Anonymous wrote:14:25 here. To the PP who asked, I confessed because I because I was tired and ashamed of lying to her.
Anonymous wrote:14:25
Was it a one time thing or an ongoing affair? To me, that matters. One time, i would rather not know. Ongoing...it would have me questioning everything during that period and would be much harder to deal with. Plus I think an ongoing affair suggests a much deeper problem in the marriage than a one time fuck up (not to excuse it).
Anonymous wrote:OP - A man here who cheated on his wife, felt horrible, then lied about it for almost 15 years. When I finally confessed - it was HELL for both of us. One of the things that hurt her almost as much as my betrayal was that my wife was never given the chance to react in real time, I never gave her the option of ditching my lying cheating ass and finding someone better. I not only cheated on her and our marriage but I cheated out of the opportunity to make an honest opinion of whether to stay married to me. Insert knife, then twist... You have to own this, suffer the consequences, whatever they are, and then move on. Don't insult him further by lying just because you are a chicken shit (like I was). You did it, own it and deal with the consequences - then move on. Hopefully your marriage will survive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder what OPs therapist will tell her? Would a therapist even give direction on to tell or not? Would seem to me the therapist would encourage her to tell for ethical reasons and peace of mind. Lying helps no one.
A therapist will help her explore her feelings, motivations, acts, reactions, relationships etc. so that she can come to a decision on her own.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder what OPs therapist will tell her? Would a therapist even give direction on to tell or not? Would seem to me the therapist would encourage her to tell for ethical reasons and peace of mind. Lying helps no one.
Anonymous wrote:14:25 here. To the PP who asked, I confessed because I because I was tired and ashamed of lying to her. She always suspected and I finally got to the point of loving her too much to keep lying. I have second guessed my decision many times but still feel it was the right thing to do. Maybe it is not for everyone but after hearing what my wife said about being cheated on then robbed of the right to make her decision at the time, I get it - I should have manned up and confessed when I did it. She would have probably left me - maybe I could have won her back, maybe she would have found someone better. It should have been her decision to make - not mine. I lost that right when I broke our marriage vows.
Anonymous wrote:OP - A man here who cheated on his wife, felt horrible, then lied about it for almost 15 years. When I finally confessed - it was HELL for both of us. One of the things that hurt her almost as much as my betrayal was that my wife was never given the chance to react in real time, I never gave her the option of ditching my lying cheating ass and finding someone better. I not only cheated on her and our marriage but I cheated out of the opportunity to make an honest opinion of whether to stay married to me. Insert knife, then twist... You have to own this, suffer the consequences, whatever they are, and then move on. Don't insult him further by lying just because you are a chicken shit (like I was). You did it, own it and deal with the consequences - then move on. Hopefully your marriage will survive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DO NOT tell your husband. How selfish of you to even consider it. If you know it would devastate him, you live with that guilt and you suck it up. No, honestly is not always better. Seems like you learned your lesson, but there is not need to involve anyone else.
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