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Алексей Ворм

The Code of Male Honor

Novel-essay

Don't Play by Her Rules – a man's perspective on relationships, or a raw conversation about a life without rules.

Epigraph to the book

«A man without honor is like a ship without a rudder. He floats but does not know where. He endures but does not understand why. He loves but does not know how to respect himself. And without respect, there is no love, no life—only an illusion.

I did not search for literary epithets and wrote as it is, as I feel—the book contains strong language.»

– Alexey Worm

Disclaimer: This book is intended for a mature audience (18+) and expresses the author's raw emotions and personal worldview, which may not align with all readers. It contains explicit language and deals with adult themes.

About the Book

«Don't Play by Her Rules. Take Back Responsibility for Your Life.»

«The Code of Male Honor» is a raw, unfiltered conversation. No sugar-coated advice, no political correctness. Through the story of Semyon Pavlintsev, who endured betrayal, divorce, and the collapse of everything he held meaningful, you will see what true male strength really is and why "being a good man"often means being a weak one. You will understand how to build unshakable personal boundaries that command respect, not ridicule. You will learn to walk through pain without breaking, drawing strength from it instead of resentment. You will discover how to master your aggression, turning it from a destructive force into a source of confidence and control.

This isn't dry theory. It's a compilation of real experience, hard-won principles, and practical conclusions. If you're ready to hear the hard truth about yourself, about relationships, and about what is truly expected of you—this book will become your guide to action.

Contains strong language and mature themes. For readers 18+.

Personal Drama

I began writing this book in a state of profound inner turmoil—the moment I finally understood that the woman I loved no longer belonged to me. She didn't just leave; she ceased to be mine in the most fundamental sense.

Suddenly, with agonizing clarity, came the realization: the ideal of a woman, etched into my very essence—perhaps on a genetic level, or perhaps woven from illusions and hopes—turned out to be utterly alien to the person with whom I had shared my life. Almost everything about her—her thoughts, her actions, even her manner of breathing—suddenly became foreign, as if we had been speaking different languages for years without noticing.

The pain I felt was not merely an emotion—it became a physical phenomenon. A crushing weight compressed my chest, spreading through my body in hot waves, paralyzing my mind. I couldn't sleep, eat, or concentrate. My thoughts were tangled, and the world around me lost its color. There were moments when it seemed that just a little more—and I would lose my mind from the emptiness inside.

To keep from falling apart, I threw myself into work like a drowning man clutching at a straw. But when even labor ceased to provide salvation, only one thing remained—to write. To pour onto paper this pain, fear, despair, and… a strange, almost mystical awareness: perhaps this book is not just a cry from the soul, but the beginning of something new.

This book is for men.

I have collected within it the experiences shared online by other guys: how to seduce, how to strengthen a relationship with a woman, how to walk away from those who do not match your inner ideal. Here are stories of divorce, ways not to lose your mind from the pain, and even chapters on how to win back the one who left.

This is not dry theory—these are the real experiences, mistakes, and victories of men just like us. Taking the experience of others and filtering it through myself, I've added my own understanding and now pass it on.

This is my first psychological work, written in an essayistic style, where the main characters are he—Semyon Pavlintsev, and she—Anzhelika.

The most important thing for me is that every man who picks up this book feels that he is not alone.

There are many of us, we are together, and God is with us.

June 29, 2025

Alex Worm

Contains strong language and mature themes. For adult readers only.

Preface

My name is Semyon Pavlintsev. And this is not a story about how I was betrayed. This is a story about how my eyes were opened.

Intuition, observation, communication… I thought these words were backed by my twenty-five years of marriage to Anzhelika. I could gauge her mood by a single sigh, tell how her day had gone by the sound of her footsteps in the hallway. We built this life together, brick by brick. The apartment, the dacha, the car, our growing children—three daughters and two sons. I was sure I knew every corner of this structure called «our family.» Turns out, I only knew the facade.

Anzhelika always smelled of expensive perfume and coffee. It was her scent. The scent of my morning, my evening. And one day, hugging her, I caught a different smell. Faint, almost imperceptible, alien. Tobacco that I don’t smoke, and an unfamiliar cologne. A trifle. A mere bagatelle. My brain dismissed it, but something inside, some string, quivered and rang out softly, softly, warning me.

Then the little things started to disappear. Her gaze, always so direct, began to evade. Her phone, forever lying on the kitchen table, was now nowhere to be found without her presence. She began staying late for «meetings» and «get-togethers with girlfriends» more often. I saw it, but I didn’t want to see. My mind refused to put these puzzle pieces together into a complete picture. It was easier to think I was paranoid. It was easier to live in the rose-tinted glasses she herself had put on me once. They were comfortable. They hid the sharp edges.

The break happened on a Wednesday. An ordinary Wednesday. I was supposed to go to a site in another city, but the call was canceled. I decided to surprise her—pick her up from work, buy that wine she loved. I stood by the entrance to her office, saw her come out. Not alone. With him. And by the way she touched his hand, by the way she laughed, throwing her head back—by a thousand of these minute details, familiar only to me—everything collapsed.

In that moment, there was no anger, no fury. There was silence. Absolute, deafening silence, in which everything I had believed to be true cracked and turned to dust. The glasses shattered.

The divorce was like clearing the rubble after an earthquake. Painful, dirty, agonizing. Lawyers, division of assets, five pairs of eyes looking at me with a silent question and a pain that can’t be put into words. Anzhelika said something about «incompatibility» and «lack of understanding.» I remained silent. What difference does it make which words you use, when the fact is one—betrayal.

The hardest part wasn’t that. The hardest part was inside me. The question drilling into my brain: «Then who am I?» If I was a blind man led by the nose for twenty-five years, then does that mean my male competence, my honor—was it all an illusion? I felt annihilated.

And it was there, in the very depths of that fall, that I found what I was searching for. Something solid and unshakable. My backbone. Male honor.

It turned out not to be about preventing betrayal. Not about controlling another person. And certainly not about humiliating myself, seeking revenge, or begging for love.

Honor turned out to be in how you go through it. In clenching your teeth and preserving your human dignity. Not dragging her name through the mud with mutual acquaintances. Not turning our five children into a battlefield. Not letting grief and anger eat you alive from the inside and deprive them of a father. Accepting the fact that the person you loved is gone. And the one who remained is just a stranger named Anzhelika, with her own weaknesses and mistakes.

Honor is looking your friends in the eye and not making excuses. Saying: «It didn’t work out.» And knowing that behind those words lies not weakness, but strength. The strength to accept reality, to stand up, and to be a father. To be the rock against which any storm will break, because behind your back are your children.

I couldn’t save the marriage. Perhaps there was nothing left to save at that point. But I saved the most important thing—myself. My inner samurai, for whom there is no goal, only a path. The path called LIFE.

It didn’t end that Wednesday. It just began anew. And in this new life, there is still a place for honor. And that means there is still meaning.

Chapter 1. Male Honor

The wind prowled the deserted streets of the sleeping district, howling in the ventilation grates. I was walking home, feeling fatigue in every muscle after a twelve-hour shift at the factory. In my pocket, my fingers were warm against the walls of the old lighter with the engraving—”A Word is Priceless.” A gift from my father. The only thing that remained.

The stairwell smelled of old plaster and cumin from the neighbors’ meatballs. On the landing, by my door, stood Anzhelika. She was not the kind of woman who should be waiting here. A silk dress, high heels, perfume so potent it overpowered even the cabbage soup smell ingrained in the walls. We hadn’t seen each other in five years. Not since she left for Moscow with that architect.

«Semyon,» her voice trembled. «I need to talk.»

The key was already in the lock. I nodded, opened the door. In the hallway hung my grandfather’s old greatcoat; on the console table lay keys and fishing line. Nothing superfluous.

She sat on the edge of a chair in the kitchen, not removing her coat. Hands with a perfect manicure fidgeted with her purse.

«He left me, Semyon. Left me without a penny. And I… I’m in debt. Big debt.»

I silently put the kettle on the stove. Waited to see where this was going.

«I need money. A lot of money. You can… get it. I know you’re alone now, saving for a garage. It’s just metal and concrete. And I’m facing real trouble.»

She laid it all out. Her ex, and my old childhood “friend,” Viktor, was tangled up in shady dealings. He took out loans in her name, forged documents. Now, some very unpleasant people were after her. The sum was astronomical.

«I knew nothing, I swear!» Real tears welled in her eyes. Fear—it has a particular smell, you can’t confuse it with feigned hysterics.

The kettle whistled. I poured the boiling water into glasses, added the tea leaves. My movements were slow, measured. Giving myself time to think.

«And what do you want from me, Anzhelika?»

«Viktor has compromising material on a man. A very influential man. If we can get those documents, he’ll pay any amount to buy them back. They’re in a safe at his dacha. You… you know how to open such things. Back in the day, we…»

I looked up at her. She fell silent.

Yes, back in the day. In my youth, when my head was light and principles seemed flexible, I dabbled in not entirely legal activities. Cracked safes to help my mother with her debts. Anzhelika was my friend back then. She knew. And now she had come for that. For the man I was. Not for the man I had become.

«Are you suggesting I rob Viktor?» I asked evenly.

«It’s not robbery! It’s justice! He destroyed my life! He must answer for it. And that money… it will save me. And you’ll get your share. Half. We could start over.»

She looked at me the way she had twenty years ago, when the two of us fled from a yardkeeper after sneaking into someone else’s garden for apples. Her gaze held hope and a hint of our shared past.

I took a sip of the hot tea. Burned my tongue but didn’t flinch.

«No.»

«Why?!» Her voice rose to a shout. «Because of your pride? Your stupid male pride? That’s nonsense! The world doesn’t work that way! You need to be flexible, Semyon!»

I looked at my grandfather’s greatcoat in the hallway. He didn’t return from the war. But his letter did, containing just three words: «Guard your honor, son.»

«No,» I repeated. «Not because of pride.»

I stood up, walked to the console table, and took my savings book. It contained the sum I’d saved for three years. For a new garage, so I wouldn’t have to fix cars on the street.

«This is everything I have. Take it. Give it to them. Pay off the biggest debt. It won’t solve all your problems, but it will buy you time.»

She stared at the green booklet as if she didn’t understand what it was.

«I can’t take your money… this is all you have…»

«You came to me for help. I’m helping. This is the right way. This is the honest way.»

«Honor?» she smirked bitterly. «What honor is there in giving away your last?»

«That’s precisely what it is,» I answered. «Not taking what isn’t yours, even when you desperately need it. Not stabbing someone in the back, even if they betrayed you. Not becoming a thief, even when you’re begged to. To remain yourself. To say ‘no’ when it’s easier to say ‘yes.’»

She took the savings book. Her hand trembled.

«I won’t be able to pay you back.»

«You don’t have to. If you can—you will. If not—then that’s how it must be.»

I saw her out to a taxi. She was silent. When the car pulled away, she didn’t look out the window.

I returned to the empty apartment. Put the empty glass in the sink. Tomorrow, I would have to go to work. Again. Start saving from zero. It was bitter and hard. But, looking at myself in the worn-out mirror in the hallway, I could hold my own gaze. And in that gaze was not me, young and foolish, stealing apples, but my grandfather, and my father, and all those who understood one simple thing.

Honor isn’t about grand gestures or lofty words. It’s about the quiet, firm choice you make in an empty apartment when there’s no one behind your back. And that choice is the only thing that truly remains a man’s own.

Chapter 2. The Limits of Trust

Semyon had long ago establ

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