Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of shit goes down in long-term relationship - fights, make-ups, ugly name calling, an occasional screaming match, etc. - and both partners will have periods of "going through something" in marriage.
But you kind of have to draw the line somewhere don't you?
If sticking his dick in someone is how your husband handles problems in his life, you could probably find a better human to be married to...
Or in my case: wife being a c@m dispenser to deal with her boredom and self-loathing
Anonymous wrote:In a 2013 article in The Guardian, Tim Lott, a British author suggested that people are maybe “over” adultery in their real – as opposed to cultural – lives. He suggests that because adultery still happens regularly enough on television, and in drama and literature, it is rarely the central trope of a single piece of artistic endeavor. I wonder how many people share his view. Maybe not for the same reasons but because the nitty gritty destruction that adultery creates is continuously obscured.
I am convinced that adultery destroys everyone involved in one way or another. I know my own devastation as the betrayed spouse and I am watching in a ring side seat the devastation that it has wrought upon my husband, even three years post D-day. Betraying me was one thing but ultimately he betrayed himself. He wants to be honest and sincere but his idea of himself and his reality do not meet. This is a bit of a psychological unraveling.
How can the correct messages about adultery be transmitted? Ashley Madison’s trite message that life is short, so have an affair, sums up casually the totally naive and cavalier attitude that drip feeds the fantasy rather than the misery of adultery. The truth is, adultery can and does lead to murder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like I would always be tempted to bring it up in a fight.
Him: “You were supposed do the dishes last night and you didn’t.”
Me: “Well, you were supposed to remain faithful in our marriage, and you didn’t.”
Or this:
Him: “It’s your turn to do the dishes tonight.”
Me: “Remember that night that I made your favorite dinner, but you didn’t come home to eat it because you said you were working late, but you were really screwing some other woman? I think I did the dishes that night. I also think I put the kids to bed that night too. So, I’m pretty sure that makes it your turn.”
I don’t know. Even if he really felt awful about it and worked hard to change, I’m not sure I could be a mature enough person to move past it.
Haha! I think about this a lot. I compartmentalize very naturally and I think I would be fine mentally if my DH cheated. But I would literally never be able to take his feelings seriously anymore. It would end in divorce either way, because after you’ve stuck your d*** inside another woman then...I mean what can you criticize me about? I guess I would check out and that would end the marriage anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like I would always be tempted to bring it up in a fight.
Him: “You were supposed do the dishes last night and you didn’t.”
Me: “Well, you were supposed to remain faithful in our marriage, and you didn’t.”
Or this:
Him: “It’s your turn to do the dishes tonight.”
Me: “Remember that night that I made your favorite dinner, but you didn’t come home to eat it because you said you were working late, but you were really screwing some other woman? I think I did the dishes that night. I also think I put the kids to bed that night too. So, I’m pretty sure that makes it your turn.”
I don’t know. Even if he really felt awful about it and worked hard to change, I’m not sure I could be a mature enough person to move past it.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of shit goes down in long-term relationship - fights, make-ups, ugly name calling, an occasional screaming match, etc. - and both partners will have periods of "going through something" in marriage.
But you kind of have to draw the line somewhere don't you?
If sticking his dick in someone is how your husband handles problems in his life, you could probably find a better human to be married to...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like I would always be tempted to bring it up in a fight.
Him: “You were supposed do the dishes last night and you didn’t.”
Me: “Well, you were supposed to remain faithful in our marriage, and you didn’t.”
Or this:
Him: “It’s your turn to do the dishes tonight.”
Me: “Remember that night that I made your favorite dinner, but you didn’t come home to eat it because you said you were working late, but you were really screwing some other woman? I think I did the dishes that night. I also think I put the kids to bed that night too. So, I’m pretty sure that makes it your turn.”
I don’t know. Even if he really felt awful about it and worked hard to change, I’m not sure I could be a mature enough person to move past it.
Do you really think it's maturity that gets you past an affair? Affairs ruin marriages, full stop. Without trust and respect, you have a sham marriage.
Anonymous wrote:
I agree but with so many caveats that I'm not sure it's an agreement, after all![]()
Most affairs are no big deal, only if both spouses love each other and really do prioritize the other, in the sense that they care for each other in sickness and in health and financially too. In that scenario, an affair on the side might be overlooked.
The problem is that it can all go downhill very quickly...