Cheating may be a deal-breaker in your relationship, or it may not, depending on the circumstances. There are lots of different factors to consider, and emotions at stake. Follow these steps to help decide how to go forward.
Investigate. Play detective, and notice his suspicious mannerisms. Ask yourself the following:
Ask the woman that he’s having an affair with, if you know or suspect who she is. Most women will sympathize and tell the truth. Oftentimes, this is exactly what she wants—for you to know. She may want you to leave him, so she can have your man all to herself. Many women are offended to be somebody’s secret, or second choice.
Ask him. He may not answer honestly, but you can still infer by his reaction whether he is hiding something.
Prepare yourself for every possibility beforehand. “Cheating” isn’t always black and white. Depending on how many times he’s cheated on you, how long he’s been unfaithful, how invested he is in his affair(s) and how many women he’s been with, you may be able to salvage your relationship.
If he’s slipped up several times, but always with different women who he cares nothing about and hasn’t kept in touch with, he may be fixable, because this means you still give him something other women don’t, if you’re the only one he’s with repeatedly. But you will have to make a change if you want him to change his ways, or it won’t work, and he’ll fall back into old habits.
If he only cheated once, and it was out of character, and he sincerely, utterly regrets it, he deserves a second chance.
Decide what you consider a deal-breaker. Where will you draw the line? When you find out how seriously he’s been cheating, at what point will you be through with him? How willing are you to forgive him and move on?
Realize that you may be partly to blame. Obviously, his actions are inexcusable, but they may be the result of something deeper, and you may be part of it. Ask yourself if you’ve been driving him away. Maybe you’ve been snapping at him, putting too much pressure on the relationship, getting serious too quickly, or not getting serious enough. It could be any number of things, but you may not be satisfying all his needs, and if you want to work things out, there may be aspects of yourself you have to change.
Confront him calmly. If you approach him angrily, he will immediately be on the defensive, and he won’t be rational or honest with you.
Ask him specifically how much he cheated.
Ask him what his intentions are with you. Does he want to stay with you? Or was cheating his easy way out of this relationship? Is he in love with someone else?
Decide if you are willing to work through this, or if you’re through. Should you stay or should you go?
Tell him what he needs to do to earn your trust back.
Ask him what he needs from you. Something may have been missing from your relationship that drove him to pull away from you.
Communicate. From hereon out , it’s clear you can’t let tensions escalate. Trust is built on openness and honesty.
Cheating can be avoided altogether if you know what causes it. Avoid doing the following:
Communicate. From hereon out , it’s clear you can’t let tensions escalate. Trust is built on openness and honesty.
Cheating can be avoided altogether if you know what causes it. Avoid doing the following:
Satisfy him sexually. If he doesn’t feel his needs are being met, he will find a way to meet them, and if you can’t satisfy those needs, he’ll find someone else who will.
Be careful not to play the blame game with him. Blaming and accusing him for every little thing will push him to seek acceptance elsewhere, not just sexual acceptance, but emotional as well.
Don’t partake in power struggles. Love is not a competition, so don’t try to win. Dismissing everything he says or being condescending with him will cause him to retaliate.
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