Momof4, not only did you guess where I was heading with this, but you got so far out in front so fast that you left me in a cloud of dust!
I am going to try to catch up to you by focusing in on two words you used: "gullible" and "cynical." I am only using these words because you did, and I hope to put them in the context of the general observations I made above.
You denigrate yourself as "Chief Gullible." Why? Because you granted the same charitable presumptions to your brothers in Christ that you would give to the paperboy, the clerk at the gas station or the total stranger occupying the seat next to you on an airplane. You feel that you are at fault for exercising the very traits that make social interaction possible. You are, in effect, apologizing for reverting to the default mode of communication that is hard wired into our very being.
Should you not be praised for this?
"Perhaps, but not after repeated betrayals," is a valid reply. So, then, why do you now characterize yourself - your wiser and more experienced self - as "cynical"? Without being sidetracked by precise definitions, I think there is broad agreement that being cynical is not something to aspire to - at its very best, it is the other extreme from gullibility. It is capable of carrying far more stringent implications, as well.
Why would you choose that particular word? I maintain that it is because it feels so horrible to you to entertain doubts, to raise questions, to suspend that normal, natural, reflexive gift from God - that inborn desire to ascribe truthfulness to what others say, to put the best interpretation on what others do. Regardless of the reasonableness of the doubting, it does not feel right; it feels uncomfortable, like wearing a T-shirt front to back. It even feels sinful. We feel the need to apologize for it: "But that is my own cynical attitude." It's not your experiences, your heartbreaks and lessons learned hard?
What you have styled as "cynicism" others are going to see as "bitterness." Why? Probably not because of personal animosity towards you, though that may sometimes play a role, too. But, primarily because it is also difficult for them to maintain an attitude of doubt, questioning, uncertainty, suspicion. When they see in you what they resist in themselves, they search for an explanation. Accepting the premises upon which your doubts are based is too traumatic, too unnerving. Plus, your expectations that NTM will do what is necessary to preserve the mission, even if it means doing things that are not best for the MKs is at variance with NTM's statements. And, they - like you - are hard wired to accept as true those statements above their own, much less your, doubts. All that is left is bitterness to explain the doubts you've voiced.
I don't think you are gullible, cynical or bitter. At the very least, I do not think it is necessary for you to be any of those to have trusted and been betrayed, to have been betrayed and learned. We trust by nature, almost by necessity. Even when betrayed, it is hard to abandon that trust. Being wary is a very uncomfortable mental state to be in. But, admitting the discomfort does not mean that we are wrong in being ware; it is just out of the ordinary. And, it hurts.