T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
953.1 | pointers | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Fri Jan 19 1990 09:57 | 11 |
| For supplemental information, see also:
Human_Relations
57 - On cheating
259 - why did he cheat?
665 - effects of "chating" on the faithful
707 - cheating - how did you handle it?
888 - cheating wife?
-Jody
|
953.2 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Jan 19 1990 10:31 | 6 |
| I think you should ignore it. I think it's better for people to
concentrate on how they live their own lives than to meddle in other
people's.
Lorna
|
953.3 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Jan 19 1990 10:52 | 8 |
| I agree with Lorna, that is something that you should keep to yourself.
You could be wrong, the 'cheater' could stop and return to the marriage
and work things out, there are multiple scenerios where saying nothing
could result in something positive being worked out. Telling will in
general have only one result.
Bonnie
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953.4 | what I would do | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Fri Jan 19 1990 10:55 | 19 |
| re .2:
I think that's wrong. If it's a best friend, you're *already*
involved in her or his life.
re .0:
Well, you can't really tell, because that may end up destroying
your friendship, but neither can you ignore it.
What I would do is tell the cheating spouse that I know what
he/she is doing, and that if he/she doesn't stop it that I'll
let my friend know exactly what is up.
Then, if the cheating spouse doesn't quit it, I wouldn't come
right out and tell my friend, but I might ask some probing
questions, like "Everything going okay with X?" to try to draw
that person out, because he or she may suspect anyway.
|
953.5 | | CLUSTA::KELTZ | | Fri Jan 19 1990 11:14 | 24 |
| Both actions are probably appropriate at various times and
under different circumstances. That said, this is my cut:
Please evaluate your evidence very, very, very carefully. If you
were to say something to your friend, someone WILL get hurt. If
your friend refuses to believe you, your relationship with that
friend is damaged. If your friend DOES believe you, your friend
will live through feeling betrayed by someone he/she loves very
much -- and that HURTS. The loss of faith/trust will damage the
relationship to the point that it will be permanently changed,
if it survives at all.
Note that where your friend places his/her trust will determine
which relationship sustains the worst of the damage. In either
case, your friend will lose faith in SOMEBODY she/he cares about.
Regardless of what kind of jerk the SO is, by attempting to tear down
trust in that person you are guaranteed to hurt your friend. It may
well be that this is a lesser hurt than your friend will have by not
being told, and in that case it *would* be an act of love. Just know
that is is not free, and your friend will pay the cost. Make sure
what you deliver is worth the price.
Beth
|
953.6 | ran through the alternatives in my head | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Fri Jan 19 1990 11:47 | 8 |
| Good point Beth.
I think I have the D!-model of friendships. If it was a close female friend
that was being cheated on (I don't care for the phrase 'being hurt'; maybe it's
a blessing in disguise), I would feel bound to take a course of action that
culminated in telling her (maybe Ellen's). Same thing with a close male friend.
Whether or not the friend's SO was of the same gender, er uh, sex.
Mez
|
953.7 | A very touchy situation, no pat answer | TLE::D_CARROLL | Love is a dangerous drug | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:03 | 44 |
| I don't think I could give a general answer for that question. It would really
depend on who was involved, my relationship with them, their relaionship with
eachother, etc.
I am very, very wary of what I consider the too-common occurance of people
assuming they know what's best for other people. Just because *I* would want
to know if my lover was cheating on me, doesn't mean every person would want
to know. The sword cuts both ways, though...just because I think my friend
would be better off without my knowing, who am I to make such a decision?
I think I would also take the tack of talking to the cheating SO, and try to
convince them to stop and/or tell their SO. After that has failed, I would
*probably* tend toward honesty. Lying (which includes deception, which
includes not telling someone something when you *know* they'd want to know)
is very difficult for me, ethically and emotionally. Part of the reason I
might tell is purely selfish - because not telling would take a lot of
emotional energy on my part.
In general, you have just desribed one of my standard nightmares. I *hate*
being in the middle of things. Honesty is so basic to my nature, it is
*very* difficult for me to be in a situation where people aren't being honest
with me or eachother. It makes me uncomfortable. I would probably find myself
avoiding the people involved until I ro they came to some resolution.
I hate being in a situation where one friend tells me something relevent
to another but "Don't tell him/her I said that...". I'd probably get
very angry at the cheating SO for putting me in such a situation.
Related comment...in a mailing list I am on about alternate lifestyles,
a recent discussion about cheating has led a number of people to say that
they regularly cheat on their spouses, but don't see a problem with it,
because they aren't hurting them. "What they don't know won't hurt them"
and to a certain extent that's true. It's not the cheating, but the
finding out that hurts the cheated-on lover. That attitude *really*
bothers me, but I don't have a moral highground to say "That's wrong,
and so if I know about it, I won't let you continue it that way."
Another related comment...be very very careful you *know* what the situation
is. They might have an open relationship, and your "information" could
be seen as unwarranted prying. Especially if the deal in their relationship
is "You can do what you want but don't tell me about it." (I know couples
like this.) If *both* people agree on the "What we don't know won't hurt
us", you'll only be adding unneccesary pain to the relationship.
D!
|
953.8 | The always know anyway | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Fri Jan 19 1990 12:16 | 13 |
| I'd keep quiet. I believe lovers always know so if they choose
to ignore it, for whatever their personal reasons are, it's not
my place to bring it up. Other people's love lives are not my
business. Anyone I'd be friends with would be intelligent enough
to make their own choices so my revelation would seem to presume
the person wasn't smart enough to run their own love lives. I know
I'd tell someone saying something like this to me to butt out.
If I put up with it, (which I never would, anyway), I'd have my reasons
and they'd be nobody's business. A friend would accept their friend's
choices and not try to "educate" them in matters of the heart.
Other info, like if I knew my friend's SO had just gotten out of
prison and my friend didn't, for instance, I'd tell immediately.
|
953.9 | another vote for silence | DECWET::JWHITE | keep on rockin', girl | Fri Jan 19 1990 14:43 | 3 |
|
as usual, i agree with sandy
|
953.10 | I'm with the 'depends' faction | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Jan 19 1990 15:16 | 23 |
| >I believe lovers always know so if they choose to ignore it, for
>whatever their personal reasons are, it's not my place to bring it
>up.
I don't believe this is always true. It's certainly not true that
the lover is always CONSCIOUSLY ignoring what's going on. And the
lover may fear or suspect, but not be sure if she's being
paranoid, may lack evidence to question.
I don't know whether I'd want to know or not. On the whole I think
I would, because you can't deal with a problem you don't know you
have, and what you fear is almost always worse than what reality
is.
Whether to tell someone else? It would depend on how close I was
to her, how well I knew her SO, and how good my evidence was.
Assuming we were close friends, I'd probably take a middle ground
of asking leading questions that would give her an opportunity to
talk about her worries if they were a problem for her, and if she
didn't feel that she could confide in me, I'd keep my suspicions
to myself.
--bonnie
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953.11 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Fri Jan 19 1990 15:59 | 14 |
|
In reference to my previous reply, I'd have to say that there
are maybe only 2 or 3 friends I have where I would "interfere"
in this way in such a situation. They are my best friends, and I
would definitely stay out of other relationships.
But if it was happening to any of my (blood-related) sisters,
brothers, or cousins, I would *definitely* do what I outlined
in my previous reply.
Does that make a difference to anyone who's advocating silence?
What if this was happening to your own sister, the one your grew up
with?
|
953.12 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Fri Jan 19 1990 16:15 | 11 |
| I would respect the intelligence of a sibling, too. But if I was
asked flat out by sibling or friend, I would be gentle but honest.
Bonnie Randall - You referred to the 'injured party' as perhaps
needing more "evidence" before confronting a wayward lover, as a
possible reason why one might tell. I disagree that any evidence
beyond one's own feeling is necessary. Feelings are valid and should
be enough of a concern without any corroborating evidence. Evidence
gathering is nasty business. Monogamous lovers should be close enough
to discuss their feelings. Unless the suspicious one doesn't really
want to...
|
953.13 | i guess it does depend... | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Jan 19 1990 16:42 | 12 |
| Re .11, I don't have a sister, but, in a couple of years, if my
daughter were in a monogamous relationship, and I saw her SO with
another woman, I'd tell her, and ask her if she knew what was going
on. I had actually forgotten this, but over a year ago I did see
my ex-husband's ex-girlfriend with somebody else, and I told him.
I have one other close friend, who happens to be male, that I would
probably tell if I saw his girlfriend with another man. But, other
than that, I would mind my own business.
Lorna
|
953.14 | honesty is the best policy | PGG::REDNER | | Fri Jan 19 1990 16:59 | 5 |
|
"what you don't know can't hurt you" is nonsense...the truth will
come out eventually. I would confront the cheater long before I
would inform the cheatee.....just the fact that you know effects
the realtionships.
|
953.15 | feelings don't necessarily reflect reality | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jan 22 1990 09:04 | 19 |
| re: .12
I'm not in the habit of making accusations, or even asking for
clarification, based on my own notoriously volatile, impulsive,
and frequently mistaken feelings. If I feel neglected, that's one
thing, and one to be discussed with spouse directly.
But what if one's husband is acting differently, and the wife
asks if something's wrong, and he says, "No, nothing," but he's
still acting strange. What then? Maybe it's just a rough time at
work, or brooding about the condition of the world, or wishing he
could bag everything and sail around the world on a little boat
all by himself, but maybe it's something else. My feeling is
everything? What about his right to privacy.
No, in that situation I wouldn't say anything without clear
evidence that there was something wrong.
--bonnie
|
953.16 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | a face in the crowd | Mon Jan 22 1990 12:33 | 7 |
| re .14, I guess I just don't understand what makes you think it's
any of your business. (in 99% of the time)
Lorna
|
953.17 | Hard to Do... | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Tue Jan 23 1990 13:09 | 8 |
| If I was directly asked by my friend whether or not I was aware
of any "cheating" going on by the lover, I would tell the truth;
however, if I was NOT asked, I would keep my own counsel. As a
friend, my position is to be supportive, caring, and "there" for
my friend rather than to add to her problems. Chances are she will
find out soon enough anyway.
Barb
|
953.18 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Wed Jan 24 1990 02:03 | 13 |
| Be careful. If you told either me or my sweetie that the other was
"cheating" you'd likely get at least a tongue lashing, and quite probably
seriously damage our friendship. If it were ME I'd ask you why you were
telling me this. You'd better have a good answer, because if it's "I thought
you should know" or "it's for your own good" I could well react
vehemently.
I like the suggestion of confronting the "cheating" partner. That would
seem to me to work well in all cases.
Good luck,
-- Charles
|
953.19 | | MCIS1::SULLIVAN | Eileen | Wed Jan 24 1990 11:59 | 7 |
| Having been married 21 years my husband (now ex) told me he was
involved with someone else. After my divorce I found out he had
been cheating on me with various woman for many years, my feelings,
for 21 years what I did not know did not hurt me. If I had wanted
to know that he was cheating on me I more than likely could have
figured it out for myself. IMHO denial is a means of protection
from hurt, I would not want any "friend" to deny my right of denial.
|
953.20 | | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Wed Jan 24 1990 13:37 | 24 |
|
Over 10 years ago a dear friend of mine gave me this sage advice:
Don't ever tell anyone something that was said
about them by someone else unless it is good news,
life threatening or your personal opinion (which
you also admit to having).
If someone does tell you something that they heard
about you that does not fit in the above catagories
question their reason for doing so and realize that
they are no longer a "friend."
This is very difficult to live by - most of the time it makes
great sense.
_peggy
(-)
|
Any interpertation of your reality by me is
still my reality not yours.
|
953.21 | Pretending ??? | EAYV01::MMCKECHNIE | | Sun Jan 28 1990 05:30 | 22 |
|
{WHAT YOU DON'T KNOW WON'T HURT YOU}
{ITS THE TELLING THAT HURTS NOT THE CHEATING}
I disagree with these comments. Surely you are hurt because
of the cheating when you've found out not because you've been told.
In my opinion "what you don't know hurts even more". You have
to go through the humility of other people knowing, assume your
SO has been lying to you and other obvious reasoning.
People you would rather not know are lacking something in the
relationship ..........Mags
|
953.22 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sun Jan 28 1990 14:27 | 40 |
| {WHAT YOU DON'T KNOW WON'T HURT YOU}
{ITS THE TELLING THAT HURTS NOT THE CHEATING}
That's not what I hear. What I heard is:
Don't assume the person wants to know. Don't assume they don't know.
Don't assume that they think it's "cheating". Do realize that telling
will hurt REGARDLESS. No one will thank you.
Also think about your motives for telling this. Will it reduce the amount of
pain? (Perhaps in the long run, but perhaps not...) Why are you telling? What
are your motives?
I disagree with these comments. Surely you are hurt because
of the cheating when you've found out not because you've been told.
Surely? Not so surely. That's what people have been saying.
In my opinion "what you don't know hurts even more". You have
to go through the humility of other people knowing, assume your
SO has been lying to you and other obvious reasoning.
I think you are making a lot of assumptions about the relationships involved,
but that aside, what *benefit* is there in telling? To spare your friend pain?
If your friend suspects but is denying it, they WILL NOT THANK YOU for making
it impossible to deny. They may be "working on it" and might actually fix
things. If you bring it up you may make reconciliation impossible. I think that
if you feel a need to do something, that confronting the "cheating" spouse is
the least harmful alternative.
People you would rather not know are lacking something in the
relationship ..........Mags
Now now, you're being awfully judgemental there. I notice that you're in Ayr,
I personally have found that attitudes about sex and relationships are
significantly (!) different in the U.S. and the U.K. Perhaps that explains some
of the difference in viewpoint.
-- Charles
|
953.23 | they may be rare, but... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Sun Jan 28 1990 20:20 | 13 |
| re: .22
I agree. I have met people who have relationships where there are
established groundrules for:
1. seeing other people (or not)
2. telling each other about it (or not)
So if you do decide to tell without knowing if there are any
groundrules, the relationship could seriously suffer...
-Jody
|
953.24 | | MCIS1::SULLIVAN | Eileen | Mon Jan 29 1990 14:54 | 10 |
| RE .21
A little presumptious of you to say the least. I meant what I
said, "what I did not know did not hurt me", when I was emotionaly
ready to except the marriage for what it was or was not, I was
willing to open my eyes to what was going on without the help of
some well meaning gossips.
|
953.25 | If it were me... | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Mon Jan 29 1990 15:14 | 18 |
| What is confronting the cheating spouse going to accomplish?? Do you
honestly think that will stop him/her from any further cheating? I
think not.
In my opinion, it all depends on your relationship with the "cheatee"
as well as the "cheater", and what you know about their relationship.
I happen to know a couple of people going thru this now. In both cases
the husband was cheating on the wife and neither wife knew. Both women
went through months of agony wondering what was wrong with their
spouses, verbal abuse from them when trying to talk about it etc. In
the end both found out something that had they known earlier might have
prevented at the least some pain. It also depends on where your
loyalties lie - with the cheater or the cheatee.
If it were me, I'd want to know. That's how I see things, and I guess
I would appreciate a friend who came forward and told me what he/she
knew.
|
953.26 | I'd want to know | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | roRRRRRRRRRut! | Mon Jan 29 1990 16:09 | 17 |
| It all depends... everything depends.
If you do tell, you run the risk of offending the type of people who a) don't
care, b) don't want to know, c) have an open marriage, etc. If you don't tell,
you run the risk of offending those who think "How could you be my best friend
and know s/he was doing this and not tell me?" You've got to know how your
friend is going to react.
If I knew that one of my friend's spouses was cheating on them, I'd only
tell if a) it would be for the best in my assessment, b) they wanted to know.
How to tell if they want to know? You may have an idea already, but if you
don't, I'd recount an anecdote about a situation where a spouse cheated, and
what the reaction of the "cheatee" was. You can generally gauge by the reaction
of the friend whether they want to know or not.
The Doctah
|
953.27 | Be Careful | AYOV10::JBLANE | | Tue Feb 06 1990 08:14 | 18 |
| Mags,
I have already been through this experience and all I can say is
1) You should try to assess how your friend will react, but prepare
for the fact that this may terminate your own relationship with
them. If they don't completely believe you, things will never
be the same again.
2) You must make absolutely sure that the cheating did occur. Make
sure you are objective about this.
If it were me, I would want to know.
Jillianf
|
953.28 | The other side of the triangle | RAMOTH::DRISKELL | | Tue Feb 06 1990 20:25 | 68 |
| I've been through this one, only there was a different twist to it.
(In fact, several different twists!) that don't seem to be represented
in previous replies. Sorry about the length, I started to ramble a bit.
I was involved with a man (lets call him Dave), who repeatedly swore
he loved me and wanted to marry me. I didn't feel that way, and told
him. I had meet Dave through a mutual friend, (let's call her Sandy).
Sandy had known Dave for about 6 years, me for about 4.
Dave was friends with his ex. (Lisa). I knew through Sandy that Lisa
was still interested in Dave. I told Dave (& Sandy) that if he wanted
to pursue a relationship with Lisa, I'd gracefully bow out. My feelings
for Dave were no where near what he professed to feel for me. I asked
Dave point blank if he was sleeping with Lisa, regardless of any
emotional feelings (or lack thereof) he had for her. Dave said no, and
insisted he had a purely platonic relationship with Lisa.
Well, Lisa had Dave's son. I found out about it 4 months after he was
*born*. (I heard the baby crying in the background during one phone
call. Lisa and the child had moved in.)
I asked Dave why he hadn't told me. He said that he didn't because he
knew I would break up with him if he did. (He was right!) I asked
Sandy, and she said that she had known since Lisa was 1 month pregnant.
In other words, for over a *YEAR*.
Sandy said she didn't tell me beacuse it wasn't her place to
'interfere.' She used all the reasons that have been stated in
previous replies.
I asked her if she thought I would have wanted to know, and she said
yes, she knew I would have wanted to know, (in fact i had asked her
about dave & lisa during/after the birth and she had told me there was
nothing going on.)
What happend was that I no longer see Dave. Instead of being able to
still be friends with him, I felt used. He knew what my re-actions
would have been, but proceeded to lie to me to 'keep' what we had for as
long as possible. 'Used' is about the only word (printable!) that can
describe my feelings.
Sandy feels that she did the right thing, (in fact the only thing) by
saying nothing & waiting for me to find out by myself. I feel that she
betrayed my trust by not telling me something that she admittedly knew
i wanted to know, in order to not 'rock the boat' (her own words). And
that she had even 'assisted' in my being used. (accomplise after the
fact, if you will.)
I wrote this story out for a couple of reason. one is that it *still*
makes me angry. And this topic reminded me of it. Another is that I
learned some things. There are some people who wouldn't want to be
told, and probably wouldn't believe you or would channel all the anger
at the proverbial 'messenger of bad tidings'. On the other hand, there
are some people, like me, who would prefere to be told.
So whether you tell or ignore, depends on the person who is being
cheated on. Best to discuss it in the abstract and find out what
their feelings are, not *yours*. Don't base the decision on what YOU
would like to know/ don't know. Base it on whether THEY want to be
told.
Oh Yeah, my friendship with Sandy? We still do things together on
occasion, but less and less. I no longer feel able to count on her as
a friend, someone who's there for me regardless what. Sandy would not
like to be told; so she didn't tell me. Thus she lost a close
friendship by her in-action.
Mary
|
953.29 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Dissident aggressor | Wed Feb 07 1990 08:17 | 9 |
| >(in fact i had asked her
> about dave & lisa during/after the birth and she had told me there was
> nothing going on.)
By the act of her lying, she facilitated your being used. That was wrong.
I wouldn't be able to be friends with her anymore if she did that to me.
I definitely think she bears some guilt in this situation.
The Doctah
|
953.30 | | BSS::BLAZEK | homeless restless known to none | Wed Feb 07 1990 10:01 | 19 |
|
Once upon a time I had two close friends I met over the network, both
from MA. One was a woman who proclaimed I was her best friend in the
whole wide world. The other was a man who proclaimed to be hopelessly
in love with me. I was hesitant to become romantically involved with
the man, yet when I finally was ready I sensed hesitancy on his part.
Through painful communication, I found out he and this best friend of
mine (who had been my friend for over a year) had just ended a 4-month
affair. She knew of my feelings towards him, I'd told her everything.
She hadn't told me, nor had he, because they didn't want to hurt me.
After their relationship ended, and I found out about it, each wanted
to confess everything to me and make everything OK. Well! For me, it
was too late.
Deceit does not a friendship make.
Carla
|
953.31 | Because I'm Scottish ?? | EAYV01::MMCKECHNIE | | Tue Feb 13 1990 13:18 | 11 |
|
Charles,
I'm really not that bad. What I say on memo is only
questions in my head. Not my opinion....I really don't know the
answer.
Mags
|
953.32 | WHoooo | EAYV01::MMCKECHNIE | | Tue Feb 13 1990 13:20 | 8 |
|
Folks,
Please be assured I am not a gossip but a person who
loves her friend very much...........Mags
|
953.33 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Tue Feb 13 1990 13:30 | 5 |
| Scots don't gossip, for one thing :-)
Seriously, Mags, I think your warm feelings come thru very well.
=maggie
|
953.34 | Margaret, what a wonderful name ! | EAYV01::MMCKECHNIE | | Wed Feb 14 1990 03:33 | 7 |
|
From one Maggie to another.........Thanks
|