I’ve been cheated on, and I’ve been asked to cheat on a
partner, but I never have. And believe it or not, I’ve been criticised for that
standpoint. I’ve been called boring and conservative. When, I ask you, did
having some morals suddenly become an indicator of being boring and a staid
conservative, rather than a good and decent person?
If you choose to have an open relationship, I respect that.
I don’t pretend to understand it, but
I respect it. I won’t preach to you about how wrong your lifestyle is, even if
it makes no sense to me whatsoever, and I expect you won’t preach to me about
mine.
But of course, by ‘open’, I mean a relationship in which you
have actually informed your partner of your intention to have sex with other
people, and he or she agrees; not a relationship in which you just choose to
take such matters into your own hands and gloss over the details with your
partner. Because that’s not an open relationship, it’s just cheating.
One of the arguments put to me by some brave soul, who
weathered the first eruption of Mt Ciara when he inappropriately propositioned
me, was ‘life is too short to only have sex with one person’.
Is it? Is it really? Let’s assume for the sake of the
argument that it is and examine the other problems with this statement and why
it’s not a justification for cheating.
Monogamous relationships are 100% voluntary. If you don’t
want to enter into one, guess what? You don’t have to! If you want to
live the single life forever and sleep with a different person every night, go
for it! If you can find a girl (or guy) to agree to an open relationship, then
I guess you can even have your cake and eat it too.
But if you freely enter into a
monogamous relationship, represent to your partner or otherwise lead them to
believe it’s monogamous, and then you have sex with someone else, I’m sorry,
that’s immoral. No argument you put to me is going to make me agree it’s not.
Because one thing I’ve noticed is that, when you pin them down, even the people
who argue to me that cheating is not immoral have to admit that lying is wrong.
And what is cheating, when you boil
it right down? Telling your partner one thing and doing another. That, ladies
and gentleman, is lying. It’s dishonest, it’s hurtful and it destroys trust
much faster than you can ever build it. The other funny thing is that most
people who advocate cheating would still go after the bastard who did it to his
sister or daughter (or son, or brother, for those women who are so violently inclined
– want to borrow my sword?). Try not to be hypocritical either.
And for those of you who want to
tell me cheating is a victimless crime, I’m here to tell you it’s not. For
someone on the receiving end, this not only destroys trust and hurts, because
they’ve been lied to, it also destroys self-esteem and causes loss of
confidence and self-doubt. When someone lies to your face and goes behind your
back to have sex with someone else, even the strongest and most robust ego has
to wonder ‘What’s wrong with me?’ And this is someone you’re supposed to care
about? I hate to see what you do to your enemies.
So, is the argument ‘life’s too
short to only have one partner’ a valid argument against fidelity?
Not if you voluntarily agreed to
enter into a monogamous relationship!
This is part of the A to Z Blogging Challenge Series. If you missed the previous posts, you can find them here - A, B, C, D and E.
If you enjoyed this post, please
feel free to check out my previous posts if you haven't already. If you're
finding yourself here often, you might like to join as a member, sign up to the
blog through RSS or email, or subscribe to my newsletter.
Don't
forget to share the love and spread the word on Twitter, Facebook or
StumbleUpon (or other social networking site of your choice) if you know other
people who might also enjoy this.
Thanks
for stopping by and visiting with us!
Author’s Note: This argument does,
of course, assume that you did freely enter into the relationship.
Circumstances of forced marriage are a different situation and not dealt with
in this post.
7 comments:
Absolutely! I married my first boyfriend, and often come across the attitude of 'don't you want to try out other men?' No, I don't, and if that makes me boring and conservative then I'll be boring and conservative, thanks, and happy to be. Thank you for standing up and saying this; I've subscribed to your blog now.
Wow, what a powerful post. I agree wholeheartedly.
That's what I tell people - if that makes me boring and conservative, then I'm loud and proud about it! I do resent the fact that people have that attitude though. Having morals should be a good thing, not a negative quality.
I married my first boyfriend. Sadly the marriage ended because he wanted to 'try out other women'. I hear he's getting divorced a second time now. Clearly that didn't work out so well for him.
I'm with you, Ciara. I won't judge, because it's not my place, but anything other than a monogamous relationship just isn't understandable for me.
Every single thing you said is so true, not meaning to put my business out there but maybe you can join me in smashing my husband's face in!!! Whenthis happened to me I, by default, thought something was wrong with me. Never did I think...What's wrong with him. After all, he was walking around with the smile on his smug face and I was the one miserable as if I had committed a heinous crime. Anyway, thank you for defending me...and other people like me.
Me neither, but if I don't judge, I expect the same in return!
Have sword, will loan it *passes the blade over* very good for smashing in faces.
I don't think people realise the damage they do, to trust, to self-esteem. It drives me crazy when people tell me what a 'victimless' crime it is, because it SO isn't. Glad you understand, but sorry for the reasons for it!
Post a Comment