I think it's safe to say that MOST couples do not discuss and make plans around what they will do if and when their partner cheats. |
Was your affair an ONS? Or did it last for some time (like a few months or more than a few times screwing?). |
. No time to read all replies above but OP, you need solo therapy to dig into WHY you were weak and how to develop strength not to cheat (or do other selfish things that would damage the marriage you do want to keep and nurture). Therapy, now, ongoing. A good therapist is where you work out whether to tell your wife -- please don't try to work that huge decision out online, based on what random strangers say here. |
| Not sure I buy it (non-cheater here). It seems to me that what will happen if this is all kept to himself is that the initial nauseous, guilty feelings will fade in time. If DW doesn't know she will continue to act the same as before so won't that just lead OP to the realization that the whole cheating thing is ok when nobody knows about it and things will continue on normally? It seems to me he will just keep doing it and it will just get easier with time. Why not do it if it results in excitement and sexual gratification for him and he still maintains the same life at home? |
| No. Most dvr. Speaks volumes that you did. |
| Most don't |
| The title of this thread says it all -"is it selfish to tell DW about an affair?" Yes, it is all about you and your feelings. |
+1. Get over it and move on. Don't cheat again. Telling just creates more drama. Don't over complicate things. Stop cheating and don't cheat again. End of story. |
This is good advice. The question as to whether you should tell her can be explored in therapy. I have experience as a DW, not told but discovered it with two different husbands. My personal opinion is that it is better not to tell. It was terribly painful to discover it the first time but hearing it directly would also have hurt immensely-- I would have been far happier not knowing at all. |
Not PP, but I think it's an excellent pre-marriage conversation, and one that more couples ought to have. People don't address all types of things pre-marriage, but that doesn't mean it's good. I've had that conversation and other similar ones even with boyfriends. It's a way of getting to know and making myself known to someone, and that's pretty important to do before signing up for a lifetime partnership. |
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I know people that talked about it pre marriage. The husband told her he wouldn't want to know if she cheated so long as it stopped. The wife to be told him that she would only divorce him if one of their kids died because she didn't think she could handle recovering from that.
12 years later he holds firm on the cheating stance. She's now thinking maybe their marriage could survive a child dying. To each their own? My friend's husband had an affair and she found a few text messages. She did not want any other details. At all. She wanted to stay and work on the marriage and felt it would be better to not know every torrid detail. I agree with pp that having the conversation pre-marriage is good. Acknowledging human nature and its flaws and bringing it in the open and allowable in conversation is good. How many marriages could be saved if the spouse was comfortable talking about initial attractions to others and what that means. I also think ANY deal breakers should be discussed dating or married. |