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Old Jun 08, 2004, 01:19 PM
arielle arielle is offline
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Member Since: Jun 2004
Location: O! Canada
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Hello I'm new here and I desperately need help. My husband and I have been married for nearly a year now. Before we were married he cheated on me and came clean, with a promise to be faithful from that point on. He has changed a lot and has done nothing since for which I would have any reason to be suspicious. But I cannot get over the trauma. I had trusted him implicitely, and now I doubt all of my feelings and fly of the handle about everything, accusing him etc. Then a couple of months into our marriage I went home to see my family and when I was there I slept with my ex. I told my husband immediately, but now he doesn't trust me either, and even though I have done nothing to suggest that I would ever cheat on him again - and I have no desire to do so - we are now caught in a viscious circle of fights, recriminations, and accusations. I feel angry with him because I would never have cheated on him if he'd never done it to me in the first place (I know that it's childish but I felt so broken, and I wanted to hurt him. I wanted for him to have the gut-wrenching feeling, cold sweats and trouble breathing that I experience whenever he's five minutes late home from work.)
How do we pull ourselves out of this problem? The thing is that we both love each other very much, but we have a lot of problems in our relationship - this isn't the only one.

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  #2  
Old Jun 09, 2004, 12:33 AM
alm15 alm15 is offline
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Member Since: Apr 2004
Location: PA, USA
Posts: 115
I think the best solution is therapy too, but if you're not willing to try that, maybe writing would help. IS this bringing up old abandonment stuff? Have you asked yourself why you can't forgive him even though he's made a change in who he is? It would probably be best to try to focus on you and why you're dealing with it or not dealing with it the way you are. I don't think it's about him anymore, but about how you're reacting to it. If you're having trouble trusting each other, it doesn't sound like it's something you two can work on together with out outside help. Good luck.

  #3  
Old Jun 09, 2004, 12:28 PM
arielle arielle is offline
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Member Since: Jun 2004
Location: O! Canada
Posts: 2
That's the funny thing - my parents have been married for nearly 30 years, and of course they had issues at various stages, but ave generally a very happy and solid relationship. I was always their little princess, and have never doubted their love and devotion, nor that of my grandparents. I have never had any issue with past relationships, so it's not past baggage which is weighing me down. The thing is that this is the first man I ever really allowed myself to fall in love with and trust (I had always been a rather emotionally detached partner in every other relationship) and it was just devastating to see that trodden on. I think that men have a different idea about infidelity than women, for us sex becomes such an intimate thing when we are with someone who we love, and at that point we lose interest in other people. Men treat it as an intimate thing with their partner, but as a physical thing with others. They can therefore detach themselves sufficiently when it comes to cheating. My husband has come to understand how I feel about making love, and this is why he is so devastated by my infidelity, and although I know how men think (and he thought before) I still cannot wrap my mind around it sufficiently to deal with it. I write about it and try to talk to him about it, but he looks at it as more something that we each did in the past, that we have each atoned for and should get on with our lives. But I know that he doesn't trust me, and I'm now so jealous, all he has to do is look at another woman and I burst into tears. I have tried shoving it into the back of my mind where I don't think about it, but this allows it to resurface at random to hurt us again and again. Sometimes I feel as though I will never have relief, unless I kill him (to restore my honour) or I kill myself (to be free of the emotional pain). I understand now the honour killings of muslim girls in Pakistan who are murdered by their father or brother because they have brought shame upon the family. How ironic.

je suis la captive de l'etre que j'aime.
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