Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emotional affair, might be different than the type of affair you are dealing with, but still an affair. 7 months out, I can honestly say that trust has been restored a pretty big amount. I think more time will further close the gap.
How did you find out? And was it your wife or husband that was in the emotional affair? How long was the affair? Sure there wasn't anything physical or would that have been a dealbreaker?
Wife had an emotional affair. I found texts. I know there was nothing physical so it's hard to say how that would have affected things either way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emotional affair, might be different than the type of affair you are dealing with, but still an affair. 7 months out, I can honestly say that trust has been restored a pretty big amount. I think more time will further close the gap.
How did you find out? And was it your wife or husband that was in the emotional affair? How long was the affair? Sure there wasn't anything physical or would that have been a dealbreaker?
Anonymous wrote:Emotional affair, might be different than the type of affair you are dealing with, but still an affair. 7 months out, I can honestly say that trust has been restored a pretty big amount. I think more time will further close the gap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good to see the "divorce him" trolls come out swinging. OP, misery loves company. They want you in their misery camp.
It varies. How long was the affair? ONS can be forgiven. Long affairs with confessions of love are harder to work through.
Uh, NO, most people can not ever recover from cheating. It's the greatest betrayal
But thanks, stay-with-your-cheating-husband-and-be-miserable troll.
Anonymous wrote:
Eight months of marriage counseling and protestations of love and wanting to work on marriage after the initial discovery. All lies!
Now divorced and exDW is with her girlfriend.
You might be a saint and he might be reformed but the odds are against both.
Anonymous wrote:Good to see the "divorce him" trolls come out swinging. OP, misery loves company. They want you in their misery camp.
It varies. How long was the affair? ONS can be forgiven. Long affairs with confessions of love are harder to work through.
Anonymous wrote:Good to see the "divorce him" trolls come out swinging. OP, misery loves company. They want you in their misery camp.
It varies. How long was the affair? ONS can be forgiven. Long affairs with confessions of love are harder to work through.
Anonymous wrote:Good to see the "divorce him" trolls come out swinging. OP, misery loves company. They want you in their misery camp.
It varies. How long was the affair? ONS can be forgiven. Long affairs with confessions of love are harder to work through.
Anonymous wrote:It depends- were you blindsided by the cheating or did you see it coming? Does it make sense to you? Not that it's okay, but does it make sense when pieced together? From what I've seen and experienced the hardest betrayal to get over is the one you didn't see coming and didn't suspect at all. I don't know how you get past that, or if you should. If there was a clear issue and elephant in the room and he just handled his anger and emotions differently than you would have, that's at least something to work with.
Anonymous wrote:Three months out and I veer between disgust and hatred. Not sure I'll ever trust my husband again.
If you were cheated on, did you trust again? How long did it take? And on a side note: how long before you had sex?