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Wayward Side :
Guilt and thoughts are consuming me

stop

 Healingpotato (original poster new member #85810) posted at 3:04 PM on Monday, February 10th, 2025

I cheated on my bf. It was an EA with a person whom I had a brief (2 week) situationship/fling in the past.

I was 1 year into a relationship with BP. Things were good. We had our fair share of ups and downs. But there came a point when I felt that BP lacked at giving me emotional support. He was logical. I wanted to feel just heard. Not solutions. Instead of communicating my needs with him, I texted AP. It wasn't an impulsive thought to do so. It was rather a thought that lingered in my mind for 3 months before I acted on it. I feel that I fueled it more and that is what lead to the EA. When the thought of AP first raised I was confident that I wouldn't act on it. Hence I just let it slide and never thought of controlling my mind.

I suffer with BPD and OCD. I finally unblocked and texted AP. At first I deleted the text I sent AP stating that I hate him. Later the next day I unblocked him again and apologized for the previous text I deleted. The convo went ahead. It didn't involve any sexual aspects or the points of reconciliation. But we did exchange a video clip of talking. I told "I love you" and said that I could read all his texts in his voice. At the end I told him that even I wanted to listen to those words I Love You from him and that I would smile to the fullest when he tells me those. Did I have something romantic? No. I just viewed it as something rather platonic and extremely supportive. At the moment I was vulnerable.

The very next day I told my partner almost everything. I first TT but the same day everything came out. BP said that he didn't think it is cheating. I texted AP later that day and told AP to never contact me again. I showed the same to BP.

2 Months post DDay a few more things that I left out from the convo came out. We are in R. It is going strong. But I have an immense guilt and shame spiral from time to time. I feel like a part of myself is dead. I feel terrible. My partner is an amazing person. Stills believes I did nothing wrong, yet I can't.

Ecerytime I think about me and my partner, I can't help but think about the mistake I did. The whole thing flashes before me.

Please help me with some techniques that help you cope up from guilt and shame spirals and flashbacks that slip you future more into extreme remorse.

posts: 1   ·   registered: Feb. 10th, 2025
id 8860922
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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 4:00 PM on Monday, February 10th, 2025

Guilt, regret, and shame are all about how we feel about what we did.

Remorse is identifying with the victim of our wrong doings and understanding how it effected them. And using that knowledge to reform our behaviors.

If therapy is a choice, I would recommend it. Most who cheat are avoidant people who often do not communicate their needs or issues within the relationship because they do not like conflict and also fear of not being pleasing to the person and possibly losing them for speaking up.

One thing about shame to mention is it is one emotion that can be destructive because it casts judgment one who we are to the core. Guilt says "I did a bad thing" shame says "I am bad". When in all truth, yes you have adjustments to make on your self understanding and character, but no one is all good or all bad. We are all a combination.

I would reccomend the book "not just friends" by shirley glass. It’s a quick read but it speaks to the way we deny we are in a slippery slope with someone. It’s common for a ws to say "this is just a friendship" and ignore boundaries are being crossed even though part of us does realize it to be inappropriate.

Secondly I recommend the book "rising strong" by brene brown because it talks about how shame drives avoidance, and how to be brave in our vulnerability so that we can experience trie connection rather than just attachment.

It’s important to take full accountability for why and how you could cheat. None of those answers should be external to you. It’s not the relationship, it’s not the boyfriend. But the true power is to unearth those truths and start practicing to change them.

Here is an easy example: I think most ws feel a sense of entitlement. "He wasn’t giving me what I needed" or "I have made more sacrifices in the relationship" then loook at what the truth was. "I didn’t know how to tell him this bothered me" Then work researching communication skills and practicing them.

Also look at what accountability you have deeper than that. If, for example, you think"I sacrificed more in the relationship" is that really true or have you forgotten to pay attention and appreciate his contributions?

I think overall the answer to your question is more about focusing on moving forward. Doing the best things you can each day. Stay in the present as much as possible and start building a new track record with how you are conducting your life. When we know better, we do better, when we do better we feel better. Break that down into:

Knowing better: becoming aware of your shortcomings or things that you deceive yourself on. Look at toxic thinking articles because that helped me define my ways of thinking that we’re holding me back. Everything comes from the quality of our thoughts. Try and remember to talk to yourself like you would your best friend. If you wouldn’t say bad things about them why do you allow it to be said about yourself?

Meditation helped me. Some people thing meditation is about clearing the mind. For me it’s about being still and observing your thoughts without reacting to them in some sort of judgment. Eckhardt Tolle has some great podcasts out on that and his books are amazing but definitely takes a while to read them because you have to absorb a lot of his deep thinking. Still he changed my life.

Doing better means to be mindful of these tendencies and working on reversal techniques. Finding compassion with yourself in your failures and celebrating when you make better choices. Consistency is important.

This sounds probably very broad, and it is. But cheating is acting out. It’s a form of escapism. You have to work on the ways you manage yourself and your life in order to become a safer partner and a person you can be proud of. The more you do for this on your journey the better you will feel. The better you feel the more these new ways will become naturally who you want to be.

In the words of a great mentor of mine when I first arrived here: Proceed with Valor.

7 years of hard work - WS and BS - Reconciled

posts: 7787   ·   registered: Jul. 5th, 2017   ·   location: Arizona
id 8860933
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