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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "what's the worst affair story you've heard of where the marriage recovered?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The children of marriage ALWAYS come first to the wife. As they should.[/quote] Wrong. You are thinking like the wicked stepmother. No wonder kids hate their stepparents if they think like you.[/quote] Expecting a second wife to be kind and welcoming to a child from the first marriage is very different from expecting a wife to be kind and welcoming to a child her husband fathered in infidelity while married to her. [/quote] The thing about you, angry PP, is that you aren't just saying that the ability to forgive this would be beyond you. I would get that. Understand it. It's reasonable, this would be a really hard thing to get over. And if you are choosing between treating an innocent child like dirt or not ever talking to them then certainly pick the latter. But you also seem viscerally against the idea that there could be women out there who got just as angry at the betrayal, but chose a different path to try to be the most beneficial to the children. Not everyone is like you. That's ok. I certainly have my own flaws and weaknesses, but I don't act like anyone else strong enough to overcome those weaknesses is full of it. [/quote] I don't think you understand how this whole line of argument came about. Perhaps you jumped into this discussion in the middle of it. How it came about was that someone opined that the wife (in the Thailand example) was a saint who chose kindness and decided to give this child a better life. It is this characterization that caused my objection. What I said - and I'm happy to restate this - is that no woman, in this case, would be motivated "solely" by the desire to give a child of infidelity a better life. My theory - and it's all theory - is that the wife did this primarily for the good of the marriage and her original family. She must have decided that her marriage and family had the greatest possible chances of survival and stability if the husband's love child was integrated into the family. THAT was her motivation. To preserve the family. That this decision happened to have the effect of kindness toward the child is immaterial. It wasn't kindness that drove her. It was her decision that her family would be best of with this course of action. If she thought that her family had the best chances of survival and success with leaving the child behind, she would have done just that. [/quote]
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