When He's Two-Timing: Your Path to Clarity and Healing

I remember the exact moment I discovered he was dating someone else while he was in a relationship with me. That sickening realization. The ground shifting beneath my feet. The questions spinning endlessly in my mind. If you've felt this too, you already know the answer to "What should I do?" What you're really asking is: "How do I deal with this rage, this betrayal, this feeling that I've been made a fool?" Let's talk about both—the what and the how.

HEART HACKS ⚡GREEN FLAGS / RED FLAGS 🚩

11/21/20259 min read

Don't let this experience harden that beautiful part of you. Just let it make you wiser."
Don't let this experience harden that beautiful part of you. Just let it make you wiser."

Last week, I received a message that made my heart sink. A reader discovered that the man she'd been dating for months—the one who texted her good morning every day, who made her feel seen and wanted—was living with someone else the entire time. He'd claimed to be single. He'd painted a picture of a life that didn't exist.

If you're reading this and your stomach just dropped because this feels painfully familiar, I want you to know something: I've been there too. I remember the exact moment I discovered he was dating someone else while he was in a relationship with me. That sickening realization. That feeling of the ground shifting beneath your feet. The questions that won't stop spinning in your mind.

And I know that when you're asking "What should I do?" you already know the answer. You know you should walk away. What you're really asking is: "How do I deal with this rage? This betrayal? This feeling that I've been made a fool?"

Today, we're going to talk about both—the what and the how. Because you deserve more than just "leave him." You deserve to understand what happened, heal from it, and make sure it never happens again.

Don't let this experience harden that beautiful part of you. Just let it make you wiser."
Don't let this experience harden that beautiful part of you. Just let it make you wiser."

Why Understanding Matters

Before we talk about what to do, let's talk about the why. Not because he deserves your understanding—he doesn't. But because understanding what happened can help drain some of that poison out of your system. When we understand the patterns, we stop blaming ourselves and start seeing the situation clearly.

The Long-Distance Trap

Here's something I wish someone had told me years ago: long-distance relationships are fertile ground for deception. I'm not saying they can never work—but I am saying they require a level of commitment and transparency that most people simply aren't willing to give.

When you chose to date someone far away, the distance itself became a shield he could hide behind. Different cities. Different daily lives. No mutual friends popping by unexpectedly. No chance encounters at the grocery store. He had built-in alibis and a built-in excuse for why you couldn't be more integrated into his life.

Think about it: A man who genuinely wants to be with you won't let distance stand in the way for long. He'll make plans to close that gap. He'll talk about timelines. He'll introduce you to his world, even from afar. He'll prove his feelings through action, not just words.

If he kept you at arm's length with sweet texts and occasional visits, but never moved toward bringing you closer? That's not about logistics, my dear friend. That's about keeping his options open.

Why Men Two-Time

So why did he do this? Why seek you out when he already had someone at home?

The truth is rarely flattering, but here it is: He's unhappy in his current relationship but too comfortable to leave. Maybe it's convenience. Maybe it's shared rent. Maybe it's habit, or fear of change, or even genuine care mixed with a complete lack of romantic feelings. Men can stay in dead relationships for years—out of guilt, responsibility, or simply because nobody likes disruption.

But here's what happens: when they're unsatisfied at home, they don't work on the relationship or leave it honorably. Instead, they seek balance elsewhere. They pursue someone new—someone who makes them feel desired again. Someone who doesn't know about the dirty dishes piling up or the silent dinners or the separate bedrooms.

You were an escape. A fantasy. A version of himself he gets to be when he's away from his real life.

And the skills he used to deceive you? Those weren't developed overnight. A man doesn't suddenly become a master at juggling two relationships. He's been practicing—texting multiple women, creating elaborate stories, perfecting his timing. This wasn't his first rodeo, even if you were the first one to discover the truth.

What About Her?

You might be wondering: Does she know? Should I tell her?

My honest answer: She probably already knows, or at least suspects. A man this skilled at deception doesn't suddenly become an expert. There have been signs—late nights, phone calls he takes in another room, emotional distance. For him to be this bold, this comfortable with lying, he's likely done this before.

She may be choosing to stay for her own reasons—reasons that have nothing to do with you. Maybe she's afraid to be alone. Maybe they share children or finances. Maybe she's simply not ready to face the truth.

That's her journey, not yours. Everyone must face the consequences of their choices, and intervening rarely helps anyone heal.

What You Need to Do Now

Okay, my dear friend. You've understood the why. Now let's talk about the how—the concrete steps that will help you reclaim your peace and move forward with dignity.

Step 1: Cut All Contact—Completely and Immediately

This isn't negotiable. Block his number. Delete his messages. Unfriend, unfollow, and remove him from every digital space where he might reach you.

I know what you're thinking: "But what if he tries to explain? What if there's more to the story?" Here's the truth—there isn't. A man who builds an entire fake life doesn't deserve the opportunity to spin more tales. He's already shown you exactly who he is.

You might feel tempted to send one final message—to tell him how much he hurt you, to make him understand the damage he's caused. I get it. I've been there, fingers hovering over the keyboard at 2 AM, composing the perfect takedown message that would make him feel what he put you through.

But here's what I learned: closure doesn't come from him. It comes from you choosing yourself. Every time you reach out, you give him another opportunity to manipulate, minimize, or gaslight you. And worse—you delay your own healing.

So block. Delete. Move on. Let the silence be your final answer.

Step 2: Don't Tell the Other Woman

I know this one feels counterintuitive. Part of you wants to warn her, to save her from the same pain you experienced. It feels like the right thing to do—sisterhood, solidarity, all of that.

But here's what I've come to understand: she's on her own journey, and it's not yours to navigate for her.

If this man has been two-timing this skillfully, there have been signs. Late-night texts he took in another room. Weekends he was "too busy" to see her. Stories that didn't quite add up. She's either chosen to ignore these red flags, or she genuinely doesn't have the awareness to spot them yet.

Reaching out to her might feel satisfying in the moment—like justice, like vindication. But realistically? It won't help her if she's not ready to receive that information. And it keeps you tangled in their drama when you should be focusing on your own healing.

Everyone must face the consequences of their own choices. Your responsibility right now isn't to save her. It's to save yourself.

Step 3: Open Your Heart to Someone Local

When you're ready—and only when you're ready—turn your attention to building connections with people who live nearby.

How will you know you're ready? When you can think about him and feel nothing. Not anger. Not sadness. Not that sharp twist in your chest. Just... indifference. Like he's a character in a movie you once watched and barely remember.

When you stop checking to see if he's tried to contact you. When you can scroll past a photo or a song that used to remind you of him without that familiar ache. When you wake up one morning and realize you haven't thought about him in days—that's when you'll know.

And then? Focus on dating locally. Join groups centered around your interests—a book club, a hiking group, a volunteer organization. Reconnect with people you already know. Say yes to coffee with that friend who's been wanting to introduce you to her coworker.

Local relationships create a natural accountability and transparency that long-distance ones simply can't match. When someone lives in your city, you meet their friends. You see how they interact with the barista at their regular coffee shop. You get introduced to their world, not just the curated version they present on FaceTime.

Does this mean local relationships are risk-free? Of course not. But it's the difference between swimming in a pool with a lifeguard versus diving into the ocean during a storm. Both have risks, but one gives you significantly better odds.

A Final Thought on Long-Distance Love

There's a quote from Charlie Munger that has stayed with me through the years: "The only thing I want to know is where I'm going to die so I never go there."

When I first heard it, I thought it was about investing. But the more I've lived, the more I've realized it applies to everything—including love.

Long-distance relationships, especially in the early stages with someone you barely know? That's where many of us women get hurt. You've experienced it firsthand now. You know the particular pain of investing your heart across miles, only to discover the person on the other end was never who they claimed to be.

So don't go there again. Now you know better.

Let's Recap: Your Three Steps Forward

Here's what we covered today, beautiful soul:

1. Cut all contact with him—immediately and completely. Block, delete, and let silence be your answer. You owe him nothing, not even closure.

2. Don't inform the other woman. Her journey is her own. Your responsibility right now is to heal yourself, not to rescue someone who may not want to be rescued.

3. Open your heart to someone local—when you're ready. Focus on building connections with people nearby, where transparency and accountability come naturally. Local relationships won't eliminate all risk, but they dramatically improve your odds of building something real.

3 Actions You Can Take Today

  1. Block him on every platform. Do it now, before doubt creeps in. Your future self will thank you.

  2. Write yourself a letter. Pour out everything you wish you could say to him—all the rage, the hurt, the betrayal. Then burn it or delete it. This is for you, not him.

  3. Reach out to a friend or join one local group this week. Start rebuilding your social connections in your own community. It doesn't have to be about dating yet—just start showing up for yourself.

You Deserve Better

I know right now it might feel like you'll never trust again. Like maybe there's something wrong with you for not seeing the signs. Like you're somehow less worthy because this happened.

Let me tell you something: None of that is true.

You trusted someone who didn't deserve your trust. You believed someone who was skilled at lying. That doesn't make you foolish—it makes you human. It makes you someone with a good heart who wants to believe the best in people.

Don't let this experience harden that beautiful part of you. Just let it make you wiser.

You will heal from this. You will love again. And next time, you'll know exactly what red flags to watch for and which roads not to travel down.

Thank you for being here with me today. Until next time, keep choosing yourself, keep learning, and never settle for anyone who makes you feel like you have to compete for their honesty.

This is KC—from Love & Life.