Anonymous wrote:"an emotional affair can be considered a type of chaste nonmonogamy without consummation"
What a bunch of hooey. An emotional affair is nothing. Or, it should be.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think I could be with someone who is constantly talking about our personal stuff with her parents. I avoid complaining about my wife to my parents, or portraying myself as a victim. I feel that this is an awful habit that some people get into.
People who constantly vilify their spouses to their parents seem immature and should be considered a form of abuse.
Anonymous wrote:WTF is an "emotional affair"?
An "emotional affair" is an affair which excludes physical intimacy, and is usually based on emotional intimacy. An emotional affair can also be referred to as an affair of the heart. It is a phenomenon that is not limited to married couples, affecting people in serious relationships of every type. An emotional affair may begin innocently as a friendship with a person outside the relationship. Over time, the partner becomes infatuated, obsessed in some cases, with this friend - and eventually tries to become friendlier, spending more time with him or her at the cost of the relationship that person is already in. Where one partner is in a committed monogamous relationship, irrespective of whether marriage is planned or not, and irrespective of if the couple is already married or not, an emotional affair can be considered a type of chaste nonmonogamy without consummation. When the affair breaches an agreement in the monogamous relationship of one of the partners to the affair, the term infidelity may be more apt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:take your medicine. They will never like you again, but at least you have your wife.
My wife bad-mouthed me to her family when we weren't getting along (not infidelity based) and they were a little pissed at me. However, they figured out she was being a spoiled brat and forgave me.
All you can do is be a better husband and see what happens. Make your wife happy first and don't worry about anything else.
Also, schedule unsupervised visits with your testicles if you can. I know they have been taken from you, but it's healthy to see them occasionally
Ouch, really? They will never like me again?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I have a feeling that this came to light less than a year ago. If I am correct, then you are in the wrong about wanting the family to move past it. Create a five-year goal and that will be much more realistic. I think apologizing to your In laws one on one would be a good idea. At a certain point when your wife chooses, she will need to tell her family to back down and support her.
Why should he apologize to the in-laws? The issue was, and is, between him and his wife. The in-laws are her family, not the aggrieved party. I think it was wrong for her to trash talk him (versus getting support); this will definitely make their efforts to reconcile way more difficult.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have a feeling that this came to light less than a year ago. If I am correct, then you are in the wrong about wanting the family to move past it. Create a five-year goal and that will be much more realistic. I think apologizing to your In laws one on one would be a good idea. At a certain point when your wife chooses, she will need to tell her family to back down and support her.