Hikingout
While I don't like to generalize, it’s a pretty fair statement that most WS are selfish and lack empathy
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I don’t disagree.
I don’t think one could have an affair without being selfish or lacking empathy. So I don’t think you are generalizing.
Both must exist for an A to occur. In my mind, those are the why's. In my view, chasing the "why's" of how I got that way seemed like a waste of time.
I don’t think the whys are a waste of time. I listed some of my whys in my initial post. They are a to do list of behavior and patterns that I needs to assess and mitigate.not one of them is an excuse to cheat. There are no excuses for cheating.
I had a crappy childhood and suffered physical abuse at the hands of my step dad for many years. Did that contribute to my behavior? Perhaps. But then there are people who've had it much worse than me who have't cheated. For me, they always sounded like excuses.
I don’t think foo is a reason that people cheat. Crappy childhoods don’t cause cheating. ALL childhoods help create coping mechanisms and perceptions of the world. It’s a big development time when you adopt your core beliefs about self, love, relationship dynamics, and many other things. We all carry beliefs from them that don’t serve us, and those things are largely unknown to us because they are ingrained, part of our operating system as a human. It’s why therapists almost always start with it no matter the reason you are in therapy. Even many bs on this site report benefits of this exploration.
Examining your FOO is generally just a portion of work towards healing perception. That isn’t about the past, that is about the present self. How did I get to be who I m today (generally)
While in IC, my therapist focused on recognizing those behaviors and changing them. One of the things he said to me which really stuck was "Try to see things through other peoples eyes". I never considered that before and that one statement really turned things around for me. Certainly what worked for me may not for others but I think energy is best spent focusing on what I could change. I can't alter the how or why I got to the point of having an A but I could do something about the here and now.
I mean I think a lot of people who cheat may regret what they did and not want to repeat the behavior in the future. I was so thunderstruck by the whole situation I think that would have been enough of the bar was to not cheat again. I could have gone home and simply tried to appreciate my husband more. After all, I did that for decades prior to my affair with zero temptation.
That would not have helped my selfishness. I didn’t see myself as a selfish person. I knew what I had done in cheating was selfish and lacked empathy but at the time I saw that as a temporary under extraordinary circumstances. Even my husband would have told you I was the most selfless person he knew. (At least before I confessed my affair to him)
It wasn’t until I spent the time to understand why I was unhappy, why I was trying to escape my life, that I started to understand more.
My people pleasing was selfish. I was presenting others a package to get something in return. I didn’t understand I was a people pleaser. I just thought I was nice. My perfectionism was me hiding behind a mask so I wouldn’t have to be vulnerable. My entitlement was because I had become a martyr of my own making.
If I didn’t "waste" the time to find those patterns, those set of whys, I wouldn’t have started to deal with my avoidant tendencies, recognized my patterns that were keeping me unhappy, learned better communication, how to negotiate, how to have healthy conflict, to be vulnerable and authentic, located the flaws in my integrity and other core beliefs.
I am pretty sure that without fixing the above list and more I still would have the same pain and it would have continued to impede upon my life and marriage.
I think one can take accountability by saying I did it because I was selfish and lacked empathy, but if that’s as far as you go the changes are only so deep and you miss out on some of the richness of healing. I am not saying being able to put yourself in other shoes, stop cheating and trying to be mindful of your selfishness isn’t an improvement, I am just saying that examining the whys is nothing like what you are talking about. I don’t view a higher understanding of yourself as a waste of time. Your relationship with yourself, your thoughts and behaviors will reflect on every relationship you ever have.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:10 AM, Sunday, February 18th]