In your example you’re responsible for a murderer going to jail. That’s a responsibility I’d be 100% good with. In the other example you’re responsible for a kid potentially growing up in poverty, having addiction problems, etc. that might be a responsibility you’re good with and that’s up to the individual. It’s not a responsibility I’d be good with. |
In my case, AP was very active in church ministry. So I emailed her pastor. This made me very happy.
Hypocrite |
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Again, NO. The parent that cheated has 100% responsibility, Cheater. And, when they aren't outed--they keep cheating. The fallout and danger from that is even worse because the cheater is constantly brining elements of danger (potential crazy jilted AP or a truly crazy betrayed spouse) around their own kids. They also are not focusing on their family, their spouse and usually are complete **ssholes at home because they are in 'affair fog' living in a fantasy. The family can do anything they want. The cheater can decide they don't like being a lying, deceitful person and don't want to cheat anymore and focus on their family. The spouse could see their genuine actions and give them a chance, just as much as they could decide to ultimately divorce. But, your own deceitful actions are what is hurting your kid and spouse---not the other victim in the situation. Cheaters are almost always suffering from a DSM mental disorder. You can see the disordered thinking when they twist logic and use mental gymnastics in order to take ZERO blame for their awful behavior and resultant fallout. So cheater, if the spouse found out---you are 100% not responsible either? You aren't responsible for the other family divorcing, right---because it was his/her family--not your own. That's the logic cheaters use. It's not my fault they divorced, it's my AP's fault. Well same logic applies in this situation: it's your own fault. Please go get some therapy. I'm guessing you grew up in a dysfunctional household where there were never any consequences and you saw this dysfunctional coping and behavior your entire childhood. |
Bottom-line: I wouldn't count on some stranger that I hurt in the most awfully traumatic way to keep my secrets. If you don't want your family and kids to find out that you live a disgusting, deceitful second life and are an unempathetic, lying cheat: don't cheat. |
Win/win all around! |
100% so many guilty cheaters here trying to keep their spouses in the dark! |
Thats rich! Church people always preaching but never following their own message. What was the outcome? |
Mic drop. |
I would only do this if I weren’t trying to stay in my marriage. Basically if you want to stay, and you want him to stay—you have to appear as the bigger person. Right now he is feeling guilty and ready to end it (supposedly). Don’t give him a reason to feel sorry for her or angry at you on her behalf. And if you don’t “blow up” her marriage—then if she knows you know and aren’t telling her DH, she will be more likely to stay away from your DH to keep you from telling him. |
This is why you should worship JESUS and not the sinners who accept the gift of salvation and forgiveness offered by Jesus taking on OUR punishment for OUR sins. We are all broken people. Even the church-goers. |
Sermon not needed. Go away. |
I’m glad this made you happy. But do you think it was a particularly shocking revelation to the pastor that people who attend church are sinners like everyone else? Or was it just to embarrass her because you assume that AP thinks her pastor thinks she is above reproach? Just curious. |
She went into “counseling” with the pastor, otherwise I don’t know. I divorced my cheater, haven’t heard about her since. |
If there are kids involved, you don't do anything. Plain and simple. Good people don't blow up another kid's life. It makes you pretty much as bad. |