palides2021
Well-known Member
- Location
- MidAtlantic, USA
This is a painful topic. Don't know why it was brought up.....
I agree with you so much on this. Relationships are founded upon trust. If you can't trust another person how can you have a relationship? Deliberate betrayal the only thing I can't forgive. You have to protect yourself, don't you?Betrayal hurts very bad. Still I was willing to forgive and then he had a massive heart attack and died. There were many feelings to deal with. Long time ago and the pain is gone. One thing he said to me about our relationship was "neither one of us has good sense.". So true. Sometimes I think I have forgiven. I'm not sure.
I never thought that such things happen. How weird.I have also received a couple msgs regarding this topic, as my other topic.
It is posted because I feel it a worthy topic for chat, if it does not appeal
to you, please pass it by.
That sounds strange, who would object? And why?I have also received a couple msgs regarding this topic, as my other topic.
It is posted because I feel it a worthy topic for chat, if it does not appeal
to you, please pass it by.
^^^ Bingo! And they usually aren't sorry for what they did.I've always maintained that you shouldn't forgive anyone unless they are genuinely sorry for what they did. Otherwise you've just let them get away with it. It doesn't mean that you should let this interfere with your life, but some things are so bad they should never be forgiven.
Perhaps to help spare others some pain, Or if that is not possible , help them get over the pain and back to living a good life. After all Living Well is the Best Revenge.This is a painful topic. Don't know why it was brought up.....
^^^^ Couldn't have said it better!Perhaps to help spare others some pain, Or if that is not possible , help them get over the pain and back to living a good life. After all Living Well is the Best Revenge.
On that note, I will add what helped me the most as I was dragged through the putrid world of infidelity and divorce.
I found a good Divorce Recovery group offered by a local church. (Before continuing, while I am sure the church sees this as a least partially a recruiting effort, there was never any hint of that in the meetings. No pressure whatsoever to join the church, proclaim allegiance to any deity or belief system, or give money (other than a voluntary contribution of $3 a meeting to offset some costs of maintaining the meeting room).
I had tried a professional counselor at about $100 an hour and while he helped me through the first few months, it was expensive and I was not getting all that I needed. For less than 5% of that cost of the counselor, the Divorce Recovery meetings did me far more good and I learned a lot more about surviving and moving on. What did I learn that did me so much good?
1. I was not alone.
2. Most people who are cheated on survive and end up living a good life afterwards.
3. Her infidelity was was 100% on her. Whatever problems I had as a husband never justified her cheating.
4. It takes two years to get past divorce. (Really, it does.)
5. There are a ton of cheaters out there, and about 1/2 of them are women. Forget the stereotype of the cheating husband. That's Hollywood nonsense.
6. Forgiveness has to done in the later stages of healing. It is basically off the table for the first year or more depending on the individual.
7. Don't let the cheater pull your strings and control what happens. (They are good at it, that's why I was fooled for years. ) Take charge of your life. Don't just respond to his/her words and actions. Start taking the initiative to heal yourself and get on with life.
8. Get out. Attend public events you enjoy. Learn to dance. Have fun.
9. Put dating on the back burner. You're damage goods for quite a while.
10. If somebody you know has been cheated on, or just going through a divorce, reach out to them. Friendship, kindness and caring are desperately needed.