Very clearly staged
Horrible acting.How do you know though?
Horrible acting.
I would point to the expensive camera equipment, the video editor working from the back and the professional setting overall including the sound design - it's meant to get clicks, not to be real.
They probably acted on a real script, though.
I would point to the expensive camera equipment, the video editor working from the back and the professional setting overall including the sound design - it's meant to get clicks, not to be real.
They probably acted on a real script, though.
He's not doing much to honestly reveal himself.No one is trying to see the guys point of view?
There are some terrible people here. Yeesh. Wait until you're cheated on and see how that shit feels.
Dude not me. After knowing how it feels I'd never do that to someone, especially not someone I like enough to be in a relationship with.A lot of people who cheat have experienced their partners cheat before. I don't think after experiencing being cheated on, it discourages them from cheating tbh. In some cases, it's the very cause of them cheating.
Dude not me. After knowing how it feels I'd never do that to someone, especially not someone I like enough to be in a relationship with.
edit: just to be clear, I wouldn't do that to someone even if I didn't already know how horrible it feels.
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https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?...=a.25723208418.32372.595628418&type=3&theater
They are real people. This picture is from October 2015
Them being awkward with each other doesn't make this fake, people.
Cheating on my girlfriend throughout the last two year is the main reason we're still together.
She's a great girl, great sense of humour and personality, but we don't see each other enough and when we do our sex life is pretty drab,
Sleeping with other women behind her back just came naturally to me.
This is incredibly selfish and your attempts to justify it in this thread don't make you sound like any less of a terrible person. Just felt obligated to let you know.
Reading a lot of posts on Gaf, sometimes I feel like I live in a completely different world.
I dunno. One of my close friends is a chronic cheater. He's the type of guy that constantly gets chased by women. Extremely attractive, charismatic, successful and in many ways a genuinely great, nice, guy. But he also cheats. A lot. Sleeps with taken women and has probably cheated on all his girlfriends. I always call him out on it and he knows where I stand when it comes to cheating but I have a hard time being too judgmental of him. We're in completely different situations and I have no idea how I would handle that kind of temptation. It's very easy for me to take the high ground. I think that's also why he often gets away with it and is forgiven. He's just living that life and so it becomes more acceptable.
Meh, perhaps. It's pretty rampart in almost all firms though (at least what I've seen from multiple people in multiple places.)
Of all the partners I've met from the Big4, about 50% are on their second wives. Not just B4 though, most of the partners/lawyers are all remarried, and I know a lot of them are fucking people in their offices.
Honestly it makes sense to me. When you work with someone for 10 to 12 hours a day, 6 or 7 times a week, eating dinner and lunch with these people, it does kinda mess with you. It's something that people maybe don't consider until they find themselves in the middle of it and then it's too late.
I can see how the act is bad or "terrible", but people are more than just their unfaithfulness in monogamous relationships to reduce them simply by that act and define them as terrible people. It's probably why some of ya'll can't understand why somebody would willingly stay with somebody they know is cheating.
If he's so charismatic and genuinely great, he wouldn't need to treat his girlfriends as a back-up when meeting other women. I have a difficult time to believe this someone is great if they're that inconsiderate of someone else's feelings. But I've seen stranger things.
If you're willing to sleep behind someone's back rather than working to improve on the relationship you're currently in, then I need no further qualifier to determine whether you're a terrible human being or not. But nothing. Cheating is wrong, and the people who do are selfish shits who will get theirs in time.
I think because it's been normalized for men, especially "successful" men. Pusherman's post is not only the story of my life but the lives of most of my friends, acquaintances, coworkers and from what I've observed, admittedly anecdotal, from society in general.
Here's something that may blow your mind, people cheat even when there happy with their relationship they're in.
Here's something that may blow your mind, people cheat even when there happy with their relationship they're in.
True, if someone were poor and cheated on someone, they would be justified as finacially unsuccessful because how they treat others. While if someone is wealthy and cheated, they would share the cause on the fact that they're rich and successful.
Happy or not they're still trash.
Ok, I'm trash. Thank you.
Did you expect them to say otherwise?
I make no excuses for cheaters, but there is very seldom anything that's black and white.
I can see how the act is bad or "terrible", but people are more than just their unfaithfulness in monogamous relationships to reduce them simply by that act and define them as terrible people. It's probably why some of ya'll can't understand why somebody would willingly stay with somebody they know is cheating.
I get what you're saying, but cheating consistently in a monogamous relationship is a terrible act that can have serious long-term repercussions on someone's mental health and self-worth when they inevitably find out.
Good people can do bad things, but cheating consistently on your partner is a pretty damn terrible act that shows a total disregard for your partner's well-being. If it was a one time thing and they regretted it then it'd be unfair to judge their character, but cheating behind your partner's back with no intention to stop or tell them makes someone look pretty terrible.
I usually make an effort to avoid moral absolutism, so my views on this could definitely change, but there are some acts that reflect so poorly on one's character that I think it's a safe bet to rule them out as somebody with a lot of empathy for others.
If people are going to still fool around (or commit adultery when they're married), & don't want to answer to a man or to a woman about where they've been at, who have they been hanging around with, etc., then why the hell don't they just stay single?
This doesn't just go for men, but women also (Women are just better at hiding cheating on someone than most men are).
I agree with your first two paragraphs, it's just I don't think cheating reflects much on their overall character but merely one aspect of it.
No, my point is the act can be and probably should be looked as terrible, but I think it's misguided to define people solely on that when there's more to humanity than whether they're faithful or not in a relationship. People are much more complicated. Otherwise based on that logic John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr are Trash.
If you don't care how your actions affect someone you supposedly love, enough that you repeatedly engage in and hide an activity that could spread STDs to them and/or mentally and emotionally destroy them if they ever found out, that says plenty about your overall character.
If you cheat once and feel terrible about it and come clean and try to work out your relationship and not cheat again, that's completely different.
I think the second example can still be a decent human being who made a mistake, while the first example says something about the inherent nature of that person and their ability to disregard the physical and mental health of people they love for selfish, hedonistic reasons.
The first time I cheated I felt terrible, but I'm not going to lie that afterward once getting over it, it made it easier the next time I cheated.
I'm only saying this for understanding why people can continue to cheat and reconcile any moral quandaries about it.
As a grown adult, you are fully capable of finding someone who agrees to have an open relationship with you rather than chronically misleading someone who doesn't. If you choose not to, it does say a lot about you.
The first time I cheated I felt terrible, but I'm not going to lie that afterward once getting over it, it made it easier the next time I cheated.
I'm only saying this for understanding why people can continue to cheat and reconcile any moral quandaries about it.
IMO most guys don't want to be with a woman that's ok with being in an open relationship. Ego wise, a lot of men couldn't handle it.
And, if they're chronic cheaters, the fact they believe they're allowed to cheat while their partner has to remain monogamous just makes them even worse people, because they completely understand and fear the effects it would have on them if their partners cheated, but still choose to do that very thing to their partners while holding them to a different standard.
I agree with your first two paragraphs, it's just I don't think cheating reflects much on their overall character but merely one aspect of it and only in the context of monogamous relationships.
Idk, saying "I'm untrustworthy, but only to my partner!" isn't exactly something not to be ashamed about. Everyone is multifaceted; assuming you're not a murderer or something your flaws won't make you "pure evil" but they're flaws that shouldn't be downplayed because maybe a lot of people do it
I dunno. One of my close friends is a chronic cheater. He's the type of guy that constantly gets chased by women. Extremely attractive, charismatic, successful and in many ways a genuinely great, nice, guy. But he also cheats. A lot. Sleeps with taken women and has probably cheated on all his girlfriends. I always call him out on it and he knows where I stand when it comes to cheating but I have a hard time being too judgmental of him. We're in completely different situations and I have no idea how I would handle that kind of temptation. It's very easy for me to take the high ground. I think that's also why he often gets away with it and is forgiven. He's just living that life and so it becomes more acceptable.
When does something like that not become a "good reflection"? Listing specific conditions needed for you to hurt other people doesnt let you off the hook. Or do people often go "Yes I hurt people in this specific way regardless of context and potential victim"?How about somebody who cheats isn't a good reflection of whether or not they're a good person. It could definitely reflect how they're not good at being faithful in a relationship though.
How about somebody who cheats isn't a good reflection of whether or not they're a good person. It could definitely reflect how they're not good at being faithful in a relationship though.
Judge away. I'm only being honest and providing a perspective for others to get a better understanding. For example, IMO most guys don't want to be with a woman that's ok with being in an open relationship. Ego wise, a lot of men couldn't handle it.
When does something like that not become a "good reflection"? Listing specific conditions needed for you to hurt other people doesnt let you off the hook. Or do people often go "Yes I hurt people in this specific way regardless of context and potential victim"?
How about somebody who cheats isn't a good reflection of whether or not they're a good person. It could definitely reflect how they're not good at being faithful in a relationship though.
Do your partners consent to that? If not, violating that trust and risking the chance they'll get hurt isnt exactly "better" than being carelessI don't know, to my credit I've never been caught therefore there hasn't been any hurt as result of it.