My STBX did all of the above, and I could've handled the cheating, but the other stuff were all the real dealbreakers. |
Cheating isn't an isolated incident. Cheaters have issues. And to cheat, almost all will become emotionally, abusive and critical at home. Cheating also requires choosing someone else over family time/work, etc. Anyone in an affair is no joy at home. |
I know. It's like these people think cheating is some impulsive thing done once in your life after celebrating a work accomplishment overseas and it never infiltrates into any part of your life and somehow you are magically cured and that impulse came and went. And that guy who thinks no one says vows anymore and means them? I don't know about this site. There is no way that person deals with life honestly other than cheating. We dated for 2 years, were engaged for a year, invited all our family and friends, went on a honeymoon, had a nice house and kids and good stable jobs and family help. He was cheating even on our vacations and spending our family money. And then blamed us for his own negligence at home knowing full well he was living a double life. This is the typical cheater. Living a completely double life for years and doing other reckless things and being a jerk at home or being overly kind to make up for their cheating. Hot and cold. I think people are confusing someone wanting to have sex outside of the relationship and opening up the relationship with cheating. These aren't the same things. |
But then you divorce or open the marriage like an adult. Not pretend you didn't eat a cookie. |
There is an entirely reasonable school of thought that any spouse who a) never initiates/usually rejects/basically uninterested in sex b) avoids conversations about it c) makes NO attempt to even acknowledge the elephant in the room d) seems more or less content with the sexless status quo for months/years ... this spouse has chosen to put his/her head in the sand, is NOT acting as an adult, and couldn't care less about any cookie eating. |
+2. Exactly. Open the marriage or divorce. This is where there’s never a good answer to why not open marriage/cheat except that it’s not good for them (obviously the messaging is that cheating is for the benefit of wife/kids etc. which is clearly not the case). |
NP. Actually, I think you’re not emotionally evolved to understand such a basic principle as trust and honesty. |
First off. There are a whole group of people who are just turned off by their spouse because they are closeted gays or just now prefer blonds instead of brunettes or whatever and they are the ones refusing sex in the marriage and also cheating. Remember Chris Watts wife wanting to have sex with him and meanwhile he was avoiding her and off with his new love and thinking about how to get away from her. Again cheaters aren’t honest people except for this one flaw. |
| Also this argument makes no sense. If you think your wife or husband doesn’t love you enough to have sex with you you somehow automatically want to become a cheater when you’ve never lied before ? No you would have a talk about sex in the open and come to a conclusion you could both live with. Honest people act honestly. Dishonest people act dishonestly. There is never an honest way forward for a dishonest person. |
+100. It’s not like they apply their faulty logic to only cheating. They apply that thought process to other decisions in their life as well. Cheating tells you about how they handle situations in their life. |
PP cheater here, of course this is the answer. I don't ask for an open marriage because she will say no and then be suspicious. What is good for me is keeping my marriage intact and having sex on the side. What would be best for me is having a loving sexual relationship but she doesn't want that with me. If she catches me, she can decide to divorce or not. |