US /dɪsˈlɔɪəl/
・UK /dɪsˈlɔɪəl/
I am so sick of you lying. You are so disloyal. I was just watching okay
You are so disloyal.
It's got a whole trail of crimes That doesn't make me a disloyal American.
That doesn't make me a disloyal American.
It's just that for us, home was a place of grief and persecution. It's easy enough to see why children put up with poor treatment. They're born radically powerless. They can't run away. They are utterly at the mercy of others. They can't even think especially straight. What they must do, above all else, is adapt. Which in practice means learning to put up with poor treatment. They have to develop an advanced skill at not noticing quite how awful things are, an expertise at being unfazed by cruelty and neglect. Children in deprived circumstances tend to be geniuses at looking away, disassociating and making light of things. Of course, it might not be perfect that their father screams at them constantly, but there are some interesting shows on television and there's a really fascinating bit of the garden to explore in the morning. You can climb up the big tree and imagine it's a little house. And of course, ideally their mother wouldn't be so mocking and disloyal. But that's just the way things are, neither more or less sad than the fact it's often raining and there's a lot of homework to do. In any case, the bad treatment almost certainly has to do with something that they, the child, have done wrong. Badly treated children tend to take a compulsively generous view of those who injure them. Obviously, they aren't nasty on purpose. That would make no sense. Clearly, their ostensible brutality has sound explanations. It must be because they, the child, is in the wrong. That's why they're being neglected. That's why they've been declared fools. That's why they're being bullied. It's a great deal easier to believe that the parent is tough, yet fundamentally right, rather than gratuitously callous and unjustifiably hostile. In other words, what a bad childhood trains us to do, above all else, is to indulge meanness. The muscle that normally functions to repel attacks has had to be starved and has atrophied. In order to survive, we had to lose the ability to work out what was good and bad for us, lest we discover that we spent 18 years in the company of fiends. What this means for our futures is that we will be extremely poor at discerning when the partners we let into our lives cross the border into selfishness and malevolence. We'll continue under a narcoleptic command not to notice that we're being robbed and deceived. We'll be as blind to the blows now as we were then. For a long time, it simply won't occur to us to wonder why we've ended up paying for everything for the partner, or why they're unreliable in their promises, or constantly prioritise their friends over us, or are angrily defensive whenever we raise a complaint. We will simply, as we had to early on, fall into line and invent elaborate explanations for their behaviour. They're good, but they're tired. They're durable, but under pressure at work. They're fierce, but compensating for their childhood traumas, for which we have a lot of sympathy. Anything other than the more straightforward conclusion, we've fallen in with unconcerned egoists. We shouldn't compound our disloyalty towards ourselves by feeling, on top of everything else, ashamed for our tolerance. It isn't weakness, it's a survival strategy from childhood that served a very sensible purpose then but is liable to be ruining our lives now. To wake ourselves up, we need to consider our choices as if someone else had made them. We might wonder what we would advise a friend to do if they were in our situation. And through such a lens, we might start to perceive that the treatment we're facing isn't, as we've long thought, a sign of our partner's depth or complexity, but in the end, something much more humble, evidence that we need to get away. But this will be only a momentary liberation until we can understand the more fundamental issue, that the muscle most people use to eject poison has withered because of a distinctive history. We need to reverse the direction of our psychological fate. Our early suffering should not condemn us to yet more pain. It is what gives us an especially powerful claim on original sources of kindness, tenderness and calm.
And of course, ideally their mother wouldn't be so mocking and disloyal.
And when a man in the church is disloyal to his wife, men help other men cover that up, to lie for him, to tell the wife that men stray, that she needs to forgive and she needs to stay with her husband.
And when a man in the church is disloyal to his wife, men help other men cover that up, to lie for him, to tell the wife that men strayed, that she needs to forgive and she needs to stay with her husband.
Mao is radically and violently transforming his China, punishing anyone he sees as disloyal, running huge societal experiments on farming and the economy,
Mao is radically and violently transforming his China, punishing anyone he sees as disloyal, running huge societal experiments on farming in the economy.
Let's get back to you and his disloyal Best friends, you can have a best friend Friend, uh, you can't have best friends.
Let's get back to you and this disloyal.
and when the disloyal, we hope, have left this country for good.
and when the disloyal, we hope, have left this country for good.
Trump lashing out at the justices, calling them unpatriotic and disloyal.
Just calling them unpatriotic and disloyal.
If he was a lurker and if he was bad on national security, why leave somebody in a sensitive, important job like that if you thought that he was disloyal, leaking,
If you thought that he was disloyal, leaking, and
Even if they weren't fully on board with the fight, others thought they might have joined simply out of fear that refusing to take part would make them look disloyal to fans or to their teammates.
Others thought they might have joined simply out of fear that refusing to take part would make them look disloyal to fans or to their teammates.