Anonymous wrote:As the cheated upon wife, I say tell, but tell for the right reason. The right reason is not to lift your guilt.
The right reasons are that 1) you want to start living life honestly, 2) you are willing to stop being a bystander in the manipulation of your cheating boyfriend 3) you are willing to stand up and face uncomfortable situations and do the right thing even when it makes you look bad and feel like crap and 4) you are committed to making amends and changing in a way that makes it impossible to do this again.
Expect to be disbelieved when you tell. Expect to be vilified. Expect that your boyfriend will be very angry. Be willing to cut all ties with him immediately and permanently. Be open to speaking with the wife honestly and answering any questions, which will be very uncomfortable. It will be awful, but you deserve that; it is a consequence of what you have done.
Then commit to at least a year where you date no one, and engage in serious therapy with a professional to understand how you could do something so horrible and self-delusional and let your life become such a train wreck.
Anonymous wrote:As the cheated upon wife, I say tell, but tell for the right reason. The right reason is not to lift your guilt.
The right reasons are that 1) you want to start living life honestly, 2) you are willing to stop being a bystander in the manipulation of your cheating boyfriend 3) you are willing to stand up and face uncomfortable situations and do the right thing even when it makes you look bad and feel like crap and 4) you are committed to making amends and changing in a way that makes it impossible to do this again.
Expect to be disbelieved when you tell. Expect to be vilified. Expect that your boyfriend will be very angry. Be willing to cut all ties with him immediately and permanently. Be open to speaking with the wife honestly and answering any questions, which will be very uncomfortable. It will be awful, but you deserve that; it is a consequence of what you have done.
Then commit to at least a year where you date no one, and engage in serious therapy with a professional to understand how you could do something so horrible and self-delusional and let your life become such a train wreck.
Anonymous wrote:If your husband/spouse was cheating on you and had been doing so for over a year, would you want to know? Or would you rather not know, especially if your spouse had no intentions of leaving you? Also, if you got the news from an anonymous email would you necessarily believe it?
Sometimes I feel like confessing to her is the only thing that will lift the guilt that I feel. But then I think no, it would just ruin her life and their kids' lives. Maybe she already knows and doesn't care. Or maybe she has her suspicions but would rather not know for sure. I hate living with the secret though. As for him, I don't know how he does it. I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one he's cheated with, and that also makes me think that maybe she already knows what he does.
Anonymous wrote:1. Stop seeing him.
2. Deal with your own issues.
3. Leave the wife alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sleeping with him may also ease your guilt.
+1
Anonymous wrote:If your husband/spouse was cheating on you and had been doing so for over a year, would you want to know? Or would you rather not know, especially if your spouse had no intentions of leaving you? Also, if you got the news from an anonymous email would you necessarily believe it?
Sometimes I feel like confessing to her is the only thing that will lift the guilt that I feel. But then I think no, it would just ruin her life and their kids' lives. Maybe she already knows and doesn't care. Or maybe she has her suspicions but would rather not know for sure. I hate living with the secret though. As for him, I don't know how he does it. I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one he's cheated with, and that also makes me think that maybe she already knows what he does.
Anonymous wrote:Not sleeping with him may also ease your guilt.