Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to get over yourself, OP.
Adultery by itself is an unethical choice if the cheated-on spouse decides it is, and if it affects the children. It gets worse if there's additional abusive, or violent, behavior; if there's financial stress due to the dissolution of the marriage; serial cheating behavior, etc.
But honestly, sometimes the cheating is a consequences of a failed marriage and both partners are at fault anyway. Sometimes you can't just divorce and remarry.
So I personally do not judge others for one-off cheating. I don't know what went on behind closed doors in their marriage. I certainly would not fault either my father or my mother if it turned out they had cheated. They're still together, and they've been through tough times. A little straying, in my mind, does not erase a lifetime of shared history.
How old are you?
How old are you?
So you suggest I just make excuses for her behavior and pretend it doesn’t impact me? Divorce is a sign of a bad marriage and I would have been hurt, but not angry at either of them. The cheating wasn’t on a work trip, she would leave me to babysit my siblings when she would betray the family with a guy who knew us all. She stayed home to raise us and my dad worked to pay for our life. She wanted to escape us and even though she didn’t choose to leave, she did abandon us. It feels unforgivable to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to get over yourself, OP.
Adultery by itself is an unethical choice if the cheated-on spouse decides it is, and if it affects the children. It gets worse if there's additional abusive, or violent, behavior; if there's financial stress due to the dissolution of the marriage; serial cheating behavior, etc.
But honestly, sometimes the cheating is a consequences of a failed marriage and both partners are at fault anyway. Sometimes you can't just divorce and remarry.
So I personally do not judge others for one-off cheating. I don't know what went on behind closed doors in their marriage. I certainly would not fault either my father or my mother if it turned out they had cheated. They're still together, and they've been through tough times. A little straying, in my mind, does not erase a lifetime of shared history.
How old are you?
So you suggest I just make excuses for her behavior and pretend it doesn’t impact me? Divorce is a sign of a bad marriage and I would have been hurt, but not angry at either of them. The cheating wasn’t on a work trip, she would leave me to babysit my siblings when she would betray the family with a guy who knew us all. She stayed home to raise us and my dad worked to pay for our life. She wanted to escape us and even though she didn’t choose to leave, she did abandon us. It feels unforgivable to me.
Anonymous wrote:I never considered my life “destroyed” by my parents divorce. I have a good relationship with both parents, I had a great support system of friends and coaches all through school, I went to a great college and had a great career. And now I have a great family of my own.
My mom made a dumb choice, but it doesn’t make her a horrible person or a bad mom. My dad is difficult to be married to, but it doesn’t make him a horrible person or a bad dad.
Anonymous wrote:You need to get over yourself, OP.
Adultery by itself is an unethical choice if the cheated-on spouse decides it is, and if it affects the children. It gets worse if there's additional abusive, or violent, behavior; if there's financial stress due to the dissolution of the marriage; serial cheating behavior, etc.
But honestly, sometimes the cheating is a consequences of a failed marriage and both partners are at fault anyway. Sometimes you can't just divorce and remarry.
So I personally do not judge others for one-off cheating. I don't know what went on behind closed doors in their marriage. I certainly would not fault either my father or my mother if it turned out they had cheated. They're still together, and they've been through tough times. A little straying, in my mind, does not erase a lifetime of shared history.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't get past my dad's affair.
He took me to a playdate once and got invited in for coffee by the single mom and suddenly they were locking the door to the bedroom and running back and forth to the bathroom in the mom's pink robe while my little friend and I were like what is even happening.
After my mom left (he said he'd never let her have us and she believed him) I was also the only girl left and he kept telling me I was the "new woman of the house" and had to help take care of my younger brothers. He got increasingly very weird and inappropriate with me as I got older. I spent years being upstairs if he was downstairs and downstairs if he was upstairs, and if I felt like he was starting to follow me around in the house, I just left the house and went running. Or something.
But nope. Never got over it. Messed me up quite deeply in terms of human relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Did your mom and dad divorce? My mom cheated, but I just learned of it recently - many years later. It’s a stab in the heart feeling, especially if you have an awesome father.