Give It Away

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Those three words can have meaning on both ends of the spectrum, positive and negative.

I think we can all agree that giving away something that is not yours to share is abuse of that gift. Such is the case of intimate betrayal. Our unfaithful gave away their time, body, resources and care to someone who was not part of the agreement when we took our vows.

They gave what was promised to us and us alone….sexual and emotional exclusivity.

On the other end of the spectrum into the positive lies much richness in giving. Those who give selflessly in the pursuit of helping others are those who bond the world together. We who give offset all the takers, the cons, the users, the destructive. Thank God there are so many who have pledged their days to the betterment of others.

Today I had an experience that caused me a number of emotions. I cut ten inches off my hair to give to charity so that those with cancer or other disease affecting their hair might have a source of free access to human hair wigs. Both my daughter and son have donated their hair in the past. It was time for mom to catch up.

I never thought I would again grow my hair this long. It was indeed longer than even when I was in high school and college. At first I let it grow to avoid the expense and time of salon visits. As time went on, I enjoyed the feel of it sweeping across my shoulders. I guess it reminded me of younger days, simpler, freer days.

Must have been about two years since my last haircut. Even the salon had stopped sending me coupons. I was pulling my own hair as I slept, it catching in the crook of an elbow or errant hand. Yet it was hard to hear that scissors going snip, snip, snip.

My UH said he would miss it when I told him I had a hair appointment. He knows I planned on giving it for a good cause. He really has said little about it—until it was imminent for it to go. My mom would have been pleased. She was a woman who was of the old school thought that any woman over forty should not have hair past her shoulders. Strange admonition. I guess she thought it was not age appropriate, just like some clothing looks too young on many older women.

To that I say, ‘poppycock’. If any ‘look’ is modest and well kept, ‘go for it’! That said, it just seemed time for my hair to do someone else some good.

And then I thought— this hair is what grew through my betrayal trauma years. I wondered if the cells that make up its strands carry some message. Would it be weakness…or strength to have carried on growing in spite of it all? I’d prefer to think the latter.

It was my choice to start again afresh with a shorter bob. Thick and silky, my ‘new’ hair is fresh and springy and shiny. It seems a fitting metaphor to send on the old, still useful, for someone else’s benefit, and begin to see myself even more, as Christine Renewed.

Emotional Intelligence and Infidelity

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Emotional Intelligence is the ability to deal with other people successfully. By understanding one’s own feelings they can understand and evaluate others. According to Daniel Goleman, psychologist and science journalist and author of the best-selling book Emotional Intelligence, there are five main elements of emotional intelligence or ‘EQ’.

The 5 Components of Emotional Intelligence:

Self-Awareness
Self-Regulation
Motivation
Empathy
Social Skills

These actions illustrate HIGH emotional intelligence:

You think about feelings.
You pause.
You strive to control your thoughts.
You benefit from criticism.
You show authenticity.
You demonstrate empathy.
You praise others.
You give helpful feedback.
You apologize.
You forgive and do not hold resentments .
You keep your commitments.
You help others.
You protect yourself from emotional sabotage.

If my UH is any indication, I would judge that there is a direct link to EQ and likelihood to betray. My UH is weak in ALL of these areas, save “you help others”. He has always been up to help, especially when it got him either free food and/or praise. For years he rode my coattails to serve the homeless dinners, along with our children. I wanted them to learn to give back, so I pushed for our church to start this ministry. He was engaged and committed to this once a month commitment. One of the few commitments he kept.

Nowhere does it say that all these characteristics must be absent to have low EQ. My contention, and many other betrayed, is that our unfaithful are and were consistently poor at displaying the five critical components of EQ and their manifestations as brought to light in the list above.

My observation is that the five components of higher EQ are also poor/weak/nonexistent in those with ADHD. My UH and son both have that diagnosis. Both lack Self-Awareness, Self-Regulation, Motivation (unless it is something they find highly interesting or desirable, then they ‘hyper-focus’), Social Skills (especially my son, but my UH literally has no adult friends that are not my friends.) Lastly, Empathy– my son has this. My UH used to have it for me, pre-infidelity, but no longer does. He has it for others–sad news stories, victims of natural disasters, crime, lost puppies–everything many have a soft spot in their hearts for. Me? ZERO…zilch. Not sure if this is a factor of so many years spent villianizing me in his mind. Makes sense. He has molded his brain to harsh judgement of me and rewriting history. His neuroplasticity has been formed into seeing me as the adversary rather than a partner.

Sadly, only he can change that because only he can self reflect to see the truth of who I actually am and have always been.

Uh oh…more weak areas in EQ. Self- reflection?

What’s a betrayed to do short of turning it over to her higher power, and her UH’s support network. Nuttin’ honey.

Was It “Worth It” to the Unfaithful?

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I sure wish I could help make the reasons it was acceptable to cheat more…well, acceptable. If former unfaithful would be willing to take a stab at it, that would in fact be hearing it from the ‘horse’s mouth’ so to speak. I think a former unfaithful would have to be healed enough to put aside his or her shame to reach out in this way to help other betrayed. A tall order.

As a betrayed whom has worked at understanding and recovery for three and a half years now—much of that time, full time, with the rest of life’s responsibilities being the part time job– I can share my experience, strength and hope.

As my FUH (former unfaithful husband) has stated, he thought he would never get caught. He also led himself into the delusion that cheating has no consequences if one is not caught. As we all know cheating opens a vein in the marriage, robbing it of truth, trust, intimacy and reality. It blood lets–making even a good marriage anemic, a weaker marriage, a shell.

At the same time my FUH also admits that he thought being caught would mean the end of the marriage. Losing it, access to the kids and the house/home he loved. He deluded himself into thinking getting caught was unlikely. And in our case, he was right. It still killed our marriage through the bloodletting, but he did not get caught.

He announced his affair to me as a weapon to hurt me. He did it in retribution for me setting a boundary because of his pot addiction. But you see, he is an addict. Although not all UH’s are addicts, it is my experience that the same sort of thinking allowed them to enter into an affair. The same delusional, blame shifting, entitled, ‘stinkin’ thinkin’ that is hallmark of the addict. It is not rational. It is not based in reality. It is demonstrated over and over again in the media–smart, successful, intelligent men with everything to lose, still risk it all for the fantasy of the affair. They know it can destroy them too. Yet, they still choose it. This is addict’s thinking.

I have also found that unless an unfaithful is a sociopath without conscience, he or she does not set out to destroy their spouse. They are way too self absorbed to purposely plan lifelong sadness and pain to their spouse. Are they aware that the discovery will cause pain? Yes. Do many/any of them have any notion as to the severity or long lasting devastation? No. Another form of delusional, minimizing thinking that is believed by the addict/cheater.

If one were to ask most non-sociopathic unfaithful if they knew the extent of the damage their choice would cause, most would say they had no idea. Therefore, I believe unfaithful who set out to do the kind of damage that is lifelong are rare as hen’s teeth. They simply did not believe it would cause this kind of trauma. More minimizing and delusional thinking. Acceptable collateral damage that in their magical thinking will either not exist, or will not be too bad.

It is also my experience that most former unfaithful think they would not have crossed the line into infidelity had they known the extent of the trauma. That said, I believe this is also a form of delusional minimizing thinking that is common to those who justify cheating. They minimize. “It won’t be that bad.” “It’ll blow over.” or “I’ll deal with that should I ever need to.” Denial of potential harm. Ahh…another of the ‘izings’ of this sort of thinking/ non-thinking.

Did my UH intend to inflict lifelong pain and suffering upon me? (even though as one of the few who actually meant to harm me by telling me, still did not think it would be anything as bad as it is) He told me, because his addictions had escalated over the years and he was just that sick in his thinking. He did not set out when he began his affair to tell me or to harm me….as I think most unfaithful operate.

Was it worth it for him? Not if he has stayed around and is trying to change, even if he stinks at the trying and it is as slow as molasses in January. If he has not left for the delusion of the AP or other self-medicating tool, he is witness day in and day out as to the consequences of pain on the betrayed. Not a pleasant place to be even when in denial as to whether he deserved his fling or not. He is living with the destruction, the shame and the guilt. Not fun.

Was it worth it? Few would say ‘yes’. Even those without a lick of empathy for the betrayed. They hate feeling bad about themselves and having their nose rubbed in their failure.

I wish I could help you, fellow betrayed, to let go so that you can move toward more authentic enjoyment in your life. I have found that it takes a lot of practice and intentionality to find some fun, happiness or joy. It is another unasked-for job, but one with potential pay off. Is it fair that we now have to search for joy, fun, happiness? No. Is it an opportunity, should you choose to look at it that way, to strengthen your gratitude muscles, and therefor joy. You bet.

Will I always remember this? Yes. Will it bring pain at the memory–yes, in varying degree. Does it have to rule my life? 

That is my choice.

What Must God Think?

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In the case of intimate betrayal…God must weep.

God gave us the most precious of gifts. It is steeped in a fundamental respect for our individual uniqueness and value. It is steeped in love. It is dangerous. It courts and expects abuse, grief and suffering. What is this monster, you ask?

Free choice.

Each of us has the gift to choose. And inherent in the gift is the ability to choose poorly. To choose selfishly. To choose brokenness and evil.

But God so loved the world–the people of this world, that he allows day in and out for them to choose. And so he weeps at the pain caused by self centeredness. He also rejoices in the sacrificial love acted out each day by the kind, the compassionate, the lovers of life.

Grant me the serenity to accept the things I can not change–the effects of broken, selfish choices

To change the things I can – I CAN choose love and goodness and healing and compassion

And the wisdom to know the difference. What a difference we can make when we choose in love.

Hello Spring

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The season of new life, new hope, new dreams.

Hello spring. So very welcome after the long, dark, cold of winter.

Healing success, so ardently wanted after the long dark night of betrayal trauma.

I am desperate to heal. I bet you are too.

If wishes made it so I’d be the beaming new grandmother of a beautiful little girl who lived in my town. I’d have a reliable, honest spouse who supported my dreams. A healthy, loving marriage. My debts would be gone. I’d weigh twenty pounds less and be in as good a shape as I was ten years ago–before all these life challenges.

Ahh..but wishes are just that—wishes. Ephemeral, diaphanous… unenforceable, dreams. Subject to the brokenness of the world, the brokenness of individuals, to free choice run rampant.

I put it to you that this season of rebirth can be that for you too. No matter your place on the long bumpy road to recovery, you can find some joy. You have lungs to fill with the floral sweetness around you, eyes to see the ribbon of Milky Way stars on a clear night.

You have the gift of choice. The gift to see, feel, hear, smell the wonders in every day of life. You can taste buttery soft bread, a tangy sweet orange, a decadent, rich dessert. You are here —alive and present to see things no generation has seen before you. You come from strength, you stand on the shoulders of your ancestors, you can read this–you have literacy, internet access, the world at your fingertips. This gift called life is yours. No one and nothing can take you– from you.

Slow down and appreciate the beauty of this season. You can choose to see all the good, live large in the breath of spring that fills the days. You, my friend, are going to be okay. You will get through this. Pain does not last forever. Nothing does. Not even spring.

Rejoice in the gift of your life, your friends, family, home. You have many blessings in which to rejoice.

Breathe.

Shake, Rattle and Roll

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Earthquake?

Thankfully not of the terrestrial variety.

But if you have experienced the upheaval of intimate betrayal, you may find yourself wishing for a little old 6.o.

Insanity has been defined as doing the same thing over and over again…and expecting a different result. When I try to control the outcomes in my world, believing my way would be right, I have found my track record sorely wanting.

And yet I find myself still trying. Trying to get my UH to ‘get it’, trying to expose him to one more article or blog that might turn on the light switch in his brain.

“Ahhh, beloved. I have been such a fool. Here are the nature of all my transgressions.” He rolls out a fifty foot scroll. Tears roll down his cheeks, eyes glistening in ‘get-ed-ness’. “Let me describe what this has done to you and how very much I regret my choices.” *Swelling of cheesy empathy violins* “Even though I do not deserve it, I hope you can someday forgive me.”

Snap out of it.

I was at my bottom. Insanity. I had to choose something different. It meant an insane life versus a sane one. My will or the will of a power great than myself. Since my will was getting me nowhere fast (or slow), the real question was how long was I willing to run around in the same circles?

Whether that power greater than yourself be the corporate wisdom of a support group, the advise of trusted elders, meditation, church, the Bible, the Koran, Nature, working out or sleeping in — there are answers that are beyond me. There is a great mystery in a power greater than myself. No one can understand ‘it’, but it is in force. Some call it coincidence, providence, karma–yet it is so much greater than that. inexplicable, incomprehensible. “It” has you. “It” has me.

My one brain hurts with the overload of this betrayal. I need to rest in a power greater than myself. Find rest and rejuvenation knowing that I can trust in a brand new end.

This is but a chapter in a life filled with joys and sorrows. As the wise say, “The only thing assured in this life, is change.” If this moment is good, savor it. If this moment is mayhem, ride it out because it too will change. When I carry the hurt, it controls me.

While the very ground beneath me shakes, rattles and rolls away, I can rest assured, that too will change.

Three Dog Night (and Day)

Yes, Milo chewed holes in his blanket when he was a puppy. His sisters Dakota and Kiki might outweigh him, but never out- heart him
.

Three dogs.

Are you nuts?

At first blush one might think the ownership of three canines borders on insane. Visions of crazy dog lady come to mind. House neglected, dog beds strewn around like islands in the mess, food bowls, tennis balls, toys, leashes, the flotsam and jetsam of the ‘dog house’.

My three have been the scaffolding in my recovery, my heart, my soul through these many months of grief. When getting out of bed seems a chore, they are there – ever happy to welcome the new day.

It is small repayment to care for them. It is my joy. Grooming cocker spaniel/papillon mix, Dakota, nursing problem ears of golden retriever, Kiki, and remaining ever vigilant during sleep to avoid hurting Milo, my six pound Yorkie man. He sleeps nestled in the top layer of blankets in whatever nook or crannie my body has formed; ever ready to relocate as I shift throughout the night.

What is it about dogs? They have no concept of how very brief their lives are here on earth. They approach each day renewed, excited about what all the moments contained therein might offer. Much wisdom in their practice of presence. Ever in the present.

We who suffer the slings and arrows of another’s brokenness might well take to heart the wisdom of the dog. Optimism abounds. Curious, trusting, empathic, loyal, tenacious, ever patient for your return; dogs embody so much of what we humans strive to be, and to have in our significant others.

Through innumerable nights of tears and terrors, my Milo has loved me. A soft kiss on red and swollen eyes, refusal to leave my side. The depth of concern and love in those big brown eyes, all too rare in the human world, is the very hallmark of a dog who loves.

When other love has proven false, canine love is true.

The other two, like Milo, remain in my orbit as though the magnet of hurt and sadness draws them close. Ever at my feet no matter where I sit, they are like moons about planet Christine. They reassure. Ever present, ever loving, they care in a pure unadulterated way. (Ironic term, that)

God must have given them tails as a reminder of the expectation of joy in each and every moment. “What are we gonna do now, mama?”, the expression of anticipation on their faces brightens even the gloomiest day.

If the answer is ‘nothing’, it is just fine with them because being in the beloved owner’s presence is enough.

I am enough. I am their joy – their everything.

Now if that is not salve for the wounded heart, the crushed ego, the soul weary, I don’t know what. -Pure love-

If only we humans could be so easily satisfied. If only we saw the preciousness in the presence of our beloved. If only the unavoidable losses and traumas of life left us as undeterred as the loving canine; as willing to give life another chance, even after the most egregious of wounds.

I love my dogs. I am grateful for their presence in my life. I am blessed by the reminders and lessons they show me.

I can never express the pure joy they have given.

Love in action. Love in essence.

The dog.

Some Well Deserved Rest


I love lazy Sunday mornings.

After forty years of a husband next to me, I have been compelled to request solitude. I sleep alone now, he in another room. It is simply too hard to have him next to me, watching YouTube videos and streaming films while I read through mountains of recovery books and blogs. Too hard to lie next to the man who robbed me of my human dignity of choice. Too hard.

“Would you like to spend your life with a ‘husband’ who sleeps with another woman?”

“No, Thank you.”

Did anyone ask you?

Nope.

Do you feel duped, used, disrespected and violated?

Yes.

Hard to sleep next to an unrepentant ‘husband’ who continued to rage, blame and respond contemptuously for months after D-day. Oh… and live in ‘pretend normal’ the rest of the time. Is he better now? Marginally. He no longer throws things, breaks dishes or dents pans. He avoids. That is his answer to my pain—and his shame. Avoidance.

And I have a ten by twelve foot rectangle of space—my bedroom—in which to retreat when I need some serenity.

Anyways…back to why I love lazy Sunday mornings. UH is not home. He is participating in his near-career attendance at another AA meeting. The dogs are littered around me as I luxuriate smack dab center of my king size bed; propped up by a heavenly cloud of pillows. A steaming cup of Joe is on the side table next to me, and a computer on my lap.

The morning light warms the room is shades of honey gold. My backyard fountain murmurs through the sliding door screen and the smell of bacon wafts forth from the neighbor’s kitchen. She must have her windows open too.

The sound of the morning news drones softly. I perk up to any (positive) stories about dog adoptions or military family reunions and leave the rest of the world’s misery to sink into the background hum.

“What should I chat about with my blog friends this morning?” I allow my mind to drift from potential topic to topic. 

“Please remove me from any preconceptions about me, my recovery, and most of all about You, dear Lord.” I pray. Buried under the clutter of everyday concerns, I court my inner murmuring to surface. Is that wee voice I sometimes hear my subconscious or is it God whispering in my ear?

“Please allow me to hear Your will and provide the power to carry that will out.”

I close my eyes and ‘watch’ as ideas float by like graceful leaves on the surface of a slow-moving stream.

Retribution? Nah. Never have had a vindictive bone in my body. If infidelity does not bring that out in a person, pretty darn close to nothing will.

Alanon Strong? Hmm…there has been much wisdom I have gleaned from these meetings that welcome all we searching souls who have been effected by someone else’s drinking. (Yes, UH is an alcoholic, amongst other addictions) –A blog on the slogans might be helpful.

Why having a dog saved my life? Good one. *make mental note to revisit*

The return of joy? If the domicile of calm spread out before me is not a reason for joy, I don’t know what is. I draw in a lungful of warm gratitude.

“That’s it.” I rouse from my meditative state.

Gratitude is the antidote to grief. 

“I am so thankful, dear Lord, for this moment, this place, this time of renewal. Oh, and thanks for the whispering nudge.”

A mental festival of gratitude ensues.

Christine Renewed.

March On

In the book of life, the answers aren’t in the back.” – Charles M. Schultz

It’s March 1st

We rest on the cusp of spring.

The sun’s rays don’t have to stretch quite so far, the night is warded off a few minutes longer each day. And…

Every fourth year this day would be February 29th—not March 1st. Every Leap Year, one day is wedged in between the cold days of late winter and the promise of spring.

That day for me, is today. My ‘D-day’. That day was February 29, 2016.

Today is the third anniversary of the day I changed forever. A day to go down in personal infamy. The day my ‘husband’ decided to explode my life. He announced a five year sexual, twenty-seven year emotional affair with my brother’s ex. Yes, you read that right. Twenty-seven years of my then thirty-eight year marriage was spent in (his covert) justifications, minimizations, rewriting history and all the lovely things unfaithful do to continue doing what they are doing.

And when he detonated the bomb, I never could have realized that he actually did me a favor.

No matter how vicious the pain, wicked the truths, miserable the depths of deceit –in the end, the truth, when it applies to my life–is ALWAYS preferable to living inside a lie.

For twenty seven years he kept all the secrets of his affair. Living in the center of cowardice and deception, he played the part of the faithful husband, though looking back now I can see that was not entirely true.

faithful. adjective

strict or thorough in the performance of duty, true to one’s word, promises, vows. Steady in allegiance or affection; loyal; constant, reliable, trusted, or believed.

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When I look at this definition, I realize he was not true to his word or promises often. So wrapped up in his work and himself, he failed to follow through with ‘honey-do’s’ on a far too regular basis. I got to the point that I simply accepted certain things would not get done. And these were not ginormous things. They were normal life maintenance and responsibilities kind of stuff. He was underinvested (as I have come to find out nearly always defines the unfaithful seekers of ‘the grass must be greener elsewhere’). So I went without or did them myself.

“Constant” – “reliable” — nope.

“Vows” – don’t make me laugh-cry.

Sadly, I “trusted” was true. I trusted him to always love me. Not the gushy mushy romantic feeling ‘love’, but the ‘go-to-bat-for’ and ‘protect-me’ kind of love.

“Believed” (‘Trusted’s” kissing cousin) was also sadly true. I believed he would never betray me.

‘Steady allegiance” – no–obviously.

Steady Affection–yes(!) This seems odd in retrospect. Why would he be so darned affectionate while cheating on me? I’m not sure he even knows the answer to that one other than to say “I loved you”, “She was just for sex”. Puhleeze.

Pardon me if this is something I still can not wrap my head around. How does one love someone while betraying them in the most filthily, intimate way possible? Must be “I love what you do for me” kind of love. Certainly was not the “what can I do for you?” kind.

Oddly enough, three years out from that awful day I have become fairly successful at detaching from ‘he who calls himself my husband’, and his ‘isms’. (a term used by recovering alcoholics– “I, Self, Me or I Sponsor Myself or Internal Spiritual Malady (or Maladjustment), or Incredibly Short Memory or InSide Me or I Sabotage Myself, or Insecure, Selfish Me.” In short the “ism” is all about the alcoholic and how they cope with the many things encountered in life. This ism is one of self-centeredness taken to the extreme.) I am still working on setting and maintaining boundaries — a discussion for another day.

I am learning to live my life largely on my own. Not expect or rely on him for much of anything. I am learning to enjoy with new enthusiasm the simple things–the rich, bitter aroma of morning coffee, a smile from the elderly lady I help to do errands, the depth of the love radiating from my Yorkie’s soulful eyes, the winter vegetables from my garden and the soothing sound of piano music playing softly on my Echo.

My “UH” (initials widely used in the affair recovery community referring to ‘unfaithful husband’) makes a near-career of attending 12 step meetings, therapy, doctor’s appointments and working out. (“Bravo”, you say? I did too for months and months) So between my 20 hour a week job and his near-career, we are largely passing ships in the night. The rest of the time he generally avoids me. I’m sad that he is still afraid to confront the demons, slay the dragon and move forward. Actually put all that therapy and 12-step learning into action? Not yet. ‘Help me heal’? Ha.

But as I learn in ALanon, “You can not force solutions” (successfully)

SO today–the first of March, I wish all my fellow recoverers a breath of floral spring, a break in the gloom of winter and hope for better tomorrows.

I Died Before I Died

The Old Me Is Dead

… not buried.

I’ve been the walking dead. A zombie of sorts navigating days in a haze of shock and grief. Blindsided by the one person who vowed to always have my back, my best interests at heart. Promised to love and cherish.

Heartbroken. Shell shocked. The earth torn from beneath my feet in one terrible moment of confession.

My life lived in an illusion of his construction. I robbed of any say. No vote in how I wished to live. No license over my own body or heart. No choice rendered. No consent. No consent.

Three years ago, I learned my life was not what I thought. 

Yes. 

Over half my life I’d been living in an illusion of his construction. 

illusion  [ih-loo-zhuhn. noun. something that deceives by producing a false or misleading impression of reality. The state or condition of being deceived; misapprehension.

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The person I thought was my partner in life, kept a huge secret. 

Society calls it infidelity.

Or perhaps you prefer the fancy, carefree term– ‘affair’.  

Massive betrayal. Sharing secrets and stolen hours. Taking the intimacy that belonged to me, belonged to what I thought was ‘us’, and spending it on an empty shell of a woman who agreed to the deception in spite of knowing me and my children. She pretended she cared about me. But like all who fall off the personal integrity wagon, she cared only for herself–her need for validation–and damn the consequences to anyone else. The epitome of selfishness. 100% self centered. The devils playground. Evil personified.

It matters not that a third of the years of illusion were sexual and the rest ‘only’ emotional connection with all the ugly innuendos and back burner ploys they employed to keep each other on the hook.

He was hooked. And he didn’t even know it. Didn’t recognize the monumental destruction that occurred every hour of every day the dirty little secret was kept. Destruction of self respect, of respect for family, commitment and love. Destruction of intimacy. No ‘in-to-me-see’ exists in a sea of secrets.

Before you get the notion that there was any seduction on her part, let me clue you that it was all him. He cast the die. The decision made to pursue her as ‘cake and eat it too’ addition to his life, made and executed by him; validation for the bottomless pit off need of a fragile childhood, a damaged ego. And she said yes.

Yeah, he is broken. 

Just like all of us.

Thing is

“No amount of trauma in your childhood excuses you from personal responsibility in adulthood.-Kathy Kinghorn LCSW

There are NO excuses.

None.

I died on February 29, 2016

I died to the illusion of a loving committed partner. The open, loving and intimate woman who shared all her joys and struggles, died. The woman who so passionately wrote love stories, who cried at romantic films, who was swept away on the tide of beautiful love songs—died. The woman who trusted—died.

My experience of never ending love, so true in the lives of my parents, my grandparents and in the depths of my heart, shattered on the rocks of his self centered choices. Choices made over and over again, once the web of deceit was cast, and the elixir of limerence drunk. His choice to tell me, not made out of care or hope of relational survival and healing, but out of vindictive retribution for resentments built over the years in a mind full of story telling. History rewritten to favor the deceiver. Justifications. Minimizations of hurt rendered. Exaggerations of need. Self deception. Self, self, self.

Lord knows I never expected, nor received a relational rose garden. Years of struggle, years of toil, years of ups and downs, of raising children, of the isolation of being on the stay at home side of a military career. Sacrifices made gladly in love. All taken in stride.  Love, by choice. Love, the commitment. Love toward a better and brighter future for us and our kids.

“I never stopped loving you,” he said.

Really?

I’m told by others to believe that. Told that an unfaithful man often maintains love for his committed partner, his wife. That he compartmentalizes his ‘real’ life from the fantasy fulfilled in the arms of a lover. Hard to impossible to wrap one’s mind around when the choice to be in that lover’s arms is in fact stealing from his store of time, thinking, emotional ‘disc space’ and relational presence. Hard to consider this new definition of ‘love’. A love that feeds his needs and ego at the expense of truth and the exclusivity promised before God.

Hurt?  …… Unless you have experienced this level of deception and betrayal, you can not fathom. Science says emotional and physical pain are centered in the same area of the brain. Betrayal will define what it means to be in that gut searing pain. Deep soul wrenching physical pain. Minute after excruciating minute for days, weeks and months on end, before the balm of time begins to soften the razor sharp edges of betrayal. Tsunamis of triggers leveling the assaulted, night and day. Movies of the covert lovers having sex, in full technicolor across the screen of the mind. Soft love songs on the radio leaving torrents of hot tears streaming down the betrayed’s cheeks. A heart tied in such a tight knot as to cause physical illness. Physical pain. Shaking, sweating, nausea, insomnia—affliction, torment.

The dream is gone. Anniversaries a lie, a bad joke played on the faithful. Exclusivity eroded by the acid of betrayal. Triggers everywhere –every film, television show, song that glamorizes infidelity, more torture to the soul-weary betrayed.

This is the “Red Asphalt” of modern times. The blood and guts of  the unilaterally

committed stain the blacktop beneath the shattered relationship; ugly excrement the harvest of the ‘fun and frivolity’ of an affair.

But there is hope, we so distressed are told.

Be patient.

Extend grace.

Strive toward forgiveness. Forgiveness will set you free.

And watch.

Observe if he works toward change, toward being a new man of integrity.

And wait.

Working toward my own resurrection. With or without him.

In the valley of in between.