I sometimes hear from people who assume that they know what has actually happened during a marital affair, but who are severely mistaken. People tend to make assumptions that are not true. yourchristiandate.com People tend to assume that things are their business when in reality, they are not. Some of these people are confused about the reaction that they are seeing from either the husband or the wife.
One emotion that seems to cause a
lot of confusion is guilt. Sometimes, the spouse who cheated can feel intense
guilt that he does not try to hide. This can be very noticeable to people who
know him well. And not everyone understands this.
Someone might ask a question like
this one: "my best friend at work cheated on his wife. I am not going to
tell you that this is an admirable thing to do. But it's not like he killed
someone or anything. Now, this guy refuses to go out and get drinks after work.
He preaches to the rest of us. He is so guilt ridden that he immediately goes
home after work and basically does whatever his wife says. It's clear he's
eaten up by the guilt. I feel like this guy is beating himself up needlessly.
Overall, he is good person. yourchristiandate.com
review Yes, he cheated on his wife. But it didn't mean anything and
most of us at this job have cheated on our wife at one time or another. But we
move on. This guy won't move on. Why does he have an overinflated guilty
conscience when everyone's doing it?"
Here's another example. The 'other
woman' might ask: "the guy I've been having a relationship with told me
that he was going to leave his wife and kids for me. I told my friends. I
started looking for a bigger place for the both of us. Well all of a sudden, he
changed his mind. His story is that when he went to tell his wife, he realized
how horrible his actions truly were. He says he can't see me anymore because of
the guilt. He is very firm on this. No matter what I do or say, he won't change
his mind. yourchristiandate I don't
get it. He didn't do anything that a million other guys haven't done. Why the
intense guilt?"
I can't answer this question from
the view point of a cheating man. I'm a woman who has been on the other side of
this. However, I get a lot of correspondence from cheating men and I think I
have some decent theories on the guilt.
It's not all that complicated,
really. It's a reaction to the knowledge that you have done something that you
know in your heart is wrong. And you also know that this mistake that you put
in motion has deeply hurt the people that you care about.
Here's another way to look at it.
If you're a parent, there has probably been a time when you've let your child
down, even when you didn't mean to. Perhaps you told your child you would take
them somewhere special but, as it turned out, you had an emergency at work and
you had to back out. Imagine how you felt when you faced your child and told
them that you had to let them down. Remember how it felt to see your child cry
and know that you were the cause of this pain. You felt horrible about this
because you knew that you made a choice that caused pain to the one you valued
the most.
That's sort of how I imagine a man
feels when he sees his wife crying because of his horrible decision to cheat.
He may have fantasized that no one was going to be hurt. But this almost never
turns out to be true. Someone is usually extremely hurt. And knowing that you
had a hand in this understandably invokes guilt.
Because you know that you did this
of your own free will. And you know that no once forced you. In my observation,
knowing all of this can make you feel lacking in integrity, weak, and ashamed.
Again, I'm not a man. But from all
I've read and heard, I think I have a pretty good idea of how many of them
feel. And we all know the feeling of guilt when we have when we hurt someone
that we love. And when we can't take it back.
Sure, many people may cheat.
(Although statistically speaking, not every one does. Plenty don't.) But
everyone knows that this doesn't make it right. And when we got married, this
wasn't our intention. We truly intended to love our spouse and to be faithful
and to treat our spouse in the way that we would want to be treated.
When we fall short of this, we feel
badly because we are human beings who want to do right by those we love. When
we don't, we are disappointed in ourselves and we feel guilty for not being the
person that we wanted to be.
If you're a friend or a family
member of someone who feels this guilt, I don't think you're doing them a favor
by telling them not to feel it. It's better to admit you're wrong, experience
the guilt, and then be proactive to do whatever is necessary to make it right
again. You can't take back the cheating, but you can try to fix the damage that
has been done.
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