Sadhguru: Sadhguru explains how being cheated on can be a blessing in disguise
When you find out someone you loved has been lying to you, it’s a total gut-punch. The nights feel endless, your brain won’t stop thinking about old conversations in a loop to find the “signs” and “red flags” you missed. And honestly, the word “pain” doesn’t even come close to describing the dreadful feeling of being cheated on. It feels like the floor just vanished.If you’re in the middle of that right now or have gone through it, simply asking to “just move on” doesn’t count. But there is a way to look at this—suggested by the spiritual guru Sadhguru—that might actually give you a way to breathe again. He suggests that betrayal, as brutal as it is, acts like a spiritual wake-up call. It’s a messy, unwanted shove toward a version of yourself that doesn’t depend on someone else to feel whole.
Shifting the “victim” lens
It is incredibly easy to get stuck in the “Why did they do this to me?” loop. And look, they messed up. That’s on them. But Sadhguru’s take is radical: he says the sting we feel is someone “opening up a spiritual dimension” for us.What does that mean? Basically, it’s a harsh reminder of how fragile we make our lives when we build our entire identity around another person. We live in this dream that someone else “completes” us. When they leave or lie, that dream dies. It hurts because the illusion was comfortable, but the truth is you were already a complete person before they showed up. This moment is just life forcing you to remember that.
Why this hurts (And why that’s okay)
We’re taught that relationships are our security blankets. But real security doesn’t come from a partner’s fidelity—it comes from being okay within your own skin.People who have walked this path often find that, once the initial fog of grief lifts, they’re actually stronger. It’s called post-traumatic growth. You start setting boundaries you never had. You stop being “possessive” because you realize you don’t actually own anyone, and they don’t own you. You learn that you can survive the worst-case scenario. There’s a quiet, fierce power in that.
A few ways to get through the day
Healing isn’t a straight line, but here are some ways to start reclaiming your space:Feel the mess: Don’t try to be “spiritual” or “strong” 24/7. If you need to scream into a pillow or cry in the car, do it. Sit with the hurt for a few minutes, acknowledge it, and then try to remind yourself: “I am still here. My life is still mine.”The “Clean Break” Rule: Stop the digital haunting. Don’t check their Instagram. Don’t ask friends what they’re doing. Every time you “check-in” on them, you’re just handing your peace of mind back to the person who broke it.Reconnect with your own company: Take yourself out. Revisit a hobby you dropped because they didn’t like it. Spend 15 minutes in silence or meditation just to get used to your own presence again.Change the story: Instead of “I was cheated on,” try “I am learning how to be self-reliant.” It sounds small, but it changes you from a character in their drama to the lead in your own life.
The bottom line
Sadhguru has this saying: “If you’ve blossomed as a complete life, you will see relationships will be of a completely different nature. So stop using these words, ‘Somebody cheated me’. Just say somebody is pushing you towards the ultimate reality from an illusory state. We must thank that person.”Right now, it feels like the end. But what if it’s actually the end of you being an “extra” in someone else’s story? The pain will eventually fade, but the wisdom you’re gaining—the realization that you are enough on your own—that stays forever.You’re not broken. You’re just being stripped of everything that wasn’t actually yours to begin with, so you can finally see who you really are. Take it one breath at a time.