Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Would you confront your husband/wife's Emotional Affair lover?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] I can think of a few problems with this approach and it ultimately does not improve trust between you and your spouse: 1) The spouse thinks you are crazy and doesn't believe you. 2) Say you are successful and you ruin the other person's marriage. Aren't you making the other person more available for your spouse by making her/him single? 3) Say you get what you want and you break up the affair. Who's to say your cheating spouse won't just find someone else since he/she was out there looking in the first place? The other person is just a symptom of what is wrong in your marriage, not the problem. I think you should only deal with your spouse because all odds are off when you get in the middle of the other couple's marriage. You come off as seeming vindictive and a looney toon. You can, however, insist on your spouse ending contact with the other person and work on your relationship. Focus on your marriage not the other person's would be the best approach at ending the affair and ending the possibility of future affairs. Just my two cents. [/quote] What trust "between" you? Your spouse is having an affair, so he or she is by definition not trustworthy. Trust must be re-earned; it is not a right. 1. That's why you need proof. 2. Why do you think the goal is to ruin the other person's marriage? The goal is to stop the affair. Two people trying to stop it works better than one. 3. Wrong again. The statistics referred to earlier on this thread and born out in research on infidelity is that more than half of married people having affairs characterize their marriages as happy or very happy. Most affairs are "symptoms" of problems within the cheating spouse, and not within the marriage. [/quote] I guess I just totally disagree with most of your logic. 1) What you consider "proof" the other spouse may not believe it because he/she is in denial. 2) Maybe your "goal" is to stop the affair but the other spouse may not support your goal. He/she may be at the end of his/her rope and say enough is enough and end the marriage. That spouse may not give a damn about whether the affair continues or not because she/he decides to leave the equation. If the person your spouse cheated with is cut free, isn't that person more likely to keep going after your spouse? 3) You must not have understood my point because you basically just restated it. If a spouse cheats once, he or she will probably do it again just because it is in his/her nature. The moral makeup of the spouse and why he/she is cheating is the real issue, not the other person. So why spend your wheels focusing on the person your spouse cheated with? Even if you are successful in ending the relationship you found out about, what is going to stop your spouse from going behind your back and finding someone new? [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics