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Pinings — Advice by Sherry Hughes
The Boyfriend & The Friend!
Dear Sherry,
I’m sure someone has written to you about this sort of thing before, but I am
confused and angry and I need advice. My boyfriend of four years has been
cheating on me—with a friend of mine. He says it “didn’t mean anything” and that
it’s over now. I only found out because they both mentioned being somewhere, and
it was a place I’d never been. After that, I spent a couple of weeks doing
detective work. When I confronted him, he lied. When I later talked to her, she
lied too, but she’s not as convincing. At that point, I already had all the
evidence I needed (his cell phone bill, specifically) but I just wanted to see
who would be honest with me.
Anyway, the problem
I’m having now is that I am absolutely full of rage. I haven’t seen either of
them for over a month, and don’t intend to. As far as I’m concerned, they don’t
deserve to be friends of mine—or anything else. Although they both apologized
and promised it was over—and my ex wanted us to “work things out”—I am having a
hard time moving on. I am obsessed with where they are and what they are doing.
I call my friends and ask if they’ve seen them, where were they, etc. I drive by
their houses all the time to see if they are together. And I’m having wicked
nightmares.
I can’t figure out
why I can’t get past this. I feel terrible. It seems as if I’d start to feel
better by now.
- Cheryl
Dear Cheryl,
I’m sorry you had to go through that. I’ve been there and it sucks.
This is huge emotional trauma. You’ve been hurt by two people that you loved and
trusted. And they, in turn, lied about what you knew to be the truth. I would
agree that they don’t deserve to be a part of your life. And two things to
remember about that:
- You get to decide who is worthy of your trust and love.
- Forgiveness doesn’t mean you have to have a relationship with someone who has hurt you.
It’s very early for you to expect to be feeling better. You are in the very
beginning of the grieving process. Grieving can take a long time. Be gentle with
yourself and take some time to pull out of this difficult period. Ask for help
from others, perhaps even a therapist, if you are feeling really desperate. And
knock off the drive-bys and gathering information from friends; it’ll only keep
you sad and angry. And it may be considered harassment.
You found out about the affair for a reason. In time, you’ll see that you can now move on to a healthier relationship.
Oh, and if it makes you feel any better, these folks have some nasty karma
coming their way.
Sherry Hughes
welcomes letters from readers. Reach her at sah103@hotmail.com
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2004
HippoPress
LLC | Manchester, NH
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