Anonymous wrote:I had an affair that lasted a little over 2 years, and it ended what will be 3 years this coming October. We only saw each other about once a month or so, and it had faded quite a bit towards the end. Married 16 years, 2 kids. Spouse doesn't know. We discussed going to therapy for an issue spouse has, and I question whether I should disclose this, but most of the advice I read says no, to take it to the grave.
I know the consensus on here is a spouse has a right to know, but is that still true if the affair is over?
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT disclose unless there was something that your wife did or is still doing to make you want to cheat again and you want to work on the marriage. Leave it in the past and never cheat again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT disclose unless there was something that your wife did or is still doing to make you want to cheat again and you want to work on the marriage. Leave it in the past and never cheat again.
I so disagree. I was told. I am glad I was told. Things would not have dramatically changed and turned around. And he would not be in therapy 3 days per week and truly changing if he had just kept a secret.
In fact, the weight of the secret was making him a different person.
I prefer the truth. Always.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've thought about hiring a PI. Right now I am seeing a therapist which has been helpful. I finally gained access to the bank accounts, which is how I discovered he had been taking out 400-600/month for several years. After I got access to the accounts, he started taking cash from money reserved to pay for babysitters, etc. Any time I asked him about what the money was for, he shut the conversation down by yelling, calling me paranoid, unstable, etc. but he stopped the spending until several months ago when he spent several hundred dollars. He's given me five different explanations, none of which make sense. I know he's lying. I suspect he has/had an affair. I just can't prove it.
For all of you who are cheating, please don't lie if your spouse suspects something. I can understand why people cheat and it isn't a dealbreaker for me. What I can't understand is willingness to gaslight somebody you are suppose to care about. This is what will destroy my marriage. DH just doesn't seem to understand this and is following the playbook of deny, deny and deny.
Could be an affair or a drug addiction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT disclose unless there was something that your wife did or is still doing to make you want to cheat again and you want to work on the marriage. Leave it in the past and never cheat again.
I so disagree. I was told. I am glad I was told. Things would not have dramatically changed and turned around. And he would not be in therapy 3 days per week and truly changing if he had just kept a secret.
In fact, the weight of the secret was making him a different person.
I prefer the truth. Always.
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT disclose unless there was something that your wife did or is still doing to make you want to cheat again and you want to work on the marriage. Leave it in the past and never cheat again.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's very wrong of you to go to counseling pretending you have been the perfect spouse.
I think it's highly likely spouse dose know and is just bidding his/her time, perhaps until the kids re 18 +.
Depending on the ages of your kids they may know too, I was able to work out my dad was having an affair and I was only 11 years old.
I also think odds are very high you will cheat again, unless you have done the work on yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Grave...and I am a fanatic about fidelity.
In this case though, you are trying to make it work by going to therapy, I see no point. And it will inflict permanent scars
Anonymous wrote:Take it to your grave OP.
Name one way that disclosing this affair will be a good thing for either your marriage or your spouse.
None exist.
Learn from your mistake and move on from it.
>>> It would be completely selfish to emotionally destroy your unsuspecting spouse over your own guilt.
Anonymous wrote:I had an affair that lasted a little over 2 years, and it ended what will be 3 years this coming October. We only saw each other about once a month or so, and it had faded quite a bit towards the end. Married 16 years, 2 kids. Spouse doesn't know. We discussed going to therapy for an issue spouse has, and I question whether I should disclose this, but most of the advice I read says no, to take it to the grave.
I know the consensus on here is a spouse has a right to know, but is that still true if the affair is over?