“…As discussed earlier, betrayal trauma experiences, attachment style, and various elements of emotion dysregulation have each been shown to have relations to relationship satisfaction (Allen, Rhoades, Stanley, & Markman, 2010;Erbes, 2011;Nelson Goff, Crow, Reisbig, & Hamilton, 2007;Cook, Riggs, Thompson, Coyne, & Sheikh, 2004;Sayers, Farrow, Ross, & Oslin, 2009;Knapp, Knapp, Brown, & Larson, 2017;Hyland, Tsujmoto, & Hamilton, 1993;Davis & Petretic-Jackson, 2000;Hadden, Smith, & Webster, 2014;Mikulincer, Florian, Cowan, & Cowan, 2002;Sadikaj, Moskowitz, & Zuroff, 2015;Collins & Read, 1990;Simpson, 1990;Kirkpatrick & Davis, 1994;Givertz, Woszidlo, Segrin, & Knutson, 2013;Rick, Falconier, & Wittenborn, 2017;Vater & Schröder-Abé, 2015;Butler et al, 2003;English, John, Srivastava, & Gross, 2012;Impett et al, 2012). Attachment style has also been shown to be directly related to facets of emotion dysregulation (Crittenden, 1992;Kobak & Sceery, 1998;Mikulincer & Shaver, 2003;Velotti et al, 2016;Viddal, Berg-Nielsen, Belsky, & Wichstrøm, 2017;Marganska, Gallagher, & Miranda, 2013). Additionally, in past research, both attachment style and emotion dysregulation have been shown to be independent mediators of relationship satisfaction (Whiffen & MacIntosh, 2005;Godbout, Sabourin, & Lussier, 2009;Rellini, 2008;Rellini, Vujanovic, & Zvolensky, 2010;Bradbury & Shaffer, 2012).…”