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Forgiveness After Betrayal: Is It Possible? (Or how well do you know the man in your life?)

Dear Helen,

It seems crass to say “thank you for your letter” when what I really want to say is that I wish you’d had no reason to write it! Betrayal by someone you love is incredibly wounding. I know! I’ve been there before with a broken marriage, and I continue to have an ongoing situation with a family member.

The pain of betrayal can be immense, confusing, and debilitating. And sometimes, when you can’t see the wood for the trees, the only thing to do is what you have done: to ask someone outside the situation to hack away the undergrowth and clear a path before you. Whether you then choose to take that path is up to you.

MAKING SENSE OF BETRAYAL

Several things strike me about what you’ve told me:

  1. Clearly, from what you’ve said, you “knew” both your ex, and the new man in your life, for quite a while before establishing a relationship with either.
  2. However, in the first instance you ignored the advice of others warning you against the relationship.
  3. You say the current man in your life is the “complete opposite” of your ex, yet both have exhibited the same problem with money.
  4. You begin your letter by stating “I’m at the end of my tether” and link that with the fact that you’re thirty-two years of age.

I’d like to look at these issues more fully and then ask you some questions.

Obviously, you are to be commended for your maturity in getting to know both men before establishing a relationship with either of them. As a society, we live in an era of “serial monogamy” – one man at a time, over and over – and wonder why relationships don’t work. Too often it’s because people jump into a full-blown relationship without ever making getting-to-know-one-another a priority. I could write a book on this topic but it wouldn’t be appropriate here. Suffice to say, again, that you did things the right way around. Or at least, attempted to.

BURYING A FEAR OF BETRAYAL IN THE UNDERGROWTH

The trouble is, how well do we ever know anyone? There’s a Bible verse that says: the heart is deceitful above all things. It’s all too easy to conduct a little internal rationale with ourselves, which supports the argument for whatever it is we most want. We do it all the time when justifying our own indulgence - from eating a whole tub of Adidas ice cream in one hit, to buying two pairs of Jimmy Choo shoes at once. Or, in your case, from believing that someone is the love of your life, to (in his case) running up huge debts.

It’s my belief that we can only truly know someone to the extent that we honestly want to know them. Note that I’m not saying to the extent that they want to be known, although, obviously, that is part of the equation. But the point is that if you are with someone who doesn’t want to be known, in the fullest possible sense, then that is a factor in what you know about them.

In other words, you may know them to be someone who:

  • Either doesn’t know himself very well, in which case he may choose to seek help in order to do so; or you may know him as someone who refuses to acknowledge his need.
  • Alternatively, you may know him to be someone who has something he does know about himself but he chooses to hide it – from you, if not from himself.

So my first question to you is, how well did you truly want to know either of the men in your life?

If that sounds somewhat harsh, forgive me. But I know, from my own past experience, how easy it is to overlook the tell-tale signs of betrayal because – quite frankly – you don’t want to know. You convince yourself that the status quo is less painful than reality. The sad thing is, as you’ve found to your cost, it rarely is!

It’s very hard being honest with ourselves – especially when we’ve put our trust in someone and been betrayed. But being alive is all about learning from our mistakes, and allowing ourselves to be changed for the better by that learning.

From what you’ve said, you evidently felt that being with your ex took priority over the warnings from your family and I’d like to suggest, gently, that you take some time out to be honest with yourself. Because it seems to me that the second man in your life isn’t as different from the first one as you thought – at least as far as money is concerned.

Let’s look at each of the problems you’re now facing. First your new man being a “loner”. There’s nothing wrong, in my estimation, with a man preferring female company to male. My husband says he finds women are better listeners than most of the men he’s known; they’re more interested in him as a person; and they’re more honest about themselves.

However, it does sound as if he may have a problem with self-esteem. Your new man has suffered a huge set-back in losing his job. I don’t think that we women can full comprehend how emasculating it is to a man when he fails as a hunter-gatherer.

There may, as you appear to think, be more to the business of his being labelled a financial risk than appears on the surface. But perhaps he deserves the benefit of the doubt? In these days of recession, employers are looking for legitimate ways of ditching surplus employees. What, in another climate, may have been a forgivable misdemeanour (signing off another’s work in error) may, quite possibly, be used as an excuse for a sacking in this.

IS FAILING TO LIVE UP TO EXPECTATION A BETRAYAL?

But what concerns me is that you say he won’t be honest with his family and ask for their emotional support “for fear of them being disappointed.” You then go on to say, “He said he finds it hard to talk and he is embarrassed.” From that I deduce that he feels that he has to live up to some image, or standard, imposed – directly or indirectly – by his family.

This is a very natural human condition. We come into the world as helpless babies, utterly dependent upon the goodwill of our parents to nourish us and protect us. Naturally, we instinctively cultivate their goodwill by smiling and cooing, and later by trying to please them in other ways. We’re rewarded when we do, and punished when we don’t. Remorse plus an apology reinstates us, and this return to favour is the reward for our repentance. It’s a cyclical state of mind.

This conditioning can continue into adult life. When we fail to live up to expectations (our own and that of others) we feel bad about ourselves. That’s the punishment. But there’s no one outside of us with whom to kiss and make-up – hence no reward. So what do we do? We comfort ourselves.

Some people do it by comfort-eating, alcohol, drugs or gambling; others through shopping. The concept of retail therapy has become an accepted part of our lives. I suspect that this may be how your man got himself into debt.

He’s not alone. You may think that it isn’t possible to have 40K of debt via credit cards, but believe me it is. I’ve spoken with young men who have reached that level of indebtedness very easily and very rapidly.

What’s more, I once interviewed various men and women about credit card debt for a series of magazine articles I’d been commissioned to write. One of them told me, very frankly, that the big spend is highly addictive. The fear of being found out provides an adrenalin rush; shame is the punishment; more spending the comfort and reward. For years he never, ever fully paid off his credit cards. No sooner had he paid enough to raise his credit-worthiness a little, than he was off again spending. All this, despite the fact that he had wardrobes full of unworn hand-made shoes and shirts.

So my second question to you is, do you want to encourage this man to confront the possibility of his frailties, and in doing so, have to face them yourself?

IN SEARCH OF FORGIVENESS: A WAY OUT OF THE WOOD

I must commend you for having “worked through” the ultimate betrayal with your ex, after he’d slept with your best friend’s sister. It takes a lot of courage and perseverance showing forgiveness when you’ve been betrayed in this way. I tried to patch up my marriage when I discovered on two or three occasions that my children’s father had been having prolonged affairs with other women. As you say, it’s not easy resisting the temptation to suspect everything, and learning to trust again.

It can be done, but I’d like to suggest that you don’t contemplate it unless your current man is prepared to talk, and to talk openly. Further, I would urge the two of you to see a counsellor together. You might try Relate if he won’t go for Debt Management Counselling. Alternatively, many churches have counselling services which don’t thrust religion at you (or they shouldn’t), plus some doctor’s surgeries support counselling services.

The point is that forgiveness is one thing; reconciliation quite another. As psychologist Aaron Beck says: "The one thing most toxic to a relationship is the other person can't change."

Which brings me to my final question.

Do you want to forgive and forget by working through this together? And if so, is this for legitimate reasons, or only because you are “at the end of your tether” because of your age?

You do see, don’t you, Helen, that this is only going to work if this man is the one you genuinely want to settle down with for the rest of your life? You qualified your relationship with your ex by saying that you thought he was the “love of my life”. I see no equivalent statement about your new man.

If you have any reservations, if that “grating” feeling about his friendship with your girlfriends is going to bug you in future, or if his depression over the loss of his job, and the lack of enterprise in trying to find another, is going to depress you, too, then you need to say so and get out. Because believe me, it will be a thousand times more painful and more difficult to do so once you have a shared mortgage / home / children.

My advice, as earlier, is to go – together – to talk things through with a counsellor. I hope that having hacked away the undergrowth, revealed the wood and the trees, and cleared the path before you, that counselling, together, will show you which path to take. It goes without saying that I wish you every peace and happiness for the future.

Related articles:

The Art Of Forgiveness: Is It Achievable?

Healing And Forgiveness

If you have some problem on which you’d like help or advice, write to: Dear Mel. I can’t promise to publish every letter I receive, but I will always endeavour to respond to you, personally.

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