liz3564 wrote:Last night I had dinner with my friend at a Vietnamese restaurant. We had coconut chicken, chicken with hot peppers and lemon grass, a bottle of Pinot Grigio, and fried bananas with ice cream for dessert. It was really nice.
That dinner sounds awesome! You're making me hungry! :)
It sounds like your friend by-passed the anger stage and just went straight to the "hurt" stage.
How is he doing? Has he been able to move on since the divorce? What were the ramifications of the false claims of the pornography addiction as far as visitation with his kids are concerned?
It sounds like he definitely has a lot to deal with, and has managed to function better than most.
I think if I was in his situation, I would be angry...but not at the Church...at the wife. I'm sorry....the idiotic bishop in the Ward may have counseled her to divorce her hubby for not having a temple recommend...which is, of course, stupid and way out of line. BUT...I doubt that he counseled her to spread malicious lies about her husband being addicted to pornography when he wasn't. That's just evil, and will have a lasting impact on the kids.
I hope no one misses this excellent point. Too often members and non-members alike fallaciously make the Church pay for the supposed sins of individual members--i.e. they blame the Church, get angry at the Church, vent and grieve towards the Church, when such actions, when functional, would more rightly be directed towards the individual members who "sinned". To me, this kind of misdirected emoting may constitute, or be a function of cognitive distortions.
Misdirected emoting happens alot inadvertantly through fallacious bundling of somewhat related challenges and grievences--i.e. possible challenges associated with lose of faith in the Church being bundled with a variety of challenges with faithful spouses, family, friends, Ward members, and Church leaders at various levels. Bundling of loosely connected grievances may be a function, I believe, of cognitive distortions.
It also is not uncommon to prematurely jump to conclusions based on an abbreviated telling of one side of the story. We haven't heard from your friend's wife or Bishop. What if your friend's wife vented her anger and grief for months at an online gripe session (operating under the guise of a support group for divorced spouses), and used as justification, among other things, the charge of your friend being addicted to pornagraphy (perhaps based on having personal knowedge of several pornographic emails in his Inbox). Should we accept uncritically and as valid what she said? Should we champion her cause, rally to her support, and applaud her chosen way of reacting?
To me, prematurely jumping to conclusions may be, or end up being, a cognitive distortion. And, granted, the presumption of innocence may bear sway--though, doesn't that apply to all parties concerned: the wife and Bishop as well as you friend?
But, what do I know?
Thanks, -Wade Englund-