Honestly about everything is part of the human condition, but yes I agree.
I donât see it as an out or an excuse. I think there are all sorts of things that we go through that is part of our growth and everyone has different areas they need to grow in.
Considering over 50 percent of marriages are effected by infidelity (and I think that is a low ball percentage), and despite each affair being unique itâs not that surprising to find that a ws often has certain behaviors, experiences in common.
I donât think it is inevitable. I donât think all people do it. And I think that anything we do that hurts others to the degree cheating does, requires a massive response of change.
I wish I could show you this video that visually demonstrates the nature of healing. But I will just say that most ws lead largely unconscious lives. We lack self awareness, emotional intelligence, and our thinking tends to live in the negative realm. Not everyone with the categories cheat but most of them will walk with some sort of addiction like you are talking about.
The degree of a on someoneâs selfishness is a direct correlation to someoneâs self worth/love.
People who donât love themselves and fill their own cup basically look for others to fill their cup. They can present overly selfish or overly unselfish, but both operate in a transactional way in relationships. They create expectations that unmet is used to prove the other doesnât love them.
In fact I would say a large portion of marriages/romantic relationships operate transactionally because we have been taught that. (How many of us long term married folks have been directed in some way that if the man helps in the house then he will get more sex?) We actually went through that choreplay era, and all it did was tell me that my husband was washing dishes to get sex that evening.
Reality is, the man lives in the house. I did his laundry, all the dishes, cooking, cleaning, grocery shopping, etc- would I have been more energetic if he did his part? Yes. But we set it up as "if you do x, then you will likely get y".
And all that came from the MC community.
I think one of our highest calls for purpose in life is to love in a non transactional way. I think we are often people who have taken that to the next level somehow. As a people pleaser I was always hustling for love. Love should not be defined on what you do for the other person but a cooperation of two people who make the connection the top priority. People who want to connect will consider and respect the other, they will honor themselves in that connection, intimacy becomes less about getting crazy and getting off, it becomes two people relishing in the connection they share.
So I do think itâs part of the human experience to get out of balance. Itâs not okay to walk around hurting people, traumatizing them. As long as you are this person you canât get to your higher purpose and that in itself brings pain, and it will keep you down in the mud. Same goes for sacrificing too much to stay in a relationship where you arenât receiving the love and respect you deserve.