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Forgive yourself and move beyond seeking remorse from cheating ex

Q. I have this idea in my head that I will only be able to forgive the ex who cheated on me if he owns up to his mistake: not in terms of the cheating, but in terms of how he fled the scene and didn't want to give me the time of day to break up in person. It's also important to note that he didn't admit to cheating, I found out from a friend.

I've already come to realizations about how we're incompatible as partners and I don't want him back, I think I just want the satisfaction that he feels bad for treating a person so disrespectfully. If I have to accept that he will never reach out and show remorse, how do I move on and forgive?

High Expectations

A. Imagine that you could forgive him only if ... he went to work in a banana suit. If he gave himself a handlebar moustache with a Sharpie. If he checked in at the next 20 restaurants he patronizes with "Obnoxious Jerk, party of 1."

Seriously imagine these, or whatever other absurdity comes to mind, not merely to amuse yourself, but to drive home to the idea-making part of your head that you can no more make him own up to his disrespect than you can make him run naked through rush-hour traffic.

It's just a tendency of our brains to make a connection between what we think should happen and what is possible when no such connection exists. At all. Any "shoulds" you believe in reside with you; any actions he takes reside with him. End of story.

So let absurd hypotheticals drive that story home. This exercise of distinguishing your jurisdiction from his can also help you with the question of how to "move on and forgive": Direct yourself to consider only what is available to you on your side of the line.

You can, for example, come up with an understanding of his behavior that feels less personally insulting, such as, "He faced temptation as we all do, and this time it exposed him as weak." Or you can acknowledge where you're drawing conclusions without enough facts maybe, "A failure to express remorse is not the same as a failure to feel remorse." Indeed, he could feel bad about his actions but lack the courage to say so. Maybe, too, he thinks, mistakenly of course, that apologizing would be a selfish attempt to ease his conscience, therefore the kind thing is to leave you alone. It's not an uncommon (mis)calculation to make.

Or you can leave him mostly out of it, and concentrate your mental dialogue on forgiving yourself for picking the wrong guy, for missing signs that all wasn't well, for not fully embracing upfront that having real feelings for real people is a messy business, that disappointments are inevitable and that some slap us harder than others. Or just forgive yourself for caring so much, since it's better than the alternative even when it feels otherwise.

Find what sits right with you and then, when you're ready, make it all the reason you need to consider the matter closed. Not painless, just closed.

• Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com.

© 2015 The Washington Post

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