Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapy doesn't do the work. You do the work. Some people are up for it, others are not.
This. Also you can't fix other people only yourself. So both partis in therapy need to do the work. It's not a cute all but it helps get to te bottom of things and salvage what is salvageable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about any of you, but if I were cheated on, I wouldn't want to attend therapy and expect a professional therapist to be able to put my marriage back together again like Humpty Dumpty.
I may be a proud woman but I also am a very loyal woman and once a man oversteps his boundaries with me, it will be impossible for him to ever get back to the original place he ever was with me.
And if I cannot ever have a man that close to me in a relationship, then I would rather be alone.
I deserve much better from someone because I love myself.
You sound young, but good for you.
Not that poster-- but 44 and feel the same way.
Anonymous wrote:Therapy doesn't do the work. You do the work. Some people are up for it, others are not.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how therapy or counseling helps. At all. Your husband either stops cheating and feels remorseful or he doesn't. Why would you want to pay a complete stranger money to tell you how to live your life?