I never thought that I would be recounting betrayal stories someday. And here I am, opening up the wounds caused by someone I not only trusted but actually invited to collaborate with in a team. The experience remains fresh, like a paper cut that will not heal.
I remember the day I recommended this particular person to join our project team. We met online on one of my online blogging websites in the year 2020. The project I was working on required someone with expertise in website designing and other such technicalities for web 3 projects. I was the marketing and promotional manager of the project and there were 2 members in the team, the project initiator and myself.
Everything else had been decided by us except for the addition of a developer to complete the group. My words were supported with much enthusiasm as I proposed the addition of this individual to the group. "He's the one for this job," I said. "His technical skills are exactly what we need." I spoke up for him, putting my own reputation on the line, and was able to convince my team member to hire him. I did this because I believed in this person.
As we set to work in our different roles, I poured my heart and soul into our project's marketing and promotion for two months solid. Long nights, endless strategy sessions, constant community outreach. Every small victory was shared, every milestone a triumph for the team. The project gained traction, sales increased, and our reputation grew solid. I was not just proud of my work, but of having introduced a worthwhile someone to the team. Let me tell you, the project was a Web 3 project. Do you know how things are done on the Web 3 community to grow a project? That was my position, promotion and community manager.
And then came the betrayal. It started subtly, small comments devaluing my contribution, faint tone changes in meetings. But the dagger truly twisted when the issue of payment came up. We had agreed on $500 for my marketing services for the two months duration. Instead, they paid me $250, demanding $50 back for the project. "Your contribution was not worth more," they said, those words hurting more than the reduced payment ever would.
The person I had trusted, whom I had invited and recommended to be part of the team, now diminishing my worth. His technical ability had somehow given him the authority to degrade not just my work, but our very foundation of trust. Each word was a personal jab, each rationale another crack in our broken trust.
I catch myself still replaying the moments in my head. Their dismissive attitude towards our previous agreement. How easily they broke their word. The painful realization that someone I trusted could so easily betray that trust. It was not so much about the money, it was about watching someone I believed in choose convenience over loyalty.
I find myself lying awake some nights and questioning whether I was naive to have trusted so easily. To have assumed that professional relationships could be founded upon actual trust and mutual respect. The betrayal altered something within me. Not only how I approach professional relationships, but how I regard trust itself.
The hardest thing to do was walk away. Not for the loss of possibilities, but because to leave was to acknowledge that trust had been shattered beyond repair. It was to accept that sometimes those we trust most can hurt us the most.
Now, they are reminders. Not just of betrayal, but of my own resilience. Yes, trust can be broken. Yes, betrayal hurts deeply. But we move forward, carrying these lessons like battle scars, physical reminders that we survived it, that we are stronger than the trust that was betrayed.
I still believe in trusting people. Just differently now. More cautiously, perhaps, but also more honestly. Because in the end, betrayal doesn't define us, how we rise above it does.
The pain still arises from time to time, especially when I see similar projects or look at my older blog posts that I published to help market the project. But now it reminds me not of what was lost to me, but of what I learned. Trust, once broken, leaves permanent scars. But these scars tell my story, a story of survival, of learning, and of growing stronger due to betrayal.
The image used is AI generated.