her summer essentials below to find out why she adores these Amazon picks so much.

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Sony Bravia XR X90K Smart TV Series With 4K Resolution Launched in India

Sony has announced the launch of the Bravia XR X90K TV series in India on Monday. This series includes three models with 75-inch (XR-75X90K), 65-inch (XR-65X90K), and 55-inch (XR-55X90K) screen sizes. The models are equipped with Cognitive Processor XR that can support 4K upscaling technology. These TVs feature a Full Array LED panel coupled with XR Triluminos Pro technology for delivering lifelike contrast and access to over a billion covers. They also include Dolby Atmos, Acoustic Multi-Audio, and 3D Surround Upscaling technologies for delivering immersive sound.

Sony Bravia XR-55X90K, Bravia XR-65X90K, Bravia XR-75X90K price in India, availability

The Sony Bravia XR-55X90K is priced at Rs. 1,23,490 on the ShopAtSC online store. Also, the Bravia XR-65X90K is available for Rs. 1,70,990 on the ShopAtSC site. Sony will soon announce the pricing information of the Bravia XR-75X90K. These smart TVs will also be available across all Sony Centres, major retail stores, and e-commerce portals in India.

Sony Bravia XR X90K series specifications, features

Apart from the dimensions and weight, the Sony Bravia XR X90K smart TVs share similar specifications. Their Full Array LED panels have a 4K (3,840×2,160 pixels) resolution and support a refresh rate of 100Hz. They pack the Cognitive Processor XR and feature the XR 4K upscaling and XR Motion Clarity technologies for clear and bright visuals. For gaming, the Bravia XR X90K series is made HDMI 2.1 compatible for supporting 4K videos at 120 fps, Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), and Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM). Furthermore, they are equipped with light sensors for automatic ambient optimisation.

These TVs are fitted with two full-range bass-reflex speakers and two tweeters that deliver a combined audio output of 40W. The X90K series’ audio performance is enhanced by technologies like Dolby Atmos, XR Sound Position, Acoustic Multi-Audio, and 3D Surround Upscaling. There is also the acoustic auto calibration technology that optimises audio output depending on your position in front of the TV.

The Bravia XR X90K series runs on Google TV, which provides access to popular streaming platforms and other apps from Google Play. These TVs also support Apple Home Kit and AirPlay for seamless integration with Apple devices like iPads and iPhones. They include the Bravia Core app, which allows customers to redeem up to 5 current or classic movies along with a 12-month streaming subscription.


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