U-Haul and Unpack - Friendships, Betrayal, and Healing After Toxic Relationships

Episode 5: Fck Your Victim Card - You're Self Sabotaging...Start Owning Your Part

Lauren & Vicky, Married Podcast Hosts on Toxic Relationships, Betrayal, and Healing Episode 5

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In this episode of U-Haul and Unpack: Friendships, Betrayal, and Healing After Toxic Relationships, we show you how to let go of blame, take accountability, and finally heal from toxic relationships, betrayal, and self-sabotage.

We’ve all been hurt.
We’ve all had someone do us wrong.
But holding onto the victim card doesn’t keep you safe...it just keeps you stuck.

In episode 5, we’re unpacking what it really means to take accountability for your part in any relationship: romantic, platonic, or family, without dismissing the pain you’ve lived through.

We’re sharing:

🚩 The uncomfortable truth about being both the victim and the contributor

💔 Why staying in victim mode blocks your healing

🔑 How accountability is the only way to break toxic cycles

This conversation is your permission slip to stop replaying what they did and start focusing on what you can change. Whether it’s a breakup, a friendship fallout, or a family wound that won’t close. This episode will help you reclaim your power and start healing forward.

You can be the victim of something and the contributing factor at the same time. That’s where real growth begins. Let’s unpack it.

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Episode 5 Transcript – Boundaries, Emotional Growth, and Navigating Therapy

Timestamps & Topics

[00:00] Introduction & Episode Overview
 [01:10] Early Insights on Therapy
 [04:00] Recognizing Emotional Patterns
 [07:25] Understanding Codependency
 [11:05] Therapist Boundaries & Event Sessions
 [14:30] Emotional Responsibility & Self-Reflection
 [18:20] Discomfort as a Sign of Growth
 [22:05] Identifying Blind Spots
 [26:10] Ending Therapy Respectfully
 [30:40] Finding the Right Support
 [34:15] Taking Personal Authority
 [37:50] Signs It’s Time to Switch Therapists
 [40:20] Closing Advice

[00:00 – 01:10] Introduction
Vicky Machtinger: Therapy is a tool, not a crutch. Understanding yourself is the first step toward healthier relationships and personal growth.

Lauren: And the goal is not just feeling better — it’s acting differently, making empowered choices, and noticing patterns.

[01:11 – 04:00] Early Insights on Therapy
Vicky Machtinger: Early therapy experiences often normalize unhealthy behaviors — over-dependency, emotional volatility, even fights. What was considered “normal” can actually be harmful.

Lauren: Recognizing these normalized behaviors is crucial for emotional awareness and change.

[04:01 – 07:25] Recognizing Emotional Patterns
Vicky Machtinger: Notice your reactions. If you leave interactions drained or anxious, that’s a clue. Patterns repeat until acknowledged and addressed.

Lauren: Tracking these patterns gives clarity and reduces unconscious repetition.

[07:26 – 11:05] Understanding Codependency
Vicky Machtinger: Codependency can feel safe, but it’s a trap. Past therapy sometimes reinforced it instead of addressing it. You need to recognize the root causes to truly heal.

Lauren: Awareness of co-dependent tendencies is the first step toward self-sovereignty.

[11:06 – 14:30] Therapist Boundaries & Event Sessions
Vicky Machtinger: Event sessions can reveal unresolved issues, but therapists must maintain boundaries. Projecting their own issues or using clients for practice is harmful. Ethical, trained guidance is essential.

Lauren: Boundaries aren’t just for clients — they protect the integrity of the therapeutic process.

[14:31 – 18:20] Emotional Responsibility & Self-Reflection
Vicky Machtinger: Emotional growth is uncomfortable. Feeling exposed or triggered shows that self-reflection is happening. Growth requires accountability — noticing your triggers, your reactions, and your choices.

Lauren: Discomfort signals engagement with your blind spots, not failure.

[18:21 – 22:05] Discomfort as a Sign of Growth
Vicky Machtinger: Emotional exhaustion after sessions is normal. It’s a sign that deep reflection is happening. Avoiding this discomfort prevents genuine growth.

Lauren: Leaning into the hard moments builds emotional resilience and self-awareness.

[22:06 – 26:10] Identifying Blind Spots
Vicky Machtinger: Identify patterns like codependency or recurring emotional triggers. Therapy helps you self-regulate, recognize unhealthy behaviors, and build coping strategies.

Lauren: Awareness leads to choices — choosing healthier reactions and more supportive interactions.

[26:11 – 30:40] Ending Therapy Respectfully
Vicky Machtinger: If therapy isn’t working, you have the right to end it. Communicate professionally — ghosting is not growth. Ending a relationship with a therapist is like leaving a job: clear and intentional.

Lauren: Respectful closure reinforces boundaries and personal authority.

[30:41 – 34:15] Finding the Right Support
Vicky Machtinger: Support options include:

  • Licensed therapists and counselors
  • Peer support groups for mental health issues
  • Recommendations through ZocDoc or trusted professionals

Lauren: Peer groups provide validation and community, complementing professional therapy.

[34:16 – 37:50] Taking Personal Authority
Vicky Machtinger: Ultimately, you control your healing. Therapy is a tool — personal responsibility drives change. Check in with yourself, track your growth, and make choices that reinforce emotional wellness.

Lauren: Active engagement outside sessions is where the real progress happens.

[37:51 – 40:20] Signs It’s Time to Switch Therapists
Vicky Machtinger: Consider switching if you notice:

  • Plateauing progress
  • Persistent unhealthy patterns
  • Emotional volatility
  • Lack of tools for behavior change

Lauren: Your instincts about your therapist are valid — don’t ignore them.

[40:21 – End] Closing Advice
Vicky Machtinger: If therapy isn’t helping, move on. If it is, ensure that real growth is happening. Trust yourself, honor boundaries, and take ownership of your emotional journey.

Lauren: Emotional freedom comes from self-awareness, consistent action, and personal accountability.