
You thought you knew this person. You really did. And then one day, the ground beneath you cracks open, and you’re left standing there, trying to figure out what the hell happened. So you start telling yourself stories: stories that let you sleep at night, stories that keep you from screaming in the grocery store, stories that make the pain feel manageable. But they’re lies. Beautiful, protective, necessary lies that we wrap around ourselves like a blanket.
We do this because facing the actual truth feels impossible. You’d rather believe almost anything else than accept that someone you loved (or liked, or trusted, or depended on) could do what they did. So your brain gets creative. You build these elaborate explanations that sound reasonable enough to repeat out loud, and before you know it, you’ve convinced yourself they’re real.
“They Didn’t Mean To Hurt Me”

Oh, this one. You’ll replay the moment over and over, searching for evidence that it was all some terrible accident. Maybe they were stressed. Maybe they were going through something you didn’t know about. Maybe the timing was bad, or they were confused, or they genuinely thought they were doing the right thing. You’ll give them every possible excuse because the alternative (that they knew exactly what they were doing) feels too cruel to accept.
But here’s what you’re avoiding: people can hurt you on purpose and still sleep fine at night. They can make choices that benefit them while fully aware those same choices will destroy you. “Intentional” doesn’t always mean “malicious,” sure, but it also doesn’t mean “accidental.” They saw the fork in the road. They picked their path. You were the collateral damage they were willing to accept.
“If I’d Done Things Differently, This Wouldn’t Have Happened”

You start rewinding the tape, looking for the exact moment where you messed up. Maybe you were too demanding. Maybe you were too distant. Maybe you should’ve said something sooner, or kept your mouth shut longer, or been more understanding, or set better boundaries. You become a detective investigating your own crime, convinced that buried somewhere in your behavior is the reason why everything fell apart.
What you’re really doing is trying to regain control. Because if it was your fault, then theoretically, you could’ve prevented it. And if you could’ve prevented it, then you have power: the power to make sure it never happens again. But that’s a fantasy. You could’ve been perfect (which, by the way, you couldn’t have been, because nobody is), and they still would’ve made the choice they made. Their actions belonged to them, not to some imaginary version of you who said all the right things.
“They’ll Eventually Realize What They Lost”

Ah yes, the revenge fantasy disguised as hope. You picture them waking up six months from now (or six years from now) with sudden, devastating clarity about what an incredible person you were. They’ll try to come back, full of apologies and regret, and you’ll get to be the one who decides whether they deserve forgiveness. You play this scene out so many times it starts to feel like a memory instead of a daydream.
But most people who break your trust? They don’t have some dramatic revelation about their mistakes. They move forward. They justify what they did. They tell themselves a different story where they’re the protagonist who made a tough but necessary choice. You keep waiting for them to feel the weight of what they’ve done, and meanwhile, they’re out there living their life, maybe thinking about you sometimes (probably not), but definitely not consumed by regret the way you imagine.
“At Least They Were Honest About It”

You cling to this one when they finally admitted what they did, as if honesty after the fact somehow softens the blow. “Well, at least they told me the truth eventually,” you say, like you’re supposed to give them credit for confessing to something they should’ve never done (or should’ve told you about way earlier). You treat their confession like an act of bravery instead of what it usually is: damage control.
Telling the truth after breaking someone’s trust doesn’t erase the breaking. They already made their choices in secret. They already lied by omission, or lied outright, or let you believe a version of reality that wasn’t real. The confession came because they got caught, or because the guilt got too heavy, or because staying silent became harder than coming clean. That’s not integrity. That’s self-preservation with better PR.
“We Can Get Past This If We Both Try Hard Enough”

You want to believe that trust can be rebuilt like a house after a fire: that with enough effort and time and good intentions, you can make things whole again. So you commit to “working through it.” You have long conversations. You set new expectations. You watch them like a hawk while pretending you’re not watching them at all. You tell yourself that people make mistakes, relationships take work, and love means giving second chances.
But here’s what nobody tells you: you can’t rebuild trust by trying really, really hard. They have to earn it back, and you have to be capable of giving it back, and both of those things are a hell of a lot more complicated than couples therapy and apology letters. Some breaks heal crooked. Some breaks don’t heal at all. You can spend years trying to force something back together that was never meant to fit the same way again, and all you’ll have to show for it is exhaustion and a low-grade anxiety that never quite goes away.
“At Least I Know Who They Really Are Now”

You tell yourself this like it’s wisdom, like the betrayal was actually a gift because it showed you the truth. “Better to find out now than later,” you say, as if there’s a good time to discover that someone you cared about could hurt you this badly. You frame it as a lesson learned, a bullet dodged, a necessary wake-up call. You act like you’re grateful, even though you’re not. You’re devastated.
The problem with this lie? You did know who they were. The version of them that you loved or trusted or depended on was real too. People contain multitudes. They can be kind and cruel, loyal and selfish, loving and destructive (sometimes all in the same week). Reducing them to “this is who they really are” makes the story simpler, but it also erases the actual complexity of what you lost. You didn’t fall for a monster. You fell for a person who turned out to be capable of monstrous things. Both truths exist at once, and that’s what makes it hurt so much.
“Time Will Make This Easier”

You’ve heard it a thousand times: “Time heals all wounds.” So you wait. You mark the days like a prisoner counting down a sentence, convinced that enough distance from the event will dull the pain. Three months out, you’ll feel better. Six months out, you’ll barely think about it. A year from now, you’ll laugh about how much it used to hurt. You put your faith in the calendar like it’s a guarantee.
But time by itself doesn’t heal anything. You know what time does? Time passes. What actually heals you is what you do with that time: how you process the hurt, who you talk to, what you learn, how you rebuild. You can spend five years carrying the same pain you had on day one if you never deal with it. You can also spend five months transforming into someone completely different if you face it head-on. The clock doesn’t care either way.
“Everyone Makes Mistakes”

You generalize the hell out of what happened because specifics make it too real. “People mess up,” you tell yourself. “Nobody’s perfect.” You file their betrayal under the same category as forgetting your birthday or saying something thoughtless during an argument. You flatten it into something universal and forgivable, something that happens to everyone, something that you’d be petty or unreasonable to hold onto.
But not all mistakes are created equal. Forgetting to pick up milk is a mistake. Choosing to betray someone’s trust is a decision. You’re trying to make yourself feel less alone in the pain by pretending that what happened to you is normal, common, no big deal. And yeah, betrayal is common. That doesn’t mean you have to minimize yours. You’re allowed to call it what it is: a choice they made that broke something between you. “Everyone makes mistakes” is true. “Therefore, I should get over this” is where the lie lives.
“I’m Stronger Because Of This”

“What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,” right? So you put on a brave face and talk about growth and resilience and all the ways this painful experience has made you a better person. You convince yourself that you needed to go through this, that it taught you something valuable, that you’re grateful (there’s that word again) for the lesson.
But you didn’t need to learn this lesson through betrayal. You could’ve learned to set boundaries or trust your instincts or protect your heart through a thousand other, less painful methods. You’re stronger now because you survived something terrible, not because the terrible thing was good for you. You can acknowledge the growth that came from the pain while also acknowledging that you would’ve preferred to skip the whole damn thing. Both can be true. You don’t have to pretend the fire was a gift just because you managed to walk out of it.
“They’re Going Through Something I Don’t Understand”

You give them the benefit of the doubt times a thousand. Maybe they’re dealing with trauma you don’t know about. Maybe their childhood messed them up in ways that explain (if not excuse) their behavior. Maybe they’re struggling with something internal and dark and complicated, and hurting you was a symptom of that struggle. You become an armchair therapist, diagnosing them with conditions that justify their actions.
And sure, maybe they are going through something. Most people are. But here’s the thing: you can have empathy for someone’s pain while also holding them accountable for the pain they caused you. Their backstory doesn’t erase your present. You’re using their hypothetical struggles as a shield against your anger, and that’s not fair to you. You’re allowed to say, “I understand you’re hurting, and what you did to me was wrong.” The two aren’t mutually exclusive.
“I Should’ve Seen The Red Flags”

You go back through the relationship with a highlighter, marking every moment that should’ve tipped you off. That weird comment they made three months ago. The time they were evasive about their plans. The gut feeling you ignored because you wanted to believe the best in them. You beat yourself up for being naive, for being trusting, for being stupid enough to miss what now seems so obvious.
But red flags are only obvious in retrospect. When you’re in the middle of something, you’re not a detective collecting evidence. You’re a person trying to connect with another person, and you’re making generous assumptions because that’s what people do when they care about someone. You didn’t miss the red flags because you’re dumb. You missed them because you were operating in good faith, and they were operating in bad faith. Those are completely different games. You can’t win one when you don’t even know you’re playing the other.
“I’ll Never Trust Anyone Again”

You build a wall so high that nobody could possibly climb it. You make sweeping declarations about how you’re done, how you’ve learned your lesson, how you’ll never be vulnerable like that again. You wear your cynicism like armor, convinced that if you never let anyone in, you can never get hurt again. You’ve got it all figured out: trust is for suckers, and you’re nobody’s fool anymore.
But you know what that wall costs you? Everything that makes life worth living. You lock yourself in a prison of your own making and call it safety. You miss out on friendships, partnerships, connections, love (all kinds of love) because you’re so committed to protecting yourself from a repeat of the pain. One person broke your trust, and you punish every person who comes after them by assuming they’ll do the same. That’s not wisdom. That’s letting the person who hurt you control your future. They get to live rent-free in your head, making decisions for you, keeping you small and scared and alone.
“Forgiveness Means Forgetting”

You tell yourself that if you really forgive them, you have to let it go completely. You have to stop bringing it up, stop thinking about it, stop letting it affect how you see them. “Forgive and forget,” people say, like the two are a package deal. So you try to erase the memory, to pretend it never happened, to reset the relationship back to some imaginary state of innocence. And when you can’t do that (because who could?), you feel guilty. You think, “Maybe I haven’t really forgiven them if I still remember.”
Forgiveness doesn’t require amnesia. You can forgive someone and still remember exactly what they did. You can forgive them and still feel the hurt when something reminds you of it. You can forgive them and decide that you’re never putting yourself in that position again. Forgiveness is about releasing the anger that’s eating you alive, not about pretending the past didn’t happen. You’re allowed to forgive someone and remember why you needed to forgive them in the first place.
“I’m Overreacting”

You talk yourself down from your own feelings. Maybe it wasn’t that bad. Maybe you’re being too sensitive. Maybe you’re blowing this out of proportion because you’re stressed or tired or hormonal or whatever other excuse you can find to invalidate your own pain. You compare your situation to people who have it worse and decide that your hurt doesn’t count. You shrink yourself to make room for their excuses.
But you’re not overreacting. You’re reacting. Someone broke your trust, and you’re hurt, and that’s a completely reasonable response to what happened. You don’t need to justify your feelings by proving they meet some arbitrary threshold of “bad enough.” You don’t need anyone’s permission to be upset. Your pain is real, and it matters, and you’re allowed to take up space with it. Stop apologizing for having a human response to being treated badly.
“Things Will Go Back To Normal Eventually”

You hold onto the idea that you’ll wake up one day and it’ll all feel like it used to. The ease, the comfort, the way you could be around them before they broke your trust. You’re waiting for normal to return like it’s a season that’s been delayed. You think, “We’ll get through this rough patch, and then everything will be fine again.” You’re banking on a future that looks like the past.
But normal is gone. You can build something new, maybe even something better, but you can’t go back to the way things were before you knew what you know now. That innocence is dead. You can grieve it (you should grieve it), but you can’t resurrect it. The relationship you have now, if you even keep it, will be built on the ruins of what used to be. And maybe that’s okay. Maybe something real can grow in that soil. But it won’t be the same, and pretending it will be only prolongs the pain of accepting what you’ve actually lost.






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