{"id":475,"date":"2014-06-17T10:23:49","date_gmt":"2014-06-17T10:23:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/revolutionapparel.me\/?p=475"},"modified":"2024-05-01T23:10:08","modified_gmt":"2024-05-01T23:10:08","slug":"ive-been-hurt-deeply-before-how-can-i-restore-my-faith-in-relationships","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/revolutionapparel.me\/index.php\/2014\/06\/17\/ive-been-hurt-deeply-before-how-can-i-restore-my-faith-in-relationships\/","title":{"rendered":"I\u2019ve Been Hurt Deeply Before. How Can I Restore My Faith in Relationships?"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"A<\/p>\n

(Image: bored-now<\/a>)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

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“Dear Celes, I don’t remember how I found you and your blog. What I remember is how touched I felt when I read your series on How To Move On From a\u00a0Heartbreak<\/a>. At that time I was in a similar ambiguous romantic-yet-not-in-a-relationship position that you were in with G, and successfully moved on from it. I posted a ‘Thank you’ in response.<\/p>\n

Now, three years later, I just moved on from a relationship that\u00a0broke due to infidelity and betrayal.\u00a0However,\u00a0having been betrayed before, I’m afraid of being betrayed again. I know that I cannot live in the past, but my past has changed me into the person I am, including all my fears and insecurities in relationships.<\/p>\n

According to your signs<\/a>,\u00a0I have already moved on from my former relationship. I have forgiven all the infidelity and betrayal, sought closure with my ex and moved on. I no longer blame my ex or my past, but you know, emotions are real even if you don’t want them to exist. How can I move on with complete faith in relationships again?<\/b>” \u2014 Anna<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

Hi Anna, firstly, I’m sorry to hear that you were betrayed before. Secondly, I’m really happy for you that you’ve moved on. It was not an easy thing to do but you have done it. Now it’s about taking the next step ahead.<\/p>\n

For more on moving on, read\u00a0How I Moved On From a Heartbreak<\/a>\u00a0(series).<\/em><\/p>\n

The fear of betrayal one experiences after an infidelity may be due to the traumatic experience of that ordeal. However, given that you said you have moved on (and it sounds like you have since you have worked through all the steps of moving on<\/a>) but the fear still persists, this fear \u2014 or at least the root of this fear \u2014 may well have nothing to do with that infidelity. Rather, it may stem from before this incident \u2014 before you were cheated on, before you even got together with your ex.<\/p>\n

In other words, your ex’s\u00a0infidelity didn’t cause your fear of betrayal. It\u00a0merely brought it to your awareness. More specifically, it is probably the reflection of deeper fears you have surrounding love, relationships, and most of all, yourself.<\/p>\n

Example: My Experience with Heartbreak<\/h2>\n

For example, after\u00a0I was let down by G <\/a>in university, there were times when I wondered if I would ever find someone I like. My subconscious conclusions from the episode were that I wasn’t good enough to be loved, that I could never find love and that perhaps I was destined to be alone. The experience of liking someone,\u00a0opening my heart to him, and\u00a0not having my\u00a0feelings requited crushed my heart\u00a0(and ego).\u00a0Deep down I felt like shit, an experience I’ve already detailed in\u00a0my moving on series<\/a>.<\/p>\n

There were times when I thought that all my relationship and singlehood\u00a0woes would be resolved if things had worked out with G back in school. However, it didn’t take long before I realized that these thoughts \u2014 fears —\u00a0had nothing to do with G or our connection not working out. Rather, they had everything to do with my own\u00a0inferiority about myself and my appeal as a woman \u2014 all of\u00a0which I already\u00a0held\u00a0years before meeting him. I never thought about them out loud, but subconsciously I already had these hangups.<\/p>\n

So why did the G event surface these fears? Well, for the first time in my life, I acknowledged to myself that I wanted to be with someone. For the first time in my life, I\u00a0opened my heart to someone. And for the first time in my life,\u00a0the reason for my singlehood was not because “There’s no one I like at the moment” or “I’m not looking for a relationship\u00a0now,” but that “The person I like doesn’t want to be with me.” To have the possibility of a great relationship\u00a0dangled in front of me and then ripped\u00a0away so abruptly only made\u00a0me feel the raw-wound\u00a0effects of not being deserving of love.<\/p>\n

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“I’m not good enough”<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

and<\/p>\n

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“I’m not good enough to be loved”<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

were\u00a0my deep seated beliefs<\/a>\u00a0that came roaring from that episode. These limiting beliefs had always been in me; the episode merely\u00a0brought them\u00a0to light.<\/p>\n

(I subsequently worked through\u00a0my hangups surrounding love\u00a0over the years, as I’ve documented in the following:<\/p>\n