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Maybe
Next Time He'll Think Before He
Cheats.....
I am sure you have heard the Carrie
Underwood song of the same name by
now. Most of us who have been cheated on
have probably fantasized about keying
our ex's car or inflicting some of the
damage Carrie sings about in her hit
song. As difficult as it may be, you
must control your emotions.
The type of out of control behavior
depicted in the song will only end you
up in jail with a retraining order
issued against you.
So what can we do to move through the
pain and anguish of being betrayed by
our spouse? Do spouses who cheat care?
Do they harden themselves so that they
can ignore the pain they’re causing? If
they could feel the actual pain they are
causing would it change them? Would they
care then?
Most of us who have been the victims of
adultery have been forced to ponder
these questions. We look at spouses who
we lovingly trusted, people with whom
we’ve had children, and we see them
walking away, blind to the tears, and
deaf to the sobs of others. It is as if
they have found a way to separate
themselves from all that led up to now,
and cut themselves off from the past.
As we ponder, we ask why? A woman asks:
Was I not good enough? A man might ask:
Was I not caring enough? Either might
want to know: Did I keep up my end? Was
I supportive enough? We blame ourselves,
and examine every small detail. Like
detectives we search for clues, leads,
and turning points. We ask the questions
of a spouse who is no longer there, and
in the end we are left right back where
we started: Why? Why would
There are no easy answers, but there are
guilty feelings that can and should be
dealt with. First, remember: you did
nothing to make your spouse stray. This
was their choice, freely made. There is
always a moment (or moments) when a
responsible person can say: No. The
responsibility is theirs, and for those
of us they abandoned the question is
not: Why did my marriage break up?
Instead we begin with: Did a perfectly
loyal, loving spouse really suddenly
turn into a cheater? It’s likely that
the answer is: No. Which leads us to the
question: Are there signs that we
ignored?
I searched my soul, and my memory, and
found that the answer was: Yes. The
indications were there, and I ignored
them. I had evidence that my husband was
not the wonderful, trusting man I had
made him out to be. I put on my
rose-colored glasses, and saw him only
through those lenses, filtering out
anything that might threaten my family
and me.
After the marriage is over, it’s often a
good idea to look back and learn. This
shouldn't be the kind of thinking that
only leads to you torturing yourself. If
you’re still at that stage, don’t dwell
on the past. Only do this when you are
far enough past the shock and the
wreckage that you can think of it as an
object lesson, and want to avoid the
same traps next time.
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