Thursday, October 12, 2006
"Is there divine justice for cheating spouses?"
OK, everybody, term paper: Do telenovelas answer that question? Your response should be one page or less, double-spaced.
Labels: announcements, humor
Re; CHEATING SPOUSES--I have often wondered whether the Latin men of the last generation or two take a higher moral road when it comes to spousal fidelity: Es decir, is it still an accepted cultural phenomenan for Latin men to cheat? When I lived in Mexico 30 years ago, it was well accepted by men and expected by women.
Maricruz feeling very filosofical today.(Sorry for copying the way you sign off Susalynn it'll be just for today) :)
I do find it interesting that in more recent novelas, the cheating thing is not so black-and-white anymore. Hipolita and Luis technically cheated even though they were "good". Can one be "good" and a "cheater" at the same time? There is also Remedios and Pedro in Barrera, Lety and Fernie in Fea, and now Gabe and MA in Mundo.
I guess that means novelas are beginning to mirror the real world a bit more... a tiny bit, that is.
If divine justice existed in the real world, my boss would be Fernando Mendiola... sigh!
Melinama, feeling fond of her friends at Caray, Caray!
Now to continue being the devils advocate what if you have had a long marriage but things have gotten stale. You dont want to leave, but seeing another on the side might help you weather the storm. Couldnt it be said that the acceptance of the affair helps the longevity of the marriage?
Im not sure personally where I stand on this issue, minus what I said about my ex, and not wanting a consumate filanderer. I appreciate that we have the opportunity to put our two cents in and to hear others opinions. Thank you everyone for sharing!
Who cares if your husband says Si Si everytime you call his name. Plus you can call him "mi vida" to make up for any perceived short comings on his part. ;)
Thank you for reality check!
... reading lynn's comment that marriage is hard and long makes me freak out a little because i've heard a lot of that too. it makes me wonder how much things change between the time you have a boyfriend (or GF) and when you get married. i have a boyfriend right now who i actually met about 6 years ago, but we were only friends until a couple months ago when we noticed that there was something more. he's the most affectionate person i've ever been with (and by the way, NOT latino...hmmm?? hehee), i believe he's faithful (i've been friends with him for 6 years and never saw anything even close to suspicious behaviour...hmm...knock on wood :)) and i think that if marriage was like that it'd be wonderful. but then reality hits me and i remember how people mention marriage is very monotonous and hard... so i want to take the opportunity to ask you experts...HOW IS IT being married?? is it worthed?? is it difficult on a daily basis?? what should one expect (or not expect??). and what do you think is the common mistake which could lead to a marriage annulment or what's the secret ingredient to a successful marriage?
as for telenovelas, i agree that generally the idea was that bad people cheat and good people don't cheat. now novelas are starting to portray a more realistic side of today's world and good people are also cheating (yes, alborada and mundo de fieras are great examples). but notice that if good people cheat, it's usually because they have a horrible partner (jocelyn!) or someone who somehow does not fulfill marriage duties (or wife/hubby who's crazy, bad, etc) such as esperanza who could not bare children. this would make the spectator feel like this cheater is not practically doing something bad because their situation justifies their cheating (note: i'm not saying i justify it).
In some cases that doesn’t happen though, for example, in 'la madrastra' hector cheats on his pregnant wife vivian on the day of the wedding because of his weakness/alcohol issues. later on she forgives him and they end up together. most of us would say that's not 'justo', plus,that's different than luis or gabriel cheating.
so i guess my answer to the question (is the divine justice for cheating spouses) is: 1) depends on the situation and 2) i'm not sure that we are right in determining what’s just. i think the word 'justice' is very broad...it's almost 'unjust' to judge a situation.... :)
ok, so now that i've confused everyone with my thoughs, i'd like to inform you that for me, the Caray Caray blogspot is the FIRST entry that shows up when i type it in google. :)
also, i want to mention that i LOVE reading your comments when i'm having coffee in the morning or taking a break at work! it's a little voyage to the imaginary world of telenovelas.
lastly, i know we all live in different cities and states, but i feel like this is such a cool 'meetingplace' already and you all sound like really fun people. thanks for all the effort put into the wonderful recaps and superfunny comments!
susalynn, your husband sounds really nice...maybe you can train him to say 'si si' everytime you make his favorite dish :)
tash, who wrote a little too much and has to go back to work before her boss gets upset at her (susalynn, your signature sign off is brilliant! it's your unique style though, so i'll also use ot only this time :))
Well, when I met my ex- he was barely 20 years old, a poet and an owner-worker in a bicycle shop collective. I was 22 and a sort of gypsy musician. Years passed and he became a burgher, a clinical psychologist. He wanted a much different life. But I was still a gypsy. He was never satisfied with me. I decided we had to get divorced when he bought a huge Suburban and started parking it between parking spaces (on the line) so nobody would scratch it. I'm kind of joking. But not completely.
I don't know if I would ever have the nerve to get married again. I certainly haven't had much luck in the search... I'm pretty lonely but being lonely is better than being in a bad relationship. I entertain myself well.
Melinama, alone on a Friday night watching "La Fea Mas Bella."
So I guess what I'm saying here is that I've been fortunate to get miserable early enough in the relationship to avoid making a big mistake. I'm not sure whether that's a blessing or a curse, but I choose to see it as a blessing. :o)
That's just in answer to Tash, who thought she might be the only SNM around here.
Getting back to the question at hand - since LMFB is my only novela so far, I probably have no qualifications to answer this question at all, but I'll make an observation:
Consider Marcia Villaroel on LFMB. She knows Fern cheats on her and it drives her crazy, but she still wants to marry him. Even her airhead best friend thinks she's an idiot for sticking with him.
But let's say she marries him anyway. Some time later, she realizes that no amount of grief, or "justice," that she inflicts on him in divorce court will ever make up for the way he has made her feel and the time she has wasted fighting for a man who doesn't want to be hers.
The only possible justice is for Marcia to move on with her life and find someone better.
I don't know what happens in novelas when someone gets married in good faith and then the spouse suprises them by being a cheater.
Actually, "divine justice" (as opposed to "poetic justice" or "dramatic justice" or "ironic justice") would, I assume, mean burning in hell for all eternity. I don't know if this has been covered in any telenovelas yet. :o)
Julie, in the middle of recapping LMFB, and who could never EVER marry someone who would park any vehicle in two spaces.
I have never been married but have just started my 18th year of "going steady" with my boyfriend. We don't like to rush things (ha!) and just a couple of years ago started calling each other "partners," but I still like to call him boyfriend because it makes me feel younger. I call his family my un-laws. He's one of the good ones and I had to kiss a lot of frogs before I found my prince. (But the frog-kissing was fun while it lasted so I'm not knocking it!) I think the thing that has worked for us is that while we do a lot of things together we also do many things separately. I truly believe he's not the cheating kind, nor am I. If either of us cheated on the other I think it would surprise both of us because we both basically loathe dishonesty; it's always the coward's way out. He's my best friend, while at the same time he drives me crazier than anybody else ever has. And bonus, he's taking Spanish with me!
I think it's amazing that somebody found Caray, Caray! through the search for "divine justice for cheating spouses." I accepted long ago that in real life there is no such thing as divine justice. The concept of justice and instant karma is just too haphazard to be part of a divine plan. Maybe that's why I like novelas, mysteries and other venues where the concepts of good and evil are fairly well-defined, where the baddies meet their appropriate fate and the goodies somehow win in the end. And when the "good" characters cheat it's usually the result of some extenuating circumstance such as (from Alborada) some hot dude making love to you while pretending to be your husband, making love to a beautiful woman to earn your freedom (also you can't have sex with your wife because it would kill her), that sort of thing.
Anyway, thanks everyone for your Telenovela insights. I'm still a bit of a newbie with Alborada being my first. Little did I know that when I started taking Spanish (and watching Alborada to help train my ear) that I would be completely hooked, not only to these crazy shows but to actually recapping some of them! I would never have predicted in a million years that I would be here now. Melinama, how do you feel about what you have started? Good I hope.
On the subject of being lonely and/or alone, I agree with Melinama, being lonely is better than being in a bad relationship. If you are alone then at the very least you are in good company...your own.
Sylvia, sitting alone but somehow feeling like she's surrounded by wonderful friends.
Julie, off-topic and exhausted, but happy
I had a 5-year relationship with a guy (a musician, my Achilles Heel is that I can't always tell the difference between great music and love/sex) who I was so madly in love with his very smell made me feel faint. How ironic it was that he, above all men in my life, made me feel loved - but he was a womanizer (I love Mariacruz's word "mujeriego" and there's a good word in Yiddish for the same thing, "vaybernik" a guy who's after wives) and betrayed me just like the soaps, and made me totally miserable. Hope never to fall into one of those again.
The things Ive learned are: 1. marriage is long and hard. 2. Love alone wont carry you through. 3. You have to have (like Susanlynn said) a good person by your side. 4. Someone who truly adores you and 5. Who you LIKE to be around.
Example: When I married my ex I had mariachis at the party. My ex got mad at me for talking with them in Spanish. I shouldve run then but I didnt. Lesson there was he didnt like me. He liked what I represented to him, my image or whatever, but me - he did not like me. Additionaly the pain Ive suffered since leaving him comes from the fact that he is also not a good person. Double whammy on me for not choosing well. Believe me I wont make that mistake again.
A realist I might be, but a cynic Im not. I believe it is possible to have a great partnership like Susanlynn & Sylvia reffered to. I believe in that. We people are made to not be alone. *And if you are alone you dont have to be lonely. Heck Id rather be with me than my ex any day!
I think the Great Puppet Master in the Sky knows how to get justice and its not for man to decided. That concept is frustrating for people so that is why, in part, we like our telenovelas. There is a resolution. We see people pay for their misdeeds and we see them rewarded for their good.
And for closing, like many of the characters in our telemovelas, Im grateful for ALL my Heridas (wounds). They have made me a stronger, more humble, all around better person. To fear jumping in is normal. To not jump though, you risk all the wonderful highs and lows gained from the experience.
It's a good thing we don't know, when we're young, what the future holds.
I haven't done any "jumping" in ages, because that last hoop burnt me pretty badly. I'm getting the itch to jump again soon, though.
I do know that I wont hang around long with a man if I dont see the partnership componet working. I do know that I dont NEED to get married.
However with all that said I have to say that Im open to what life and love bring. Im open to meeting someone who could make me want to marry (never say never) but but but.... if that doesnt happen I will be more than fine. Those are the hard earned blessings for me... to know that I have climbed the hill and I dont HAVE to do it again. If the hill and the weather are just right, I know that I have the option to climb instead of an obligation.
your stories are very touching and yes, it makes me notice each one of us have our own telenovela going on!
susalynn, you have been blessed to have by your side a husband who is with you during good times and bad times. i'm sure he also knows what a lucky man he is! i think the hard moments you've been through make you stronger as a couple and also make you realize how grateful it is to have each other.
i agree with lynn, that regardless of your past experiences, it IS possible for everyone to find someone with whom they can be happy. i'm the kind of person who doesn't like taking risks in relationships, but a friend told me somthing similar to what lynn mentioned and i think she's very right: if you don't allow yourself to experience love you miss out on the good moments you can have with this person, and also the lessons you can learn from your challenges. that's part of the beauty of love.
lynn, melinama, julie: i hope and believe that one day you'll be with a good person with whom you'll be very happy! i have talked to many people who have gone through divorce, cheating, or horrible breakups that have left them wounded for many years. yes, it hurts horribly, but also, through those situations you grow as a person, plus you learn what it is that you should stay away from. i bet if you met a mujeriego right now you'd be able to tell immediately :) like the old saying sauys 'mejor sola que mal acompañada'.
one of the most wonderful things that we can do is to be patient and never lose hope (i mean, look at hipolita...duh! hehehe...ok, j/k...). have faith that there are many people out there with whom you can be happy and be patient until you meet this person who is different than the rest.
in regards to marriage: i have heard from several people now that it has somewhat to do with 'luck' like susalynn mentioned. and also sylvia's comment of 'we have our own separate lives' as well... i think it's essential so that you don't get in each other's way. how nice that you and your BF have such a trustable relationship for all these years.
i will keep ALL these valuable mini-novelas on this page in mind :)
-tash.
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