Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he is cheating then nothing is perfect. Have some self respect!
Do you think that Hillary Clinton should have divorced Bill Clinton?
Do you think that Vanessa Bryant should have divorced Kobe Bryant?
Do you think that forgiveness is a weakness?
Narrow-minded thinking and blanket intolerance for how *others* live their life truly baffles me. For yourself, fine. Others? Who are you to say? By the way, I am not defending the behavior or arguing that cheating is okay. I'm not condemning everyone that has cheated to hell either.
I hope none of you posters oversee any courts. If so, our future is screwed.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."
Gross.
Married 22 years and we never vacationed without one another or into the separate sex scene. We get along with our friends AND their spouses and enjoy group outings, dinners, trips, etc.
I love being with my spouse more than just about anyone else. I think those that have this and he banged a side chick in a 20-40-year marriage at midlife wouldn’t throw away genuine love, fun, friendship, adventure, intellectual stimulation and family for a dumb whore that meant nothing.
+1
It’s easy to say if kick him out and divorce him when it’s all theoretical. 20+ years of marriage, shared history, kids, etc. It is not black and white and every case is different: type of affair, what it meant, how much invested, was it midlife, how did they deal with it- confess, transparency , lots of therapy or self righteous a-hole, remorse or entitled?
Married to a twice-diagnosed narcissist?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."
Gross.
Married 22 years and we never vacationed without one another or into the separate sex scene. We get along with our friends AND their spouses and enjoy group outings, dinners, trips, etc.
I love being with my spouse more than just about anyone else. I think those that have this and he banged a side chick in a 20-40-year marriage at midlife wouldn’t throw away genuine love, fun, friendship, adventure, intellectual stimulation and family for a dumb whore that meant nothing.
Anonymous wrote:If he is cheating then nothing is perfect. Have some self respect!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."
Why are you married to him? It doesn't seem that you respect him. You seem to not have issue attracting other partners. You are obviously financially secure. So what is the reason for having a marriage that you are not loyal in? No snark, honest question. No one ever answers this.
Appearances. Mutual friends. Intertwined life together. Kids who enjoy seeing us at the same time. and the big one: I don't want him to have half the money we've accumulated. I've sacrificed a lot and I'm not giving it up so I can pursue someone more perfect for me.
What a miserable way to spend this lifetime
This, folks, is why posters don't answer these types of questions honestly. I think being alone is miserable. I think giving up half my money is miserable. Don't judge until you have walked a mile in my shoes.
If you have a cheating spouse, you are alone, you are very much alone already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."
Why are you married to him? It doesn't seem that you respect him. You seem to not have issue attracting other partners. You are obviously financially secure. So what is the reason for having a marriage that you are not loyal in? No snark, honest question. No one ever answers this.
Appearances. Mutual friends. Intertwined life together. Kids who enjoy seeing us at the same time. and the big one: I don't want him to have half the money we've accumulated. I've sacrificed a lot and I'm not giving it up so I can pursue someone more perfect for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."
Why are you married to him? It doesn't seem that you respect him. You seem to not have issue attracting other partners. You are obviously financially secure. So what is the reason for having a marriage that you are not loyal in? No snark, honest question. No one ever answers this.
Appearances. Mutual friends. Intertwined life together. Kids who enjoy seeing us at the same time. and the big one: I don't want him to have half the money we've accumulated. I've sacrificed a lot and I'm not giving it up so I can pursue someone more perfect for me.
What a miserable way to spend this lifetime
This, folks, is why posters don't answer these types of questions honestly. I think being alone is miserable. I think giving up half my money is miserable. Don't judge until you have walked a mile in my shoes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No I wouldn't look the other way I would divorce. Things aren't perfect if one person is finding fulfilment outside of the marriage. What's the point in being together if to tolerate life you have to cheat with other people, to me that's not worth it.
If he was seeing a man, I would want him to go live the life he really wants, with a man.
Have you sacrificed a lot to build a multi million dollar nest egg? If not, you can't understand that I'm not going to throw away half of that because I don't want to be monogamous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."
Why are you married to him? It doesn't seem that you respect him. You seem to not have issue attracting other partners. You are obviously financially secure. So what is the reason for having a marriage that you are not loyal in? No snark, honest question. No one ever answers this.
Appearances. Mutual friends. Intertwined life together. Kids who enjoy seeing us at the same time. and the big one: I don't want him to have half the money we've accumulated. I've sacrificed a lot and I'm not giving it up so I can pursue someone more perfect for me.
What a miserable way to spend this lifetime
Anonymous wrote:My husband looks the other way on my cheating. I do 90% of everything for the kids and household, make more than he does. We went to therapy; he was told to "step it up." He wants to sleep 9 to 10 hours a day, and do nothing but work and ride his bike and joke around with the kids. He and I didn't live together before marriage so I didn't realize that sex once or maybe twice a week for 15 minutes was perfectly fine for him. I'm the alpha, he's the follower but it really benefits him so he ignores the nights I "go out with the girls."