Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^no you just sound bitter. Seriously get help for your bitterness. You don’t sound logical.
You just do not like my position: a sexless person must bring forth the reasons for their sexlessess, divorce, or accept infidelity.
Your position is simply the biased inverse: a cheater must (somehow!) ascertain/fix why their spouse doesn't want sex, divorce, or accept celibacy.
You not liking my position does not make my bitter, illogical, in need of help. I could make same childish claims of you.
This may be difficult for you but it’s not complicated. You made a vow and you are breaking or have broken it. You say you do it or did it because of what someone else is/was doing. That is the excuse of a child: “but they made me do it!” As an adult, you can only control what you do and only you control what you do. You cheat or cheated. You. Simple, perhaps difficult for you.
Those vows are bidirectional: one does not pledge sexual fidelity to a spouse who cares nothing about sexual needs. Both sides of this vow are broken. I am neither making excuses, nor assessing blame, because there is no wrong here to excuse or offense, only choices. One spouse chooses not to have sex, another chooses to have it elsewhere. Neither is better or worse or morally right or wrong. My logic is precisely the same as yours... just the opposite position. Too bad that you do not like this. I would advise you either maintain a healthy sex life or divorce.
Sorry, buddy. You are assessing blame and making excuses: “It’s Spouse’s fault I cheated! Spouse made me do it!” This is exactly what you are saying. And yes, it is a choice. A choice between honesty and mendaciousness. And yes, it is a moral issue - are you saying that lying is not a moral issue? You choose to lie; no one is making you do it. And you lie to your children too.
Again, I can make equal claims about you blaming and making excuses for a sexless spouse ("it's HIS fault ... that I withhold sex"). That is an equivalent choice. What do you mean honesty? Who is lying? About what? Who what do the children have to do with this at all? You still do not make any sense!
Most of us got married because we wanted to be with the whole person. FOR BETTER of FOR WORSE! Not as long as my d@@k is being regularly serviced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^no you just sound bitter. Seriously get help for your bitterness. You don’t sound logical.
You just do not like my position: a sexless person must bring forth the reasons for their sexlessess, divorce, or accept infidelity.
Your position is simply the biased inverse: a cheater must (somehow!) ascertain/fix why their spouse doesn't want sex, divorce, or accept celibacy.
You not liking my position does not make my bitter, illogical, in need of help. I could make same childish claims of you.
This may be difficult for you but it’s not complicated. You made a vow and you are breaking or have broken it. You say you do it or did it because of what someone else is/was doing. That is the excuse of a child: “but they made me do it!” As an adult, you can only control what you do and only you control what you do. You cheat or cheated. You. Simple, perhaps difficult for you.
Those vows are bidirectional: one does not pledge sexual fidelity to a spouse who cares nothing about sexual needs. Both sides of this vow are broken. I am neither making excuses, nor assessing blame, because there is no wrong here to excuse or offense, only choices. One spouse chooses not to have sex, another chooses to have it elsewhere. Neither is better or worse or morally right or wrong. My logic is precisely the same as yours... just the opposite position. Too bad that you do not like this. I would advise you either maintain a healthy sex life or divorce.
Sorry, buddy. You are assessing blame and making excuses: “It’s Spouse’s fault I cheated! Spouse made me do it!” This is exactly what you are saying. And yes, it is a choice. A choice between honesty and mendaciousness. And yes, it is a moral issue - are you saying that lying is not a moral issue? You choose to lie; no one is making you do it. And you lie to your children too.
Again, I can make equal claims about you blaming and making excuses for a sexless spouse ("it's HIS fault ... that I withhold sex"). That is an equivalent choice. What do you mean honesty? Who is lying? About what? Who what do the children have to do with this at all? You still do not make any sense!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^no you just sound bitter. Seriously get help for your bitterness. You don’t sound logical.
You just do not like my position: a sexless person must bring forth the reasons for their sexlessess, divorce, or accept infidelity.
Your position is simply the biased inverse: a cheater must (somehow!) ascertain/fix why their spouse doesn't want sex, divorce, or accept celibacy.
You not liking my position does not make my bitter, illogical, in need of help. I could make same childish claims of you.
This may be difficult for you but it’s not complicated. You made a vow and you are breaking or have broken it. You say you do it or did it because of what someone else is/was doing. That is the excuse of a child: “but they made me do it!” As an adult, you can only control what you do and only you control what you do. You cheat or cheated. You. Simple, perhaps difficult for you.
Those vows are bidirectional: one does not pledge sexual fidelity to a spouse who cares nothing about sexual needs. Both sides of this vow are broken. I am neither making excuses, nor assessing blame, because there is no wrong here to excuse or offense, only choices. One spouse chooses not to have sex, another chooses to have it elsewhere. Neither is better or worse or morally right or wrong. My logic is precisely the same as yours... just the opposite position. Too bad that you do not like this. I would advise you either maintain a healthy sex life or divorce.
Sorry, buddy. You are assessing blame and making excuses: “It’s Spouse’s fault I cheated! Spouse made me do it!” This is exactly what you are saying. And yes, it is a choice. A choice between honesty and mendaciousness. And yes, it is a moral issue - are you saying that lying is not a moral issue? You choose to lie; no one is making you do it. And you lie to your children too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^no you just sound bitter. Seriously get help for your bitterness. You don’t sound logical.
You just do not like my position: a sexless person must bring forth the reasons for their sexlessess, divorce, or accept infidelity.
Your position is simply the biased inverse: a cheater must (somehow!) ascertain/fix why their spouse doesn't want sex, divorce, or accept celibacy.
You not liking my position does not make my bitter, illogical, in need of help. I could make same childish claims of you.
This may be difficult for you but it’s not complicated. You made a vow and you are breaking or have broken it. You say you do it or did it because of what someone else is/was doing. That is the excuse of a child: “but they made me do it!” As an adult, you can only control what you do and only you control what you do. You cheat or cheated. You. Simple, perhaps difficult for you.
Those vows are bidirectional: one does not pledge sexual fidelity to a spouse who cares nothing about sexual needs. Both sides of this vow are broken. I am neither making excuses, nor assessing blame, because there is no wrong here to excuse or offense, only choices. One spouse chooses not to have sex, another chooses to have it elsewhere. Neither is better or worse or morally right or wrong. My logic is precisely the same as yours... just the opposite position. Too bad that you do not like this. I would advise you either maintain a healthy sex life or divorce.[/quote
Sorry, buddy. You are assessing blame and making excuses: “It’s Spouse’s fault I cheated! Spouse made me do it!” This is exactly what you are saying. And yes, it is a choice. A choice between honesty and mendaciousness. And yes, it is a moral issue - are you saying that lying is not a moral issue? You choose to lie; no one is making you do it. And you lie to your children too.
Anonymous wrote:Angry sexless guy doesnt realize that hes actually proving our point that cheaters are irrational selfish jerks who are incapable of taking responsibility for their poor choices. Its comical. Angry sexless guy... there is a reason you arent getting any. You are an insufferable child. Stomp your feet and hold your breath and bone your wife for it. Because she made you do it! Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^no you just sound bitter. Seriously get help for your bitterness. You don’t sound logical.
You just do not like my position: a sexless person must bring forth the reasons for their sexlessess, divorce, or accept infidelity.
Your position is simply the biased inverse: a cheater must (somehow!) ascertain/fix why their spouse doesn't want sex, divorce, or accept celibacy.
You not liking my position does not make my bitter, illogical, in need of help. I could make same childish claims of you.
This may be difficult for you but it’s not complicated. You made a vow and you are breaking or have broken it. You say you do it or did it because of what someone else is/was doing. That is the excuse of a child: “but they made me do it!” As an adult, you can only control what you do and only you control what you do. You cheat or cheated. You. Simple, perhaps difficult for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would you tell your children that your spouse had sex outside of the marriage? My children don’t need to know what happens in the bedroom.
+1000
My kids don't need to know if my spouse and I decide to employ some kinky moves in the bedroom. Hell, they don't even need to know if we decide to invite a third person into the bedroom. But these things are not the same as betraying your spouse. How are you so callous?
Then just tell them that your dad is dates outside the marriage and he takes his girlfriend on vacations and spends Valentines with her. No need to discuss sex.
Anonymous wrote:As my DH is fond of saying ...don't Sh$t were you eat.
We both cheat yet it doesn't cross over into our children lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cheaters - in marriage, or other areas of life, are not people who care about others in general. They lack empathy, so of course they don't care about how it affects kids.
If "sex" is the issue then be a grownup and ask for an open marriage or get a divorce. Cheating is the juvenile path of cowards.
This is ridiculous, yet totally emblematic of black and white judgement, thinking and advice on DCUM. Lots of people cheat at some point in their lives.... LOTS. You're saying they don't care about their kids, families, spouses? That's just absurd on its face.
One of the reasons for "cheating" is that the cheater DOES care about their family. They care about their kids and they care about their spouse, but they're maybe not getting their needs met within the relationship.
Then divorce you say? Go back to why they are cheating in the place instead of divorcing. They don't want to throw the proverbial baby out with the bathwater. They may love and care about their families and don't want to get divorced or break up their family unit.
Then don't get married, you say? Marriages evolve, people evolve and change. Affection and intimacy wane and die, or someone works too much, or one partner stops wanting to have sex or whatever... You can script life in a logical flowchart as to how it SHOULD work, but it falls apart when you add people and real life.
Stop being so judgmental. You don't know what goes on in the hearts of the 50% of the population that cheats at some point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would you tell your children that your spouse had sex outside of the marriage? My children don’t need to know what happens in the bedroom.
+1000
My kids don't need to know if my spouse and I decide to employ some kinky moves in the bedroom. Hell, they don't even need to know if we decide to invite a third person into the bedroom. But these things are not the same as betraying your spouse. How are you so callous?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would you tell your children that your spouse had sex outside of the marriage? My children don’t need to know what happens in the bedroom.
+1000