Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I did not have second thoughts, so I am not a good example. I stayed for far too long...that is probably why I did not have second thoughts once I decided.
Ha same. I now see this as a pattern in my life — I stay too long in relationships that were either always bad or soured — this includes jobs and friendships btw — but on the bright side, this has also meant for me that when I finally do leave, it is with zero second thoughts or “what if I’d tried X?”
This is my personal pattern, as well as my pattern specifically with my ex. He cheated, and I knew from the very first day that I found out that he didn't have it in his character to be able to do the things necessary to come back from it. He begged me not to end our relationship, and I said to him at the time, "Please do not ask me to do this if you can't stop and you can't be honest. Please don't waste my time like that. I don't want to be years down the road and still find out you are cheating." He begged, and he promised.
Two and a half years later, I kicked him out of the house. He couldn't stop, and he was never honest -- just trickle-truthing me the whole time.
I would have been much better of dumping him instantly as my instincts told me. But, my kids were both under 5, and I thought I owed him and them another chance.
The truth is I owed him nothing. And, I owed my kids a chance at a better, healthier life, even if it was just the three of us. It would have been far better for the three of us, if I had used my energy to create our new life, instead of wasting it by pouring it into the old one.
But, like PPs say, when I finally kicked him out, in all of the years of financial hardship and witnessing the ongoing pain he caused my kids emotionally (cuz cheaters continue to lie and put themselves first), I never had any doubts that there was anything more I could have done.