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Can the guilty partner help the innocent party after infidelity? - Uneasy

I've gotten so much from your pages in the last few days in a time of need, and would appreciate any response to my issues.

Quickly, I'm a 29-year SWM that has been with the same woman (30 yrs old) since college, mostly continually and exclusively. I recently (June 1996) asked her to marry me but things went downhill for me a few month later, as I think I feared responsibility, compatability, and the fact that I became attracted to another. My attraction led to a romance with a co-worker (27 yrs old) that continues to date. I broke off the engagement in January despite attempts at counselling and continue to date my co-worker. My ex-fiancee is, understandably, shaken and I fear nearing depression.

There are SO many challenges in her life now (sick father, let go from her job (unrelated to performance), etc.), many of which I have introduced since my-coworker lives less than 1/2 mile from my ex-fiancée. She has requested that for her sanity I end the relationship with my co-worker and attempt to heal myself and let her heal. She says that since my co-worker lives so close she has lost her man, her town, and her church, and fears confronting us in public, although my co-worker and I do not go out in the town where they both live. Should the guilty partner be involved in the innocent's healing? Should I grant her request, or is this the beginning of a cycle where she still views me as responsible for her happiness?

Honestly, I am undecided about my future with my co-worker and about the kind of love I am searching for, and my ex-fiancee fears I am hiding in my current relationship. My ex-fiancee agrees that she was controlling but has tried so hard to improve herself recently, although I fear she is changing to suit what she thinks I want. Coupled with my my patience, I feel her controlling ways over the year seemed to build, and I failed to communicate my feelings, until I lashing out and ending things. Both women are career-oriented as I am, although I feel less pressure to move the relationship forward with my co-worker than I felt with my ex-fiancee. I really want to help myself and my ex-fiancée, but am unsure how to do this best, if I can at all. Any suggestions? Thanks so much in advance for everyone's responses, and Bernd, if you find time to respond I would greatly appreciate your insight. Thanks!

From: Bernd

You said “I think I feared responsibility, compatibility, and the fact that I became attracted to another”. My guess is that the attraction was a natural RESULT of those first 2 things you feared. I also suspect that the apparent absence of similar stresses in this relationship, in comparison to the one with your ex (sick dad, job loss, depression) are a temporary illusion, and you will be facing a similar subconscious “flight” feelings as your new relationship deepens. What we don’t heal in one relationship we almost always face in the next.

I suspect as well that you struggle with how much support and contact you can have with your ex, before it jeopardizes your current relationship. Take a look at what may be really happening here, and see if that awareness can help you make some choices that feel solid inside.

- you left the earlier relationship no because of any real change in your girlfriend, or anything that she did that was unacceptable, but because of your fears. Those fears won’t go away with someone new; they might submerge for a while, but like an iceberg, the submerged stuff is really the stuff that catches us by surprise most in the future, and wrecks stuff all over again, often in different ways.

- I suspect that you were unsure about asking your ex to marry you, but felt a certain amount of obligation because you had been together for so long. If you agree that love is a choice first, a feeling second, then you let your sense of obligation guide your choices, instead of making a choice that felt solid inside. Rejecting that sense of obligation feels right on, but you may have thrown the baby out with the bath water, in rejecting your ex as well.

- you and your ex have a lot of history together, and an awareness of each other on intimate levels that will take a similar amount of time in a new relationship. Whatever faults your ex has are actually blessings, because long-term partners usually fit together like jigsaw puzzle pieces. What imperfections, fears, and struggles one has are usually mirror images of corresponding imperfections, fears, and struggles in the other. Your ex feels anguish over being abandoned; you feel anguish over being clung to. See the mirror?

My sense is that the most loving thing you can do for your ex is to take the time to listen to her - a lot of time - and feel her pain, anger (yes, anger), and turmoil over the loss of your relationship together. It may jeopardize your current relationship by doing so, but if you base your choices out of trying to juggle both priorities, you’ll fulfil neither. If you make truly loving choices, then whatever happens in your current relationship will be the best path, even if it seems like a huge leap in faith to believe so.

You may end up getting back together, or you may become the best of friends, while your current or a future relationship with someone else deepens. Either way, if you go for the choices that feel loving, kind and caring, and make those choices with integrity, and not trying to steer the results your way, things will work out better than you could have ever dreamed. That’s my guess, anyway, based on my own experiences.

You and your ex still have much to learn from each other, and the breakup seems to have been the catalyst to start a real healing process for both of you. It is a porcupine coming towards you with a huge diamond underneath. Whether you get the treasure it holds is up to you, and your commitment to truly find the most loving choices for yourself, and her.

Hope this helps a bit.

From: Not as uneasy!

Bernd, thank you so much for your response. I can't tell you how good it feels to get some fresh, experienced insight!}:^)

I feel like I left my girlfriend for the fears I mentioned, fears I have about her expectations based on the differences in our upbringing (she from au upper middle class family, mine not so upper!), and a feeling that I was sacrificing my happiness (and not communicating it!) to make her happy. I feel like now I am making choices and doing things that I enjoy and that make me happy, and not at my co-workers expense since she enjoys these things also. However, I do feel the uneasiness, pain, and pressure of my girlfriend's experience when we talk, which is maybe 1 or 2 times a week.

I am not sure, however, that this is what you mean by making loving choices. In fact, I feel that the loving choices I may make for myself would be different than those I would make if I concentrate on trying to help my girlfriend or my current relationship happy. You mentioned that the choices should feel right, and not steer the results my way...I feel I err on the other side (concentrating on making OTHERS happy at the expense of MY happiness!) and that, partially, that is what got me in trouble with my girlfriend. How does one know which are the right loving choices to make? Based on earlier postings I assume it has to do with listening to my inner voice, but with the everyday pressures of trying to juggle both priorities (and I am struggling!) I feel I cannot hear it too well. I'm not sure whether this posting requires an original response, or if there is another you have already made that you could point me to. Either way, I certainly appreciate the sharing and caring that you have shown me. I hope to return the favour on your page when I feel more able!

From: Bernd

I've been struggling on how to answer your questions, and I think the best sources of insight will be women posting to this forum. Ask them what they'd want you to do, if they were in your ex's shoes. And listen to what they have to say, very very carefully.


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