“A Terrible Excuse”: Woman Confesses To Cheating, Didn’t See The Consequences Coming
Interview With ExpertThe festive season is upon us, which also means cheating season has arrived. Studies have found that more people step out on their partners during December than at any other time of the year. 85% of people who took part in one survey said the holiday season makes them feel more passionate and excited. They’re also more likely to be out and about, which in turn leads to giving in to the temptation to have an affair.
One man shared how his girlfriend of two years recently admitted to cheating on him with a random guy she met at a bar. As if that wasn’t bad enough, the woman said she only did it because she “wanted to see if she still had it.” The man refused to accept it as a valid excuse. But now his ex and their mutual friends are pressuring him to give the relationship one more chance, and he’s not sure if he should. Bored Panda reached out to psychotherapist and best-selling author Anna Mathur about how to manage misplaced guilt.
There are several reasons someone might cheat on their partner
Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
When this guy’s girlfriend decided to hook up with someone else to see if she still “had it,” he immediately showed her the door
Image credits: RDNE Stock project / Pexels (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Big-Classic-7657
Image credits: Victoria Romulo / Unsplash (not the actual photo)
The guy feels a tinge of guilt for sticking to his boundaries, and an expert explains why
Bored Panda asked psychotherapist and best-selling author Anna Mathur to unpack what guilt is, why we feel it, and how to deal with it. She began by telling us that guilt is a prompt that we’ve behaved or acted in a way that doesn’t align with our values somehow.
“Misplaced guilt is the feeling of guilt that comes when you’ve not actually done anything wrong,” explains Mathur. “This is often rooted in people-pleasing or perfectionism – such as holding a healthy boundary, and feeling guilty because someone is finding it hard to accept.” As in the case of the guy who is being pressured to take back his cheating girlfriend.
The expert advises people to acknowledge and name the guilt. For example, if you feel bad for upsetting a friend, “Consider whether you did anything wrong that you need to apologise or take responsibility for. ‘I was really blunt with her because I was tired, so I should probably explain that I wasn’t actually annoyed with her.’ Once you have acted upon that step, you can let the guilt go,” Mathur told Bored Panda, stressing that guilt is there to prompt you to act or take responsibility where needed, not make you feel like a bad person.
Image credits: simonapilolla / Freepik (not the actual photo)
There are pros and cons to forgiving a cheater
When researchers examined data collected over a 50-year period, they found that roughly 1 in 5 people cheat. And psychologists say there are several reasons someone might decide to be unfaithful. The main ones being anger, low self-esteem, lack of love, low commitment, need for variety, neglect, sexual desire, and situation or circumstance. In the case of the guy left blindsided, it appears his girlfriend’s low self-esteem played a part.
People who have low self-worth might choose to seek validation outside of their relationship because it makes them feel more wanted – and better about themselves. But as Brides.com reports, “while taking the unfaithful route might give them a temporary boost of self-confidence, in the long-term, cheating exacerbates low feelings about oneself.” So it’s a vicious cycle.
Whether you stay with a cheating partner or end the relationship, you’ll still have to decide if you’re willing to forgive them or not. Experts say there are pros and cons to forgiving a cheater. On the upside, forgiveness frees you from resentment and pain, working things out might bring you closer together, and the process of forgiveness can help couples reconnect with each other.
“Choosing forgiveness can lead to personal growth and introspection. It allows you to confront your emotions, work through them, and develop a deeper understanding of yourself,” notes Marriage.com. “Then again, the periods accompanying a cheating incident will also help you understand your triggers and identify loopholes in your relationship.”
The cons to forgiving a cheater include the fact they may cheat again, you may constantly be reminded of the hurt, and not addressing the root cause could enable their bad behavior. In the end, only you can decide whether it’s worth the risk.
“You dodged a nuke, bro”: the internet rallied behind the guy, reassuring him that he did the right thing
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
I absolutely hate it when people refer to cheating as a “mistake.” Like sure, it’s a mistake in the sense that you shouldn’t have done it. When you knowingly and deliberately betray someone in a way that cannot be undone, that is a decision, and you should use language that shows you understand that. “We all make mistakes” - yes. We forget to pay back a friend for dinner, we merge into another car, we say hurtful things in the heat of the moment. Cheating on your partner is a choice. You can regret all of it, but don’t act like it’s the same thing.
"When someone tries to use language to imply what they did happened by magic [or accident, in case of a mistake], they make it pretty clear they're trying to deceive you." -hbomberguy Quite a lot of people seem to not understand that apologizing does not mean the other party is obligated to forgive and forget. If the (ex-)girlfriend really learned her lesson, that's great, and it will keep her from ruining her next relationship over something this stupid - but thinking OP must forgive her and carry on after his trust in her has been basically obliterated is just delusional.
Load More Replies...If she wanted to know if people found her attractive, just flirting would have told her that. If she simply wanted "validation", she had all the validation that she needed as soon as this random dude hit on her and started to express interest in having sex with her. She didn't want validation, she wanted to have sex with a random dude. Aside from a massive violation of trust, she also risked her health and life - she had no idea whether this guy has any STIs, whether he was abusive, a trafficker, etc. She also risked the health of her partner, since she wouldn't be keeping the STIs to herself, and didn't tell her partner that she had potentially exposed him too. If the random hookup was a crazy, he could also harm the partner. She didn't "make a mistake", she knowingly engaged in very risky behavior, endangering both of them. It was also likely planned, so not "a moment of weakness".
The only mistake that can be linked to cheating is to mistakenly think you're gonna be forgiven. At least I wouldn't.
I don’t think I could even if I wanted to. No matter how great of a person they were in all other aspects, once that trust is broken it’s gone for good. That’s just the way I’m wired.
Load More Replies..."Making a mistake" is like putting two teaspoons of baking powder in the muffin batter instead of the one that the recipe called for. Cheating requires several intentional choices. She admitted that even! It's not a mistake.
100% correct. And in the case of your muffin analogy, all you need to do then, is double the recipe so that the mistake will be evened out. Double the amount of yummy homemade muffins? It may not have been intended, but you can make the most out of it and share with more people (I suppose cheating is another way to "share with more people" but, not in a good way)
Load More Replies...Mistake? She wasn't walking down the sidewalk, slip on a banana peel and land on a d**k. GTFO.
Lol!! Now I'm imagining that actually happening. I've got a cartoon version of how that could possibly play out running in my mind right now. Thank you for that mental image.
Load More Replies...Reverse the roles and he cheated on her: her friends would be telling her to dump him. Time for him to leave.
"It was a mistake!" Yeah... no. There are a dozen different decisions that happen before cheating. Not dismissing the idiotic idea immediately; starting the flirting; letting it get heavy; agreeing to go somewhere with the stranger; taking the clothes off; etc. This lady made a whole bunch of selfish and awful decisions IN A ROW.
I don't believe "once a cheater, always a cheater." Some people are capable of learning from their mistakes. THAT BEING SAID... The next times her friends accuse you of being unforgiving, ask them how willingly they would forgive their partner if their partner chose to cheat on them simply to see if they were still considered attractive. Would they take them back with open arms and a "no biggie, all is okey dokey"?? Bet you'll be met with crickets. The others are just lying.
someone i kno was cheated on and he told her about it. she forgave him. fast forward a year they were engaged a few months before the wedding he cheated again. he asked for forgivness again but she said no bc he promised it would never happen again and it did. she now has a new guy and they r engaged and he cares about her so much and his son treats her as if she is his mom. my husband and i have never seen her so happy. best part wen she left her ex she took the dog and bc everyone was on her side he didnt say a word about it. so she has an amazing relationship and still has her canine best friend and doesnt need to share him.
Although it is true that potentially, people can change, for the most part, "once a cheater always a cheater"
Load More Replies...Once a cheater, always a cheater. Those friends of her are as worse as herself. NTA.
Rachel and her friends were 100% correct about "throwing away a great relationship over one bad choice".... But it's not you doing the throwing away. It was Rachel, with her bad choice. They're turning this around to make you the bad guy. She's the bad guy. You deserve better.
Worst part is they were in on it and did nothing to stop it? Yeahhhh... NO!
Load More Replies...I imagine she only told him in case one of her friends dropped her in it. OP - NTA. 'Once a cheat, always a cheat'.
She's not getting any younger so the prospect of seeing if she still has it is not going to get any better ...
Please be checked for STDs. Why don't people think about these anymore? All we need is another epidemic similar to AIDS and everyone will be blaming each other again and taking it out on scapegoats.
Syphilis. It's on the rise, and it's becoming resistant to penicillin.
Load More Replies...Flirting with a man to see if you 'still have it' already crosses the line. She didn't want to see if she still had it, she wanted to cheat and see if her bf would still take her back, you know, because she 'still has it'.
Nah, bro, you did the right thing. If she did it once she'll do it again (and probably has), especially since her friends are trash and will push her to cheat.
A mistake? People sometimes go to jail for a "mistake", like hitting someone with a car, panicking and driving away, even if they realise their error and return to the site of the accident a few minutes later. On the other hand, a relationship is not a jail (at least, it's not supposed to be), so, if OP feels that the relationship run its course, he's free to break up.
Statistically, if your partner cheats once, they're going to cheat on you again. Learned that lesson the hard way.
You can't be with someone you don't trust, and you cannot trust a cheater.
Never give anyone a chance to betray you a second time. I'd be asking the friends what they would do if their SO cheated on them on a lark.
I don't believe in the "once a cheater always a cheater" thing, but it should be OP's decision whether it's a deal breaker for him. Some couples can move past it, some can't. It's no one else's call. And I can understand why it hurts more to him that she did it for such a s****y reason.
I don't remember what it's in, but I saw a scene in a movie or a TV show where a guy insists that his cheating was an accident and the angry girlfriend says "oh, so your fly was open and you just tripped over and your d**k accidentally landed inside her?"
The question shouldnt be ATAH or anything approching that. The question should have been, can they move past it? Will he ever trust her again and what is she willing to do to save the relationship. But that said... the immediate tears, and the gaslighting, and the human garbage "friends" I dont know she's even worth it.
As they say on Letterkenny: "If he (or she) cheats, it's over. No exceptions."
She didn't make a mistake, she made a choice to go screw some stranger. She put her health and possibly life and yours in danger! She's stupid and can go screw whoever she wants and hopefully will make sure they are using rubbers.
If the tables were turned, the friends would be telling her to run, and trashing you all day long.
I call BS. You can tell if you still "have it" without having to sleep with a random stranger. If he lets her get away with it she'll just do it again in 5, 10 years to make sure she's still got it, expecting forgiveness. I'd tell her I'm not so sure she still has it, as some people will sleep with anyone, regardless of if they are hot or not. Hope he left for good!
Oh Rachel still has IT alright, except "IT" is not OP. What a pathetic excuse from a two-timing ego-mistress and the equally sh*tbucket, enabling excuse of "friends" as well. OP did right to drop the ego-mistress and hopefully he drops the bunch of ego-mongers as well. SMH!!!
I absolutely hate it when people refer to cheating as a “mistake.” Like sure, it’s a mistake in the sense that you shouldn’t have done it. When you knowingly and deliberately betray someone in a way that cannot be undone, that is a decision, and you should use language that shows you understand that. “We all make mistakes” - yes. We forget to pay back a friend for dinner, we merge into another car, we say hurtful things in the heat of the moment. Cheating on your partner is a choice. You can regret all of it, but don’t act like it’s the same thing.
"When someone tries to use language to imply what they did happened by magic [or accident, in case of a mistake], they make it pretty clear they're trying to deceive you." -hbomberguy Quite a lot of people seem to not understand that apologizing does not mean the other party is obligated to forgive and forget. If the (ex-)girlfriend really learned her lesson, that's great, and it will keep her from ruining her next relationship over something this stupid - but thinking OP must forgive her and carry on after his trust in her has been basically obliterated is just delusional.
Load More Replies...If she wanted to know if people found her attractive, just flirting would have told her that. If she simply wanted "validation", she had all the validation that she needed as soon as this random dude hit on her and started to express interest in having sex with her. She didn't want validation, she wanted to have sex with a random dude. Aside from a massive violation of trust, she also risked her health and life - she had no idea whether this guy has any STIs, whether he was abusive, a trafficker, etc. She also risked the health of her partner, since she wouldn't be keeping the STIs to herself, and didn't tell her partner that she had potentially exposed him too. If the random hookup was a crazy, he could also harm the partner. She didn't "make a mistake", she knowingly engaged in very risky behavior, endangering both of them. It was also likely planned, so not "a moment of weakness".
The only mistake that can be linked to cheating is to mistakenly think you're gonna be forgiven. At least I wouldn't.
I don’t think I could even if I wanted to. No matter how great of a person they were in all other aspects, once that trust is broken it’s gone for good. That’s just the way I’m wired.
Load More Replies..."Making a mistake" is like putting two teaspoons of baking powder in the muffin batter instead of the one that the recipe called for. Cheating requires several intentional choices. She admitted that even! It's not a mistake.
100% correct. And in the case of your muffin analogy, all you need to do then, is double the recipe so that the mistake will be evened out. Double the amount of yummy homemade muffins? It may not have been intended, but you can make the most out of it and share with more people (I suppose cheating is another way to "share with more people" but, not in a good way)
Load More Replies...Mistake? She wasn't walking down the sidewalk, slip on a banana peel and land on a d**k. GTFO.
Lol!! Now I'm imagining that actually happening. I've got a cartoon version of how that could possibly play out running in my mind right now. Thank you for that mental image.
Load More Replies...Reverse the roles and he cheated on her: her friends would be telling her to dump him. Time for him to leave.
"It was a mistake!" Yeah... no. There are a dozen different decisions that happen before cheating. Not dismissing the idiotic idea immediately; starting the flirting; letting it get heavy; agreeing to go somewhere with the stranger; taking the clothes off; etc. This lady made a whole bunch of selfish and awful decisions IN A ROW.
I don't believe "once a cheater, always a cheater." Some people are capable of learning from their mistakes. THAT BEING SAID... The next times her friends accuse you of being unforgiving, ask them how willingly they would forgive their partner if their partner chose to cheat on them simply to see if they were still considered attractive. Would they take them back with open arms and a "no biggie, all is okey dokey"?? Bet you'll be met with crickets. The others are just lying.
someone i kno was cheated on and he told her about it. she forgave him. fast forward a year they were engaged a few months before the wedding he cheated again. he asked for forgivness again but she said no bc he promised it would never happen again and it did. she now has a new guy and they r engaged and he cares about her so much and his son treats her as if she is his mom. my husband and i have never seen her so happy. best part wen she left her ex she took the dog and bc everyone was on her side he didnt say a word about it. so she has an amazing relationship and still has her canine best friend and doesnt need to share him.
Although it is true that potentially, people can change, for the most part, "once a cheater always a cheater"
Load More Replies...Once a cheater, always a cheater. Those friends of her are as worse as herself. NTA.
Rachel and her friends were 100% correct about "throwing away a great relationship over one bad choice".... But it's not you doing the throwing away. It was Rachel, with her bad choice. They're turning this around to make you the bad guy. She's the bad guy. You deserve better.
Worst part is they were in on it and did nothing to stop it? Yeahhhh... NO!
Load More Replies...I imagine she only told him in case one of her friends dropped her in it. OP - NTA. 'Once a cheat, always a cheat'.
She's not getting any younger so the prospect of seeing if she still has it is not going to get any better ...
Please be checked for STDs. Why don't people think about these anymore? All we need is another epidemic similar to AIDS and everyone will be blaming each other again and taking it out on scapegoats.
Syphilis. It's on the rise, and it's becoming resistant to penicillin.
Load More Replies...Flirting with a man to see if you 'still have it' already crosses the line. She didn't want to see if she still had it, she wanted to cheat and see if her bf would still take her back, you know, because she 'still has it'.
Nah, bro, you did the right thing. If she did it once she'll do it again (and probably has), especially since her friends are trash and will push her to cheat.
A mistake? People sometimes go to jail for a "mistake", like hitting someone with a car, panicking and driving away, even if they realise their error and return to the site of the accident a few minutes later. On the other hand, a relationship is not a jail (at least, it's not supposed to be), so, if OP feels that the relationship run its course, he's free to break up.
Statistically, if your partner cheats once, they're going to cheat on you again. Learned that lesson the hard way.
You can't be with someone you don't trust, and you cannot trust a cheater.
Never give anyone a chance to betray you a second time. I'd be asking the friends what they would do if their SO cheated on them on a lark.
I don't believe in the "once a cheater always a cheater" thing, but it should be OP's decision whether it's a deal breaker for him. Some couples can move past it, some can't. It's no one else's call. And I can understand why it hurts more to him that she did it for such a s****y reason.
I don't remember what it's in, but I saw a scene in a movie or a TV show where a guy insists that his cheating was an accident and the angry girlfriend says "oh, so your fly was open and you just tripped over and your d**k accidentally landed inside her?"
The question shouldnt be ATAH or anything approching that. The question should have been, can they move past it? Will he ever trust her again and what is she willing to do to save the relationship. But that said... the immediate tears, and the gaslighting, and the human garbage "friends" I dont know she's even worth it.
As they say on Letterkenny: "If he (or she) cheats, it's over. No exceptions."
She didn't make a mistake, she made a choice to go screw some stranger. She put her health and possibly life and yours in danger! She's stupid and can go screw whoever she wants and hopefully will make sure they are using rubbers.
If the tables were turned, the friends would be telling her to run, and trashing you all day long.
I call BS. You can tell if you still "have it" without having to sleep with a random stranger. If he lets her get away with it she'll just do it again in 5, 10 years to make sure she's still got it, expecting forgiveness. I'd tell her I'm not so sure she still has it, as some people will sleep with anyone, regardless of if they are hot or not. Hope he left for good!
Oh Rachel still has IT alright, except "IT" is not OP. What a pathetic excuse from a two-timing ego-mistress and the equally sh*tbucket, enabling excuse of "friends" as well. OP did right to drop the ego-mistress and hopefully he drops the bunch of ego-mongers as well. SMH!!!
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