How long does the cheater charade last?

 

A reader recently struggling with her spouses infidelity wrote to me. She shared how her spouse had multiple addictions, several affairs along with narcissistic tendencies.

She was obviously worn out from dealing with the many challenges and string of on-going crises that come with such situations. She had many questions, yet one caught my attention. She wanted to know, “When does the charade fall apart or does it continue?”

Part of me wanted to give her a specific answer in the form of a date on the calendar. When you mix addictions with affairs, it makes any situation worse.  One bad habit encourages another.

I shared with her that “some cheaters continue their charade as long as they can and then some. The power of denial is powerful. The charade can continue until either their money, health or support network break down and collapse.”

I associate the charade with denial, since it keeps them from waking up to what’s really happening. As long as a cheater is feeling no pain, there is little likelihood of change.

The hard reality is that pain forces them to change. When there’s not pain, there’s no change.

Cheaters need pain before making changes in their direction. Without pain, there’s little to no motivation for changing what they’re doing.

Pain can show up in the form of embarrassment, guilt or shame. In some cases, the natural consequences finally catch up to them.

As long as they can gratify themselves with no consequences, they have no reason to change.  They don’t want to grow up so long as it’s still playtime. This is why gratification without consequences is dangerous.

The awakening process consists of them waking up to what’s really going on. They wake up to what they did to themselves, what they did to others and the consequences of their choices. It’s when  they are confronted with the ugly consequences, they finally find motivation to improve things.

The awakening process is also painful for you. You finally wake up to the reality of what’s happening rather than continuing being part of the cheater’s delusional world.

This is where the video “Overcoming the Affair Crisis” comes in. It helps you adjust to what’s going on and what your options are.

Keeping It Real,

Jeff

 

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