Manage episode 518899077 series 3663852
When an accusation hits, everything collapses. Here’s how to steady yourself and move forward with integrity.
When you’re accused—rightly or wrongly—your body floods with fear, anger, and shame.
Licensed therapist and veteran Tim Wienecke shares what to do next: how to regulate, think clearly, and take accountability without losing who you are.
This isn’t legal advice. It’s therapeutic guidance for one of the hardest moments a man can face. Drawing from over a decade of clinical work with men, veterans, and those accused of harm, Tim explains how to move through crisis with structure and care.
You’ll learn a three-phase framework to get through the chaos:
1️⃣ Stabilize: Ground your body, slow your breathing, and manage emotion before reacting.
2️⃣ Assess: Build your support team—legal, HR, clinical, community—and gather facts, not stories.
3️⃣ Repair: Rebuild integrity and trust through self-accountability, apology, and service.
Tim also discusses:
• Why public declarations of innocence often backfire
• How acceptance isn’t approval, and why it matters for healing
• Why 12-Step amends and restorative justice can guide moral repair
• How service and belonging help rebuild dignity after harm
What You’ll Learn
• Grounding techniques to regulate anger and panic
• How to separate facts from fear and rumor
• The difference between guilt (I did wrong) and shame (I am wrong)
• How to rebuild community and self-respect after rupture
Chapters
00:00 Before I Was a Counselor — Why This Topic Matters
01:10 Three-Part Roadmap to Accountability
02:10 Phase 1 • Taking the Hit and Stabilizing
03:30 Ground Your Body — Breath, Cold Water, Movement
06:30 Name Your Emotions and What They Need
09:30 Organize Your Thoughts and Avoid Coping Traps
13:30 Phase 2 • Assess What’s Real
18:10 Phase 3 • Accountability and Repair
22:30 Relational Repair and Community Reintegration
26:00 Three Models of Accountability + Closing Reflection
Fact-Check Highlights
• Social pain activates brain regions tied to physical pain (Eisenberger & Lieberman, 2004).
• Cold-water resets and breathwork can support parasympathetic calm (Porges, 2011).
• HR’s duty is to the organization—get outside legal guidance (SHRM, 2023).
• Public self-defense often worsens outcomes (Jensen & Wigley, 2021).
• 12-Step models provide tested paths for accountability (Kelly et al., 2020).
Reflective Prompts
• Who can hold me accountable and still believe in my growth?
• What would “repair” look like if I valued trust over reputation?
• How can I respond to accusation without losing integrity?
Key Message:
Slow down. Ground yourself. Tell the truth carefully. Accountability isn’t punishment—it’s the path back to belonging.
🔗 Full transcript, references, and resources at:
www.americanmasculinity.com/29-metoo1-accused
The American Masculinity Podcast™ is hosted by Timothy Wienecke — licensed psychotherapist, Air Force veteran, and men’s advocate.
Real conversations about masculinity, mental health, growth, and how men can show up better — as partners, leaders, and friends.
We focus on grounded tools, not yelling or clichés. If you have questions or want a tool for something you're wrestling with, leave a comment or send a message — your feedback shapes what we build next.
Note: While this doesn’t replace therapy, it might help you notice something worth exploring.
40 episodes