Anonymous wrote:I’ll tell you my perspective, as someone who left a cheater:
A) The devastation and betrayal was and is something that changed me on a cellular level. It changed my worldview forever.
B) There was no way I would ever have been able to love my spouse the way I had.
That said, MOST people in my life encouraged me to stay with my former spouse. I was told that people make mistakes blah blah blah. We had a toddler and I was pregnant when I found out. I left when my new baby was six months old.
The fallout was horrific and I am truly traumatized by the process of divorce. My former spouse further financially abused me and used his (then) superior financial position to humiliate me and take advantage of my vulnerability, particularly in the court system which rewards the party with more money by default.
He got custody. I got no retirement etc in the divorce and lost every single proceeding. I filed bankruptcy. I am STILL paying for his sins/the dissolution of our marriage and we separated eight years ago.
Logistically and otherwise, I DO understand why people stay. My tale is an example of everything that could have gone wrong, going wrong. But I definitely could not stay.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll tell you my perspective, as someone who left a cheater:
A) The devastation and betrayal was and is something that changed me on a cellular level. It changed my worldview forever.
B) There was no way I would ever have been able to love my spouse the way I had.
That said, MOST people in my life encouraged me to stay with my former spouse. I was told that people make mistakes blah blah blah. We had a toddler and I was pregnant when I found out. I left when my new baby was six months old.
The fallout was horrific and I am truly traumatized by the process of divorce. My former spouse further financially abused me and used his (then) superior financial position to humiliate me and take advantage of my vulnerability, particularly in the court system which rewards the party with more money by default.
He got custody. I got no retirement etc in the divorce and lost every single proceeding. I filed bankruptcy. I am STILL paying for his sins/the dissolution of our marriage and we separated eight years ago.
Logistically and otherwise, I DO understand why people stay. My tale is an example of everything that could have gone wrong, going wrong. But I definitely could not stay.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll tell you my perspective, as someone who left a cheater:
A) The devastation and betrayal was and is something that changed me on a cellular level. It changed my worldview forever.
B) There was no way I would ever have been able to love my spouse the way I had.
That said, MOST people in my life encouraged me to stay with my former spouse. I was told that people make mistakes blah blah blah. We had a toddler and I was pregnant when I found out. I left when my new baby was six months old.
The fallout was horrific and I am truly traumatized by the process of divorce. My former spouse further financially abused me and used his (then) superior financial position to humiliate me and take advantage of my vulnerability, particularly in the court system which rewards the party with more money by default.
He got custody. I got no retirement etc in the divorce and lost every single proceeding. I filed bankruptcy. I am STILL paying for his sins/the dissolution of our marriage and we separated eight years ago.
Logistically and otherwise, I DO understand why people stay. My tale is an example of everything that could have gone wrong, going wrong. But I definitely could not stay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do women stay after their husbands affair(s)? …
Maybe I am different from other men, but I think most men would leave after the first affair.
Maybe you’re projecting. I stayed after the first. And the second. Now I’m looking for an affair myself and figuring if she finds out, she’ll forgive too. We get along great.
Anonymous wrote:Why do women stay after their husbands affair(s)? …
Maybe I am different from other men, but I think most men would leave after the first affair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also think women, and society as a whole, have a lower bar for men than we do for women. Men often seem to make idiotic, impetuous choices... this is why teenage boys, for example, can be so reckless and do such dangerous things. They can often be destructive and unthinking in the moment, and then devastated with long term consequences. Meaning I think some men can cheat on the spur of the moment but deeply regret it later, whereas women tend to be much more intentional about our actions (perhaps because society also judges us more harshly and holds us to a higher bar). So I think in some ways it's easier to forgive a man's indiscretion because you can just "know" that it was a meaningless f-up in the way women's actions usually arent.
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