A lady shared a painful account of betrayal, explaining how her husband cheated on her despite the fact that her family sponsored his master’s degree abroad and paid their house rent for four years. After discovering the infidelity, she chose self-respect, filed for divorce, and refused to take him back.
Amid the reactions, one controversial comment stood out: “I will always say it again and again, MOST women who built with a man always end up betrayed.”
This statement is misleading and harmful. It turns a single experience into a sweeping rule and frames commitment and sacrifice as foolish. Betrayal is not an inevitable outcome of building together; it is a failure of individual character. Such generalizations breed fear, discourage healthy partnerships, and replace accountability with fatalism instead of addressing the real issue—trust and responsibility.

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