Miki(masochist female) |
3 years ago •
May 19, 2021
3 years ago •
May 19, 2021
Miki(masochist female) • May 19, 2021
The first question has already been answered abundantly, so onto the second. "Rationalize trusting them (again)".
"rationalize" has un-pretty connotations, but I don't want to play semantics. The best thing to do is to put away the broad brush. It depends on the nature of the lie. Did they lie about an affair? Trust is tough on that one. "Easy come, easy go" That one bites the ass of the one about who the liar was lying. "I stole so-and-so's lover!" That one can expect the same down the road. But onto the lesser ones. (Skip the "A Lie is a Lie" bullshit. In that case everyone is guilty. One who says they never lied.. is lying.) Did they lie about a forgotten parking ticket when the demand notice comes in? Did they let the dog go pinch a loaf in the neighbor's yard and now the neighbor is seeing red (or brown)?--- and deny these? Did they not do the laundry when they said they would and make excuses "The washer was fucked-up." In cases of this nature, sure they can be trusted. In all cases, to err is human. If a habit develops, then you have a different story. As with a lot of things, dealing with someone who lied is at best to be taken on a case-by-case basis. |
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