At 28, she stands shattered, grappling with a betrayal that cuts deeper than any wound—a boyfriend’s secret affair with the one person she trusted most, her cousin. What began as whispered doubts unravelled into a painful truth, exposing lies that spanned months and a family forced to confront a fracture it never saw coming. The weight of their deception presses down, isolating her in a sea of disbelief and silent expectations to forgive.
Their bond, once unbreakable and filled with shared memories, now lies in ruins under the cold dismissal of her cousin’s indifference. “Things happen,” she says, as if the betrayal is a trivial misstep rather than a profound violation of trust. Amidst the shock and the pressure to mend what feels irreparably broken, she faces a heartbreaking choice—between preserving familial peace and honoring the searing pain of a love betrayed.

AITAH for not being able to forgive my 30-year-old boyfriend and my 27-year-old cousin after discovering their affair?







According to relationship expert Dr. Terri Orbuch, a researcher specializing in relationship longevity, trust is the foundational element of any close relationship, and its violation requires significant, genuine repair efforts from the offending parties, not just immediate forgiveness from the injured party.
The situation described involves a dual betrayal: romantic infidelity and familial breach of trust, both layered with sustained deception. The cousin’s dismissive response (“things happen,” “it wasn’t a big deal”) indicates a severe lack of empathy and an unwillingness to acknowledge the gravity of her actions, suggesting that reconciliation efforts would likely be one-sided. The boyfriend’s actions, combined with the cousin’s, represent a major violation of established relational boundaries. The family’s reaction, which seeks to enforce ‘harmony’ by minimizing the victim’s pain, exhibits a pattern of emotional invalidation, effectively prioritizing the avoidance of external discomfort over the internal psychological well-being of a family member.
The poster’s feeling that forgiveness is currently impossible is a completely appropriate and healthy response to significant emotional trauma. Forcing forgiveness under duress undermines the necessary grieving process. A constructive recommendation for the poster is to establish firm boundaries immediately, which may include temporary or permanent separation from both the boyfriend and the cousin. Furthermore, seeking external, unbiased support—such as individual therapy—is crucial to process the betrayal without being overwhelmed by family pressure to sweep the event under the rug.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.


















Attention all relatives: cousin has no morals nor family love.

The individual is experiencing profound betrayal and emotional pain due to deceit from both their long-term partner and a close cousin. The central conflict arises from the individual’s deeply felt need for accountability and healing clashing directly with their family’s strong pressure to prioritize immediate ‘harmony’ and avoid conflict, regardless of the emotional cost to the person wronged.
Given the depth of the broken trust and the lack of remorse displayed by both parties, is the expectation for the victim to forgive and forget a reasonable demand when their core emotional reality is being dismissed by their support system?







