I was married for a brief period of time so long ago I
sincerely don’t remember when I got divorced. I think it was 93 or 94 but it
someone showed me my divorce decree (which I have NO idea where mine is) and it
said 95 I wouldn’t be shocked. We were
married in 89 and we separated in 91.
When the actual divorce was finalized is beyond me however.
The reason my ex-husband and I separated is because he
cheated on me. The entire marriage was
unhealthy but of the four years we were together, two years were good, two were
extremely horrible. Oddly enough they
weren’t consecutive years. My ex-husband
was a pathological liar (a theme that has been consistent in my partners
throughout my life) and he was emotionally abusive. If I didn’t know any better, I would say that
he trained under my mother because he was the male (extremely handsome) version
of her.
I put him out the first time he cheated. I had told him from day one, “Don’t cheat. If
you feel like you want to have sex with someone else, come to me FIRST. Let’s talk about it, let’s figure out if it’s
just a physical attraction, if you are unhappy in the relationship, let’s get
to the source of your feelings BEFORE you cheat. Once you cheat, our trust is destroyed and I
can never trust you again. All I ask is
that you let me leave the relationship with my dignity before you decide to
cheat.” Apparently, those instructions
were too complicated for him to grasp because he cheated anyway.
I put him out the first time I found out he cheated. Apparently, he had been cheating with a woman
almost the entire time of our relationship but that was not the woman I found
out about. There was no room for
negotiation, no need for counseling at that point. My mother was a mistress all my formative
years and I saw first-hand how deceptive men could be when they were
cheating. I was willing to tolerate the
emotional abuse but cheating was my hard limit.
Clearly, he had no desire to be married to me any longer because he
broke my one cardinal rule.
I wasn’t enlightened at the time. I wasn’t at all self-aware or
introspective. I was intelligent by
nature but I hadn’t explored, read, studied, or research 1/10th of
the things I’ve done in the decades since I put him out. I hadn’t examined my own issues nor had I
decided that I needed to work on or heal myself from my childhood traumas. I couldn’t even have admitted to myself that
I had childhood traumas at the time because I was still of the, “My mother beat
me and I turned out fine,” mindset. I
had low self-esteem but I would have told you at the time that it was
high. I was average. I was still relaxing my hair and an
unquestioning Christian. I was not at
all the evolved and conscious person I am today.
I said all of that to say this. I didn’t cheat on him to pay him back. I didn’t take him back and forgive him time
and time again. I didn’t stalk the woman
he cheated with and try to make her life hell.
For as average and mediocre as I was at the time, I didn’t do any of the
classically dysfunctional things so many average and mediocre people do. I had my hard and fast limit and when he
crossed it, I ended things succinctly and I didn’t look back. I found out he cheated and he packed his
things that day and he was gone. There
was a brief period, or about a month and a half, more than a year after we
separated that we tried to reconcile and he told me how he was going to therapy
and how much he was going to be a better man for me. Turns out he was cheating on me with two
other women during the reconciliation. I
confronted him, with one of the women as soon as I found out, and I have never
seen him since.
I’ve been divorced over twenty years (I think). Cheating and adultery is entertainment these
days when it wasn’t back then. Cheating
is so commonplace these days, people don’t even see it as a hard limit, they
expect cheating in the relationship. The
same people who are cheaters are offended and outraged when their partner is
cheating on them. I simply can’t be that
dysfunctional. I can’t allow that much
drama in my life. If you don’t want me,
fine, move on and let me move on. I’m
not for every one, I get that. I do,
however, bust my ass to make my relationships work, even more so now than I did
when I was in my 20s and stupid. If you
don’t value, cherish, appreciate, and love me enough to work at our
relationship, if you find someone else more appealing, cool, go pursue a
relationship with her and I’m going to make space in my life for more healing and
introspection.
If people today no only don’t set hard and fast limits about
cheating, but they lie and cheat and deceive their partners, if they are having
internet relationships, texting relationships, if they are having sexual
relationship with other people while supposedly committed to someone how can
any relationships ever be healthy? If
you can turn on the TV and see a dozen shows at any giving time about cheating
how on earth are you ever going to say to yourself that you won’t cheat, let
alone that you will end the relationship at the first sign of cheating? I think cheating, revenge cheating (Is that a
thing? I’m sure there’s a name for it)
and the acceptance of cheating is so commonplace that even the long lasting
relationships are victims of it. How can
we ever get to a place of having healthy relationships ever again?
I have lots of ideas of how to show people healthier models
of relationships (and I’m fully acknowledging that I’ve never had a healthy
relationship other than in my mind) but people are so desperate to hold on to
their dysfunction they don’t want to listen.
(I feel like the word dysfunction is my most used word). Black culture promotes cheating. TV promotes cheating. Music promotes cheating. And here I am, little ole me, trying to beat
the drum of emotional maturity. I don’t
think anyone hears it.