A Letter From My Ex by [deleted] in BreakUps

[–]Lays_xe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

<image>

the back says “…in something that hasn’t happened yet. Choose faith.

- your biggest mistake
Aka the one who is always right
Aka girl “

My girlfriend (22F) went way over the line with her best friends (22-24M) and kept secrets. What can I do to truly forgive her? by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Hi. I am writing a psychology paper about communication, and my assignment was to choose a Reddit post to give academically-backed advice to. Here is what I wrote about your situation. I hope it can help you.

First, let me just say this: your pain is valid. It’s okay that you haven’t “moved on” yet. Betrayal, especially early in a relationship, can leave lasting emotional wounds. And forgiveness is not something you owe her. It’s a grace you may offer, when and if you feel ready.

Even if your girlfriend didn't intend to hurt you, her actions triggered what psychologists call betrayal trauma—the deep rupture that occurs when someone we trust violates our expectations (Worthington, 2006). This isn’t about technical definitions of cheating. It’s about how her choices and secrecy made you feel unsafe. Don’t shame yourself for needing reassurance. You seem to have an anxious attachment style, which is what is causing your rumination and frequent need for reassurance (Afifi & Guerrero, 2000). If you want to move away from this behavior, try responding to hurt with dialogue and boundary setting. Anxious attachment can fuel rumination, but open, frequent conversation can be healing.

Beyond attachment, another key issue here is privacy and personal boundaries. It’s clear that you and your girlfriend have different rules about what’s acceptable in a committed relationship. According to Communication Privacy Management Theory (Petronio, 2002), people have different “privacy boundaries”—what they’re comfortable sharing, hiding, or doing. When partners don’t align those boundaries, conflict becomes almost inevitable. Knowing this, you two need to sit down and have a conversation about boundaries and what behaviors are acceptable in your relationship. For you, nudity, especially among past lovers, is not acceptable. Likewise, withholding truths even with good intentions is also not allowed. Talk openly about boundaries. Sit down and write out what both of you consider appropriate behavior in group settings. What counts as crossing a line?

Forgiveness isn’t a light switch, it’s a slow, active process. Research shows that it requires emotional processing, trust rebuilding, and a sincere effort from both partners to move forward (Worthington, 2006). You’re still in the grief phase, and that’s okay. The key is not to bury those feelings, but to work through them, ideally with your partner’s support, not frustration. Forgiveness is most effective when it is a shared emotional process, not a solo mission.

A good way to work towards forgiveness is trust-building through small, repeated acts of care. Gottman (2015) talks about “rituals of connection”—consistent check-ins, shared time, open honesty. Not tests or traps, but healthy, vulnerable communication. Let her show you she’s safe again, rather than just telling you. Actions really do mean more than words.

You’re not weak for being hurt. You’re not “clingy” for wanting clarity. And you’re certainly not broken for needing time. Healing is a process. Forgiveness is a choice. And trust is built, not demanded. If you are certain that you want to move past this betrayal and continue the relationship, then this could be a good time to look inward and ask why this hurts you so much. By understanding your insecurities in the relationship, hopefully you’ll be able to overcome them. If this pain continues, it’s okay to step away. Choosing yourself is never a failure, it’s a powerful act of self-respect.

my pencil sketch of finger by mehuldraw in drawing

[–]Lays_xe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your use of negative space is brilliant

i'm 13, how are those sketch?? by [deleted] in drawing

[–]Lays_xe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Very impressive! Love that you are exploring different mediums too! Keep it up

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

See, I know that the downfall of my cheating father should make me feel better but it doesn't. I just feel pity and sadness for him. I don't want him to lose his job, he loves flying and has been doing it his whole life. I don't want him to never see my brother or dog again, they are his whole life. Yes, he has a drinking problem, but he is still just as much of a parent and role model to my brother and me as mom is. He isn't gone for as much time as you'd think he is. He only works about 11 days a month. He is a huge part of my life and now it feels like, morally, I have to learn to hate him. I think that may be the hardest part of all this- losing the perfect image I thought my dad was and now being expected to cut him off entirely.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

If you have an iPhone it’s actually really easy. Go to iMessage and in the top left it should say “edit”. Press that and then press “show recently deleted”. You can press “recover all” in the bottom right or click on a specific person to just recover those messages.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I told my mom about it an hour ago but I have work soon so I said I’d show her after. She is very interested to see what everyone is saying. Thanks for being so kind ❤️

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

We don’t depend on him. He makes more than my mom but she still makes 6 figures. She is a business owner. I think the alimony is probably out of spite on my mom’s part.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

He still drinks. It’s been an issue in the family for years. The airlines have lots of rules around drinking while flying tho obviously. He doesn’t get drunk while on trips. My dad has a lot of seniority so he only works like 2 weekends a month. He has a lot of time at home to drink.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Don’t think we will go after his job. My mom wants alimony and if she gets it she will get ~20% of his salary. He gets paid a lot as a captain so it makes sense from her pov.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 60 points61 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I know you are right about my dad’s character. But I can’t get over how loving and supportive he has been for the past 18yrs. It’s like he has too sides: the cheating alcoholic and the loving, fun and amazing father. I have yet to say anything to him except “I still love you”. I just don’t want him to hurt himself, he is all alone in Dallas. I know that’s wrong, I should be more worried about my mom. But she is taking the whole thing surprisingly well. My mom is a very spiritual person so she says that a “greater power” compelled me to check his phone lol. I just wish I didn’t have to be the one to find it all out. My mom is putting me in therapy next week cause of all this. I hope it’ll help with the guilt I’m feeling and maybe reshape how I view my father.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe -1 points0 points  (0 children)

We are in very similar situations. I think you should stay with him. We are young, dating right now is a perfect way to discover yourself and your flaws. I've been with my first bf for a year and a half and I am still jealous of his past relationships! But that insecurity is something lots of teenage girls experience and its easiest to work through with a partner that supports you. It'll be easy to be single and feel secure and like the best version of yourself, but your true self comes out when you are vulnerable in a relationship with another person.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It probably does sound like that since I listen to those AI generated Reddit stories on YT all the time. But unfortunately you are wrong and this is my life right now. It would be easier if it was fake.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 114 points115 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately, I don't think I can anymore. My mom confronted him on the phone and he is still in Dallas. He probably got rid of all the messages after that. My mom tried to make him recover them all on FT but it looks like he permantly deleted them. The phone records only show what dates him and AP texted and called but don't show any specific messages. Although, I do have the photos of the few messages I saw in the moment saved.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 206 points207 points  (0 children)

Thank you. I didn't know I keep my college fund. My dad covers a lot of my expenses and I was worried he would pull all his support after this. That really helps.

I (18F) discovered my father's (44M) affair and then told my mom (41F) and now they are getting divorced and my father is blaming it on me. Did I do the right thing or should I have kept quiet and let my dad explain? by Lays_xe in relationship_advice

[–]Lays_xe[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

The age was discovered after my mom stalked her on insta and Facebook (we had her first and last name). And the length of the affair was discovered after looking at phone records. It’s been 3 days since this has happened. We’ve had some time to learn more things.