Infidelity

Popeye, an old fraternity brother of mine, posted a Facebook comment to one of his friends last night. The woman posted her status as, “It’s sad that over 25 years of relationship with someone can be thrown away by 20 minutes in front of a stranger.” I don’t know if she was paraphrasing someone else or not, but that’s not important. What I found disturbing were the comments her “friends” made.

To me, a friend is someone who provides counsel when asked, listens when appropriate and bears your burdens with you as if they were their own. Although I could, I will not infuse today’s discussion with references to Christianity or morality as not everyone shares my beliefs. For that matter, we may share a common belief but not to the same degree. This said, today’s discussion will not be humorous or lighthearted but it will let me vent a frustration.

I do not know Popeye’s friend and do not feel it appropriate for me to post a comment (if I could) to her Facebook wall. However, her “friends” are alive with comments and apparently feel free to spew their ‘supportive’ morality at-will. I gather from her status and a couple of comments that her husband of at least 20+ years cheated on her. She was specific in her post to choose the words ’25 years of relationship’ as opposed to ’25 years of marriage’. To me, that’s telling.

I gather from this brief snapshot of a relationship that they might have been having problems. I do not get the impression she was still in a honeymoon period this far into the relationship and the affair took her by surprise. What I do feel is that perhaps she hoped things would get better and that they may even have been in counseling.

I read her post as a cry from a broken heart looking for healing. “Over 25 years of relationship” tells me they may have had a long friendship and/or engagement before they married. Perhaps they were together three or four years before they married as a way to ‘validate’ their decision as appropriate. Who knows. I don’t think people who live together before they get married stay together longer than those who don’t. For what it’s worth, I strongly, strongly oppose living together before marriage and no, it’s not just because of my religious beliefs.

If you’ve been in a committed, monogamous relationship for over two years, you’ve passed the honeymoon period. I can’t cite it right here right now, but research shows that many relationships go through a period anywhere from 6 months to 2 years where the sex is frequent and the acceptance of the other person’s quirks is constant. After two years, however, the sex and intimacy falls off and those cute little quirks become obnoxious personality traits that seem insurmountable. After three years, you have to make the relationship work. Both of you.

I can’t stress enough that I don’t know who this woman is or what issues she faced in her marriage. Her friends should know, however. But that’s not what I read. Again, I understood her post to be a cry of heartfelt pain; a plea for compassion in a hurtful situation. Instead, I read (all paraphrased, by the way):

* Don’t worry about it; life’s too short.

* The best revenge is living life to the fullest. That will show him!

* I know you’re hurting now but when you’re ready say the word and I can introduce you to someone who will appreciate you.

* Memorial Day Weekend’s almost here! Call me and we’ll go bar hopping!

* This is the push that you needed to move on. Let him go.

* I’m sorry to hear about this but maybe now you’ll know it’s over.

* It gets easier every day. Don’t let this get you down.

And so it went. She had over a dozen comments when I read the post. All I could think was, “What are these people saying?!?” Granted, we can’t see the messages or the one-on-one e-mails sent between people, but I was shocked. Not one person offered a word of encouragement from my perspective. There were offers to help ‘get revenge’ by dating and drinking; advice to ‘forget about’ the last 25+ years of her life and ‘move on’; suggestions that ‘it was about time’ she noticed something was amiss and she should have removed herself from the relationship long ago. Where was the compassion?

If I grieve because the 12 year old dog I’ve had since a puppy died today, would you tell me I shouldn’t have had a dog to begin with because they die? I don’t think so. You’d tell me to remember the good times, treasure the moments we were able to spend together and that grieving is good, natural and healthy. How is it any different with a human relationship?

An affair is a horrible thing to happen in any relationship but it doesn’t necessarily mean the end. People do and say all kinds of hurtful things when they’re hurting. I believe the saying, “Hurt people hurt people” but why encourage them to hurt? Would you tell me I shouldn’t have been married and shouldn’t have had kids because statistically my marriage would end in divorce? I hope not.

I think if this woman had accepted the end of her relationship before the affair the post would have read differently. I also think if her husband had a history of cheating and her friends knew about it, the comments would have been different. My impression is that the marriage was on the rocks and the husband had, perhaps, the first affair of which his wife became aware. But again, I don’t know. And neither do you.

We don’t know the background related to the post. Perhaps she had turned cold and distant and her husband, seeking to validate his worth as a person, sought the comfort of someone he saw as compassionate and caring. What if the husband was just a screw-up from the get-go and this was the first affair he in which he was caught? We don’t know.

Perhaps most troubling to me is the lack of respect her friends have shown her. They were together over 25 years. Were her friends encouraging her to leave the whole time? Were her friends offering to take her bar-hopping or to meet someone new the whole time? At what point did her friends seem to know better than her what she wanted or needed? More importantly, at what point did the woman ask for everyone to comment publicly on her life? On this I know I’m a hypocrite, but I’m trying to make a point.

Again, to me, a friend is someone who provides counsel when asked, listens when appropriate and bears your burdens with you as if they were their own. Which of her friends offered an ear to listen or a shoulder upon which to cry? None that I saw. No one said they would stand with her and help her through this regardless of the outcome. The only offers given were for revenge and starting over. Perhaps the woman wants neither revenge nor to start over with someone new. What if she just wants a fresh start with her husband? That, apparently, is not an option her friends will consider. Everyone knows better than her it seems.

I noticed she did not call her husband a foul name or curse him to hell. She did not ask for pity or claim moral superiority. She just cried from the heart. Unfortunately, in my opinion, she cried to the wrong people and I can empathize with her. Unless you’re going through, today, exactly what I’m going though, you don’t understand. Your situation is different than mine. Don’t come out of your white picket fenced, perfectly manicured yard to come down the street and tell me how to fix my flower bed. But people will and people do, all thinking they’re helping when actually what you need is healing.

The best pop-culture example I can cite is Seinfeld. In one episode, Kramer wants to break up with his girlfriend. Jerry and Elaine tell Kramer exactly what they think of her and that it’s ‘about time’ he dumped her. So he did. And then he had second thoughts and they got back together. Where did that leave Jerry and Elaine with respect to his girlfriend in Kramer’s eyes? If this woman wants to forgive her husband for his affair and continue to work on the relationship, where does that leave the friends that encouraged her to leave him?

If I’m your friend, it’s not my place to offer advice if you don’t ask. Neither is it my place to say, “I told you so” if you choose to follow your own path and later accept and follow my advice. My responsibility to you is to be a trustworthy, loyal, faithful friend with whom you can laugh or cry and know I’m laughing or crying with you. But if I’m telling you how much better you’ll feel by listening to me offer unsolicited advice when I haven’t gone through the same heartbreak as you, I’m not your friend. I’m just trying to elbow my way into your life.

That’s it. I think I’m done venting. Thank you for your time.

The Cave

I have a Facebook friend who reads this blog. I spoke with him this morning and he asked me to clarify my reference to “The Cave of Wonder”. I recognize he might not be alone in his confusion so, albeit very personal, let me put the term into perspective.

My wife and I separated a year ago. Having no where else to go but my office, I converted part of the mail processing room (with folders, sealers, labeling machine, computers, filing cabinets, etc.) into a sanctuary. In a 10′ x 14′ room I have a 5′ x 8′ space from which I contemplate life. Since most of my business is conducted via e-mail and I rarely interact face-to-face with people on any given day, the room has become my hermit cave. But it’s not a hiding place. I don’t “hang out” there to escape people, life, or day-to-day events. My hermit cave isn’t really like the guy who has given up on life and people and wants to escape everything. My cave is more like a spiritual center of stillness and quiet from which I think thoughts and ponder.

It is not the “Cave of Wonders”, plural. There’s nothing “wonderful” about it. It does not contain collections of things I’ve saved, paintings of exotic landscapes or things that make you think, “that’s cool.” When I refer to the Cave of Wonder I don’t really mean a physical place. It’s like heaven. If someone asks you where heaven is, you more than likely will point up to the sky and say, “It’s up there, somewhere.” Yes, there are “the heavens” from a cosmological perspective, but there’s also a “heaven” from a theological viewpoint. The “Cave of Wonder” is my office area (particularly my sanctum sanctorum) but more specifically, it’s the state of mind I enter into at the end of the day.

If you know me, you know I’m well beyond a Type-A personality when it comes to certain things. With other things I flat-line, I don’t care. But I really do believe that you can’t judge a book by its cover. I might appear to be laid-back and easy-going, but don’t let it fool you. I might be having a full-on, total meltdown stress attack because I’m about to miss a deadline but you’d never know it. At the end of the first part of my work day, before I change gears for the evening shift, I wonder. When my day is done, before I go to sleep, I wonder. I wonder a lot. I wonder if I wonder too much.

I wonder why God put me here. No, not in my office but here, on earth. I know I have a mission. I know He put me here for a reason. I wonder what that reason is. One of the guys I meet with on Saturday mornings told our group today that I am a real inspiration for him. He knows my situation and what I’m going through. He recently lost his job and, as a consequence, his wife left him. He told the group as he goes about his daily life now he asks himself two questions: “What does the Bible say about how he should deal with a situation” and “How would {Sparky} deal with this”. I’m certain he meant that from his heart as a compliment, but that’s an awesome amount of responsibility I didn’t know I had in someone else’s life. I wonder, is this why God has me going through the problems in my marriage and my career? So that I might minister, mentor and inspire other men? I don’t know. Am I supposed to know? Do I want other men looking to me for inspiration when, in truth, they’re the ones I respect for their candidness and faithfulness?

I wonder if other men have the same issues I have. I want my children to see my true character. I hope when they look at me they see someone driven by honesty and integrity. I have been lied to, deceived by and forsaken by people very, very close to me. I want to break the cycle of “hurt people hurt people”. I have been hurt deeply more than once. I wonder if I have ever hurt anyone as badly as I have been hurt. If so, I sincerely apologize.

I honestly pray that when my kids look at me or think back to this period of time they can see my example. “When such-and-such happened to my dad, do you know what he did? He didn’t lie, he didn’t cheat, he didn’t steal, he didn’t deceive us. He didn’t dishonor my mother or me. He didn’t give anyone any reason to think he was doing something he shouldn’t have been doing. He held his head up and said that even though it sucked right now, it wouldn’t be like this forever. He had the courage to have faith.” That’s what I want my children to think on and realize that it isn’t really me that kept that standard. God gave me (all of us, actually) that standard as basic common sense. If a lie got you into trouble, a lie won’t get you out (the truth will set you free). If your spouse cheated on you, cheating on them doesn’t make it “even” (two wrongs don’t make a right). Me having a bad day doesn’t mean I should ruin your day (I can’t think of a cute quip to throw in here).

Jacob and Job are two Old Testament men from whom I draw a lot of inspiration. Both had issues. Depending on the situation I may feel more Jacob-like than Job-like. My rule of thumb is this: If something unexpectedly bad happens and nothing good comes from it in a short period of time, it’s a Job-like test of faith. If something good does come from it, it’s a Jacob-like reward of faith. Regardless, both are tests of integrity and accountability. I can cite two examples from the same event: A long-time customer of mine hired a new buyer. Since the new buyer had the authority and the responsibility to solicit and secure new contracts on behalf of the company, they used my products and pricing to leverage other companies and obtain better pricing from them. I was never given the opportunity to bid because, according to the buyer, it would not have been fair to ask others to bid against me and not award the contract to one of them. The issue wasn’t my quality, my turn-around, my customer service or my pricing. The issue was the buyer looking to make a name for himself within the company as an aggressive go-getter. That, to me, was a Job moment. By his own admission my company had done nothing wrong at all. We had better delivery times, higher quality and better pricing than the company that replaced us. But the bottom line was that we were replaced because we *could* be replaced. I let it go.

A year went by and the owner of that company called me. Very, very unhappy, he laid into me about how I had screwed up a job so bad recently they almost lost a licensing contract. I let him vent. When he was done, I politely asked him what the heck he was talking about since it had been over a year since I had done any work with his company. Very long story short, not only did we once again take over the work we had been doing previously, I also became more integrated in that company’s production planning process in all aspects, from design to overseas production to local assembly and fulfillment. The buyer was fired. This was a Jacob moment. Rather than throw it back in my old customer’s face and tell him to pound sand, I worked with him on how to fix a problem that was never mine, how to prevent future issues related to that event and how to address and preempt long-term problems from overseas factories. I went from nothing to being a de facto production manager in the course of one phone call. Totally Jacob-like, totally God. So it makes me wonder.

I wonder if things had not occurred as they did between my wife and me if any of this would have happened. My wife and I attended the same church for twelve or thirteen years before I was asked to move out. Had I stayed, I probably would not have been as involved with the guys on Saturday morning as I am currently. Am I really an inspiration for other people? Why would you lie about something as trivial as that? We’re a Saturday morning men-only Bible study group. No one there has a “posse”. We don’t have “people”. You don’t come with an “entourage”. We are very sensitive to cults of personality and don’t claim any one member of our congregation, our senior pastor included, has any more or less authority or divine appointment from, to, or by God than anyone else.

I was honored and humbled when someone asked me to be their accountability partner while they struggle with an addiction. I tried to turn him to someone who either has the same issues or experience with the same issues and he wouldn’t have it. He only wanted me because he felt God had sent me to him. This has been a two-way blessing. All I have to do is be me. Since I can’t be him that’s easy enough, but I do need to be sensitive to his struggles. According to him, I have helped him in more ways than he can count. Not too long ago he asked what kinds of hobbies I had when I was a kid. I told him. A week later he asked if I knew where he might find a hobby store. I told him. The next week he came to me and said he had a new hobby building and painting scale model die-cast metal cars (which, by the way, is not something I did so I’m not worried he’s becoming a Mini-Me).

I saw him today and he said the relationship between him and his wife was much, much better than it had been in years, all because of the model building. Because it’s something they can do together, his wife helps him. Because she’s with him and they’re working on projects together, they talk more. Because they’re talking more he doesn’t have the time or the desire to fall back into his addiction. Because he knows he’s an addict and he knows I care and he knows I’d answer the phone if he called, he feels strong enough to make it on his own. What did I do? Nothing. It was all God. But I wonder: Is that why I’m here?

I wonder if I’m a conceited, pompous ass. I know I’m no better than anyone else. I don’t think I have a false sense of humility. If you invite me to your house for dinner, I’ll do the dishes. I’ll clean your oven if you’d like. I don’t do it because it makes me look good. I don’t do it because I’m a kiss-ass. I do it because I can and it’s helpful. If you’ve been working to make a meal for us to enjoy and to make me feel welcome and all those other warm and fuzzy feelings, let me return the favor. If I can’t pay you for the time and money you’ve invested in the meal, let’s turn it into something more than just a host/guest scenario. Let me do something for you so that we have a shared experience of sacrifice (yours in making the meal and mine in cleaning all that crap out of the oven you’ve left there for the past two years). It really doesn’t bother me, don’t let it bother you.

I wonder how long I’ll walk in the dark valley before me. I work community outreach programs a couple of times a month. I talk to homeless people and give thanks that I have a roof over my head. I have a car. I can cook up a mean batch of rice whenever I want. But there are a couple of homeless couples I actually envy. These people have nothing except what they can fit in the two or three shopping carts they’ve roped together. They truly have next to nothing. But they have each other. One of the couples said they were married in a homeless camp by the minister of a church that did a feed-the-homeless program. The church members paid for the license, the ceremony and the food. They wanted to have the ceremony at the church but the couple wanted to do it at the camp so their friends could be there. It’s awesome. They are not the freeway off-ramp “will work for food” homeless. They are much worse off. But when you look at them and how they interact with each other, you know it’s love. I look at them in wonder: When this test is over, will my wife and I be able to have the same sparkle in our eyes? I wonder.

I wonder about all kinds of things. How my kids are doing, where I’ll be living in the next month or two, whether or not the decision I made today about something will help or hurt someone who might look up to me. But I don’t dwell on it. I don’t want to sound Yoda-ish, but dwelling on the negative leads to questioning yourself which leads to questioning your faith which leads to fear which leads to hate. When I think about the negative things happening in my life right now I just chalk it up to a temporary setback and keep moving. That’s really all you can do. I guess I could start drinking to escape reality or start smoking as a “stress relief” and blame someone for giving me the stress in the first place, but the reality is it’s on me. Run and hide or stand and fight. Sometimes I know it’s easier to run and hide, but then I wonder: Is that the example I want to set for my wife and kids? No. I wonder if I’m cut-out to be an example for other men. After all, their problems are their problems, right? Wrong. Am I my brother’s keeper? Yes, to a certain extent, I am. But I wonder if they’ll see it’s not by me alone that I choose to help but by God’s greater design.

And so you have it: The Cave of Wonder is singular, not plural. It is both a physical place and a mindset. As it has been for the past year and will be for the foreseeable future, it’s also my home. Welcome to it.

It Took Guts

At about 7:30 this morning I was engaged in a rather unusual discussion as a group of us met for coffee. An acquaintance of mine admitted an addiction to something they had been introduced to at a young age. The addiction grew over the years and although the family and the first spouse were aware of the issue, it was dismissed. Now on a second marriage, the individual had hidden the addiction from the current spouse out of fear and embarrassment. Until late last week.

Not wanting to hide the issue any longer, my acquaintance admitted the addiction to their spouse. Fast forward past the embarrassment, hurt and crying period they described, we come to today. It did not end as I thought.

My acquaintance told a small group of us everything that had happened from the initial contact to the most-recent event regarding the addiction. We were told of the attempts to self-heal and the subsequent failures. We were told of the life-long hurt and humiliation they experienced. Crying, one of my group came forward and admitted to exactly the same issue.

As we discussed and comforted those two, it became apparent that the addiction they had was no different than many other addictions: drugs, alcohol, pornography, anger, abuse. The key today, though, was this individual having the courage to come forward and admit the issue and ask for help.

As we were breaking to leave, a friend of mine came to me and asked what I thought about what had happened this morning. I related my thoughts and asked if we should have done anything different than what we did. No, I was told, we did everything this person would have hoped to have happen. In fact, how we reacted gave my friend the courage to admit an addiction to me.

Not to make light of it, but I thought I was done with the “Day of Confession” and was taken aback by this new admission. But it got more interesting. My friend not only wanted me to support them while they sought help, I was specifically asked to be this person’s accountability partner. I freely admit I have no idea what an accountability partner is, what they do, or how they establish accountability. All I know is that my friend asked for help and I, as I’m certain you would, freely gave it.

The first thing I was asked to do was read a passage from the bible out loud with my friend, which we did. I was then told that as far as my friend was concerned, they considered me “faithful” and “beyond reproach”. In fact, they felt I was perhaps the only person they could put into those categories. Wow.

Simultaneously, I had a huge feeling of honor that someone would think that highly of me while also feeling a huge weight of responsibility placed on a yoke around my neck. So, if something like this happens to you, do what we did:

First, we discussed the fact that I am no more or less human than my friend. Just because they honored me with very kind and blessing-filled words doesn’t mean I walk the straight-and-narrow path 24/7. I trip and fall just like the next person and, like most of my friends, I choose to get up and keep walking.

Second, I am not responsible for my friend’s behavior. If they back-slide, it is due to a conscious choice on their part and not because I did or failed to do something for them.

Finally, we established that an “accountability partner” is someone who can be called at any time to offer either words of encouragement, support, or meeting for coffee at all hours of the night. For us, an “accountability partner” is not a babysitter, an au pair or a scapegoat. If my friend is in a moment of weakness and needs strength and encouragement, I’ll be there. If they fall prey to their weakness, I’ll be there to lift them up and help them keep on the path they *want* to be on, not the path to which they briefly returned.

So, all this said, by the time 10:00AM rolled around, I learned a lot from and about a group of friends and acquaintances I see quite regularly. I also took on a role to which I personally felt unprepared but to which a friend of mine felt I was solely able to execute. Although I have a lot of mixed emotions about it, I feel confident that will succeed in my duties. Why? Not because I think I can do it myself but because my friend thinks I can do it and has asked for my help.

It goes without saying (to me, at least) that God played a huge roll in the lives of the people I associated with this morning. It took guts for the first person to admit their addiction. It took guts for the second person to join with the first. It took guts for my friend to ask me for help. It didn’t take guts for me to agree. I did what you would have done–helped a friend in need. At least that’s what I hope you would do…

Because I know my friend will read this post, I felt it appropriate to include the bible verse we read today that gave them the courage to approach me and ask for help:

Psalm 101 (NLT)

A psalm of David.

1  I will sing of your love and justice, Lord.

I will praise you with songs.

2  I will be careful to live a blameless life—

when will you come to help me?

I will lead a life of integrity in my own home.

3  I will refuse to look at anything vile and vulgar.

I hate all who deal crookedly; I will have nothing to do with them.

4  I will reject perverse ideas and stay away from every evil.

5  I will not tolerate people who slander their neighbors.

I will not endure conceit and pride.

6  I will search for faithful people to be my companions.

Only those who are above reproach will be allowed to serve me.

7  I will not allow deceivers to serve in my house,

and liars will not stay in my presence.

8  My daily task will be to ferret out the wicked

and free the city of the Lord from their grip.