Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can someone watch their significant other burn down their relationship for a fling or affair with a new person and...be ok with it and stay?
What goes through their mind?
Well, nothing was really burned down.
Why stay:
- don't want to lose half my money, pension, assets
- don't want to lose time with the kids
- don't want to do all the child-rearing myself, this is a two-person job
- at the end of the day, I'm fond of my spouse
- when viewed against the total reality of family and marriage, where a person puts his genitals is a minor thing. I mean it's unpleasant but if he remortgaged the house or stole marital assets, it would be much more of a crime.
So back to first response - no self confidence.
You think it's only about 'putting genitals?" What about respect for your marriage, your family?
I don't really know what you mean by self confidence. I am perfectly confident in my ability to carry this family alone. I just don't want to.
Everyone has a different definition of respect. I've noticed that sometimes on this board there is a great deal of anger toward women who admit to staying with their adulterous husbands. I am not quite sure why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will provide a perspective from a friend that shed a whole new light on this for me.
She met her husband when they were in their mid twenties. Happily married into their mid forties. He suddenly starts serially cheating on her. Her friends find his tinder profile. He in fact starts dating another woman and moves to another city.
She is heartbroken and devastated but also confused. As, they did have a good relationship and were best friends. She does not react. He comes back and asks to go to therapy. they learn they he has severe emotional and self esteem issues from his impoverished childhood. Furthermore, as her career took off and she became more professionally recognized, he felt insecure and that she did not love him. So he self-sabotaged with the fear of losing her.
After a year of therapy. They are back together. He never loved anyone else. He is grateful and happy and cannot believe she loves him that much. She is hurt but happy to have her best friend back.
Cheating is not about the spouse being cheated on or even the relationship. Its a maladjusted person's way of crying out.
LOL ok. This relationship is totally normal and healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can someone watch their significant other burn down their relationship for a fling or affair with a new person and...be ok with it and stay?
What goes through their mind?
Well, nothing was really burned down.
Why stay:
- don't want to lose half my money, pension, assets
- don't want to lose time with the kids
- don't want to do all the child-rearing myself, this is a two-person job
- at the end of the day, I'm fond of my spouse
- when viewed against the total reality of family and marriage, where a person puts his genitals is a minor thing. I mean it's unpleasant but if he remortgaged the house or stole marital assets, it would be much more of a crime.
So back to first response - no self confidence.
You think it's only about 'putting genitals?" What about respect for your marriage, your family?
Anonymous wrote:I will provide a perspective from a friend that shed a whole new light on this for me.
She met her husband when they were in their mid twenties. Happily married into their mid forties. He suddenly starts serially cheating on her. Her friends find his tinder profile. He in fact starts dating another woman and moves to another city.
She is heartbroken and devastated but also confused. As, they did have a good relationship and were best friends. She does not react. He comes back and asks to go to therapy. they learn they he has severe emotional and self esteem issues from his impoverished childhood. Furthermore, as her career took off and she became more professionally recognized, he felt insecure and that she did not love him. So he self-sabotaged with the fear of losing her.
After a year of therapy. They are back together. He never loved anyone else. He is grateful and happy and cannot believe she loves him that much. She is hurt but happy to have her best friend back.
Cheating is not about the spouse being cheated on or even the relationship. Its a maladjusted person's way of crying out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can someone watch their significant other burn down their relationship for a fling or affair with a new person and...be ok with it and stay?
What goes through their mind?
Well, nothing was really burned down.
Why stay:
- don't want to lose half my money, pension, assets
- don't want to lose time with the kids
- don't want to do all the child-rearing myself, this is a two-person job
- at the end of the day, I'm fond of my spouse
- when viewed against the total reality of family and marriage, where a person puts his genitals is a minor thing. I mean it's unpleasant but if he remortgaged the house or stole marital assets, it would be much more of a crime.
Anonymous wrote:How can someone watch their significant other burn down their relationship for a fling or affair with a new person and...be ok with it and stay?
What goes through their mind?
Anonymous wrote:Don't judge. You really don't know what other people value in a relationship. For some people it's a dealbreaker, while for others it just isn't.
Not your relationship, not your problem.
Anonymous wrote:How can someone watch their significant other burn down their relationship for a fling or affair with a new person and...be ok with it and stay?
What goes through their mind?
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone sees sexual fidelity as the gravest sin. There are worse things my spouse can do.