
When it came to love, I didnβt learn anything about it from the movies, fairytale cartoons, or some grand, romantic stories while growing up. I actually learned it from my father, and he wasnβt the best of role models when it came to it. His choices affected not just my mother but our entire family dynamics as well. It also influenced and molded the way I perceived relationships, the way I trusted people, and what love truly and deeply means to me. It took many years for me to divest myself of the lessons that I had imbibed in my youth and even longer to understand the ways others loved and professed affection for each other. Here are the lessons that I carried with me, the ones implanted within me by my cheating father, regarding love.
Love without Loyalty Isnβt Genuine

You can say the mundane and generic words; you can profess verbally the love that you supposedly have for another person as much as you want, but if it isnβt tempered and complemented by fidelity, then that isnβt love; it is just a sham, a farce.
Trust is Fragile, and Once Broken, It Changes Everything

I saw personally how one betrayal could change a person irrevocably and indelibly. Trust is a fragile and weak thing, and once broken, it canβt be mended or brought back to the way it was before. It is only distorted into doubt once it is violated.
Silence Can Hurt More Than the Truth

Silence, telling lies, keeping secrets from your partner, and coming home every night and pretending as if everything is okay hurts far more than the truth ever can. At least by being honest, one can finally ascertain where they stand in a relationship. The silence and lies perpetuate the pain and confusion, and that stings deeply.
Children Always Know More Than You Think

Even if no one tells or elucidates the events to them, children still know far more than the adults are letting on or divulging to them. They can feel the stress and the tension in the air, as if there is something palpably amiss amongst their parents. That is what I felt, as if the truth were hiding in plain sight for me.
Cheating Isnβt Just a Mistake; It is a Pattern of Choices

Cheating isnβt loud or prominent, nor is it predicated on just one bad moment for its manifestation. Rather, it is the culmination of a long and steady series of decisions, ones where the perpetrator places his own needs and selfish interests above the overall well-being of his partner and family.
Love Should Never Make Someone Feel Replaceable

When I watched my mother cry over and try to cope with my fatherβs infidelity, I learned that this wasnβt real love. Genuine affection is supposed to make a person feel chosen, not replaceable or dismissed. Sadly, that is just what my father made my mother feel with his depraved ways.
Respect Matters Just as Much as Love

Without respect, love doesnβt hold any meaning or profundity. You can love someone from the bottom of your heart, but if you donβt accord them the respect they deserve, then that love is simply meaningless and does more damage than good.
Apologies Mean Nothing Without Change

I saw my father commit mistakes and profusely apologize in every single instance. However, this penitence was fleeting, and he showed no genuine remorse over his mistakes. He would go right back to his pernicious ways, showing little contrition. It made me realize that apologies that are bereft of any real resolve to change or mend oneβs ways are hollow and meaningless.
Broken Relationship Affects Everyone, Not Just the Couple

Cheating and unfaithfulness don’t just affect the connection between two partners; they have far-reaching and resounding effects that ripple through and affect the entire family. My fatherβs cheating affected my mother just as much as it affected me and my siblings.
Stability is a Form of Love

My father taught me the significance of stability in relationships. He was never consistent, reliable, or intentional in his approach towards us and his relationship with my mother. He was also not of the sort to freely accord emotional safety to her, and that taught me just how important these things were for the integrity of a relationship.
You Canβt Fix Someone Who Doesnβt Want to Change

I watched my mother try again and again, just so she could salvage and save her connection with her father, even when it eroded her own self-respect at times. That showed me that no matter how diligently or fastidiously you try, you canβt force someone who isnβt willing to change positively.
Love Should Feel Safe, Not Uncertain

Love should afford a sense of security, both physically and emotionally, to a person. If it makes you constantly question your connection, makes you ambivalent about where you stand with your partner, and generally makes you feel anxious, then that is not love.
Your Partnerβs Actions Reflect Their Character, Not Your Worth

It took me many years to finally come to the conclusion that someoneβs betrayal doesnβt have anything to do with your own worth. If he cheats, then it is his fault, a flaw in his character, an unscrupulous tendency on his part. You donβt have any hand in his decision to indulge in infidelity, and you shouldnβt lose any sleep over it.
You Have the Power to Break the Cycle

I may be my fatherβs child, but I most definitely am not him. Just because he committed those mistakes and made my mother feel depressed and despondent doesn’t mean that I evince any predilections or propensities to do the same. I have to be better than him; I have to commit to breaking the cycle of infidelity because deep down, I have the power to do it.
Real Love is Built on Honesty, Not Illusion

True love isnβt flawless or perfect, but it is abounding with honesty, consistency, and stability. It is one where both partners respect each other completely and ensure that they remain grounded and faithful in their relationship.
Final Thoughts

My belief in love wasnβt decimated irrevocably by my cheating father, but it did compel me to alter and rectify my perception of love and how it is accorded and imparted. Love is more than just promises; it is a choice, one that is defined by deliberation, intent, and an explicit resolve to adhere to the principles of consistency, admiration, respect, and honesty with each other.






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