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#82 Should I tell
stepfather that mom's cheating with dad?/ Give mom a chance to tell
dad first? |
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Dear Annie: I am a 20-year-old female with a
serious dilemma. Three years ago, my parents divorced because my mom
cheated on my father. I knew for two years that Mom was cheating, and I
never said a word to anyone until she came out and confessed. Then she
asked why I didn't speak up sooner. [
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Gabby's Reply:
Hi Abandoned: A big congrats to you. It’s nice to know that your integrity is such that this bothers you enough to write. Most children support parental infidelity by silence such as you originally did (consciously or unconsciously) with your father. As you discovered silence condones; silence is an extremely powerful and effective communication used by those pretending to not be leaders who are in fact leaders stuck in make-wrong and covert sabotage. It will work for you to acknowledge the lie you and others have been living. Even unconscious lies have an effect. I'm referring to, “my parents divorced because my mom cheated on my father.” The truth is your parents divorced. And, there are many reasons, one of which was the cheating. I don’t get that either of them is clear as to the truth as to why they divorced. Reasons serve as barriers to the truth. In any case, the way you and others are telling the story makes your mom out to be the villain. If we were to ask your dad what he did to cause her to cheat (with the intention to get to the truth) he would tell you exactly what he did and did not do. We each use our equally powerful leadership-communication skills to produce all the results we produce. Suffice it to say, he was doing his imitation of communication with her which always drives others away (if not physically then emotionally/spiritually). Deceit simply can't take place for long in the space of a person who operates from integrity. What we do know for sure is that his own integrity was out prior to her cheating. He was withholding thoughts from her and had hundreds of unacknowledged perpetrations which were serving as barriers to being with her. When a person is whole and complete (in–integrity) they can immediately tell when another is withholding a thought, such as this one she might have been hiding from him, “I saw this good-looking guy today and found myself wondering what it would be like to have sex with him.” In relationships in which there is an agreement to communicate openly, honestly, and spontaneously, zero withholds, such thoughts shared nip cheating in the bud. Put another way, he was not a safe space for your Mom to tell the truth. Next we address: “Then she asked why I didn't speak up sooner.” This is an irresponsible dump. It makes you wrong. It covertly blames you for not stopping her. It is an abusive communication. It didn’t feel good for you to hear or us to read. What she could have said is, “I get I was not a safe space for you to tell me that you knew.” That you let her dump blame in your space indicates that you are addicted to abuse, so much so that you are unaware of your boundaries and don’t know enough to stop it mid-sentence, and, most importantly, to insist that the other immediately acknowledge the abuse before continuing the conversation. Re: “but I feel I should tell Frank what's going on.” It works to make a distinction between feelings and thoughts. A conscious person would have written, “I feel badly about the cheating and I have the thought that I should tell Frank.” For you to have this thought means you are programmed to get others in trouble, to look good while making others look bad. The Military Academy Code of Honor is to confront the perpetrator and ask if they are willing to tell whomever…. If they say no then you must tell them that they leave you no choice but to report them. In this way you become responsible for the integrity of those with whom you relate, your friends and family. As you can tell from the string of military academy scandals this is not an easy code to live by. Re: "all the mutual friends my parents had together abandoned her." This reveals that you are not clear about responsibility. You have taken sides. Written responsibly it would read, "My mom drove all her friends out of her life." Or, better yet, "I supported all my parent's friends in abandoning her."
Your Mom has set you up to support her in getting to the source of her
addiction to cheating. I suspect at some level (however unconscious she
may appear to be) she is supporting you in acknowledging and completing
your own identical addiction. Therefore, compassion is what’s called
for. [
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