Anonymous wrote:I have had many affairs. No regrets. Life experience.
Anonymous wrote:I had an affair that went on for around 12 years until I finally had the sense to cut contact a few years ago. I didn't regret it at all until recently. I'd absolved myself from guilt somehow by reasoning that I wasn't the first he'd cheat with and wouldn't be the last, both of which were true. A little while ago I saw a SM post from one of his now grown children about what a screwed up home/family life they'd had and how child hasn't spoken to his parents in years over it. It was only then that I started having regrets and realizing what damage and destruction I might have helped cause.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband told me his best friend from college who married quite young drunkenly cheated a few times in the first year of marriage and also on his bachelor party. Never told his wife and she's totally oblivious to all of it. Claims he hasn't since. They've been married 20 years!
Your husband most likely has as well. Men/women with friends that did/do this almost always have as well.
Omg. Yes! For years I heard about my husband’s best friend that was cheating on wife. My husband always acted like it was wrong and we’d be like “I can’t believe he’s doing that”. Well- guess what? 18 years in I found out (completely blindsided!!) my husband was cheating. Never ever in a million years would I (or his/my family) have thought he’d ever do this. Perfect family man and husband and all. We had a great sex life/great marriage/relationship.
I have heard from numerous other people similar stories. It’s some weird psychological way of confessing without confessing and testing the waters.
Think about it. Would you want a best friend that treated their spouse that way? Or one that hit their spouse? It's ALL abuse. I would dump them in a heart beat. His behavior was showing you he actually condoned it.
I would have told his wife even anon if I had to. I hope you divorced him because I'll bet he did it more than you know. That's usually the case.
Yes. 50-year old friend's husband found out about her 4-year affair during Covid. He was fooled into believing it was a one time thing (not the multi-year affair it was) AND has no idea there were other affairs and infidelities before this. To the outside world she is a SAHM that projects a wholesome 'boy mom' image and homemaker. But, she secretly hates her husband and could give 2 sh*ts about her teen sons and offloads them on husband so she can carry out her infidelities. The poor guy is a sap. He has zero idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't really regret it, but I do regret being careless because my kids found out. Still dealing with the fallout from that.
Just shows that tigers don't change their stripes (when it comes to what they value and who they put first).
I have come to the conclusion that people who cheat lack empathy. I don’t know that you can fix that. Sad for their families who have to live with the fallout.
Broadbrush much?
You don't know anyone's specific situation. Neglect, abuse, abandonment, infidelity, who knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband told me his best friend from college who married quite young drunkenly cheated a few times in the first year of marriage and also on his bachelor party. Never told his wife and she's totally oblivious to all of it. Claims he hasn't since. They've been married 20 years!
Your husband most likely has as well. Men/women with friends that did/do this almost always have as well.
Omg. Yes! For years I heard about my husband’s best friend that was cheating on wife. My husband always acted like it was wrong and we’d be like “I can’t believe he’s doing that”. Well- guess what? 18 years in I found out (completely blindsided!!) my husband was cheating. Never ever in a million years would I (or his/my family) have thought he’d ever do this. Perfect family man and husband and all. We had a great sex life/great marriage/relationship.
I have heard from numerous other people similar stories. It’s some weird psychological way of confessing without confessing and testing the waters.
Think about it. Would you want a best friend that treated their spouse that way? Or one that hit their spouse? It's ALL abuse. I would dump them in a heart beat. His behavior was showing you he actually condoned it.
I would have told his wife even anon if I had to. I hope you divorced him because I'll bet he did it more than you know. That's usually the case.
Yes. 50-year old friend's husband found out about her 4-year affair during Covid. He was fooled into believing it was a one time thing (not the multi-year affair it was) AND has no idea there were other affairs and infidelities before this. To the outside world she is a SAHM that projects a wholesome 'boy mom' image and homemaker. But, she secretly hates her husband and could give 2 sh*ts about her teen sons and offloads them on husband so she can carry out her infidelities. The poor guy is a sap. He has zero idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband told me his best friend from college who married quite young drunkenly cheated a few times in the first year of marriage and also on his bachelor party. Never told his wife and she's totally oblivious to all of it. Claims he hasn't since. They've been married 20 years!
Your husband most likely has as well. Men/women with friends that did/do this almost always have as well.
Omg. Yes! For years I heard about my husband’s best friend that was cheating on wife. My husband always acted like it was wrong and we’d be like “I can’t believe he’s doing that”. Well- guess what? 18 years in I found out (completely blindsided!!) my husband was cheating. Never ever in a million years would I (or his/my family) have thought he’d ever do this. Perfect family man and husband and all. We had a great sex life/great marriage/relationship.
I have heard from numerous other people similar stories. It’s some weird psychological way of confessing without confessing and testing the waters.
Think about it. Would you want a best friend that treated their spouse that way? Or one that hit their spouse? It's ALL abuse. I would dump them in a heart beat. His behavior was showing you he actually condoned it.
I would have told his wife even anon if I had to. I hope you divorced him because I'll bet he did it more than you know. That's usually the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband told me his best friend from college who married quite young drunkenly cheated a few times in the first year of marriage and also on his bachelor party. Never told his wife and she's totally oblivious to all of it. Claims he hasn't since. They've been married 20 years!
Your husband most likely has as well. Men/women with friends that did/do this almost always have as well.
Omg. Yes! For years I heard about my husband’s best friend that was cheating on wife. My husband always acted like it was wrong and we’d be like “I can’t believe he’s doing that”. Well- guess what? 18 years in I found out (completely blindsided!!) my husband was cheating. Never ever in a million years would I (or his/my family) have thought he’d ever do this. Perfect family man and husband and all. We had a great sex life/great marriage/relationship.
I have heard from numerous other people similar stories. It’s some weird psychological way of confessing without confessing and testing the waters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I look back on my long term affair (10 years) not with regret but sadness.
He filled a giant void in my life at the time and it was very hard to end it (took work sex scandal that happened when he had affair with someone else in time when we only saw each other twice a year). And he was great lover.
But proved to me I suck at picking men so I have avoided relationships since then. Busy with work and being single mom and it’s okay
You think?!?!!
For godsakes, you picked a MARRIED man. A dishonest cheater. He had already proven to be a liar before you even started seeing him (he's betraying his wife).
It really isn't too difficult to avoid that. I don't think it's a picker when people choose to hook up with married people (or vice versa), it's a mental issue or past unprocessed trauma from childhood.
Anonymous wrote:Man here. Totally regret it. Marriage was very distant by the time I "went out," but we really did not work on the marriage before. Never got caught, but ended up leaving my wife after 27 years. We were friends and that was it, the kids were out of college. I should have tried to work on things, but we were not compatable in the end. I (we) should have worked on it. If it did not work then we should have split and then looked elsewhere. I still feel like a pig about the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband told me his best friend from college who married quite young drunkenly cheated a few times in the first year of marriage and also on his bachelor party. Never told his wife and she's totally oblivious to all of it. Claims he hasn't since. They've been married 20 years!
Your husband most likely has as well. Men/women with friends that did/do this almost always have as well.
Omg. Yes! For years I heard about my husband’s best friend that was cheating on wife. My husband always acted like it was wrong and we’d be like “I can’t believe he’s doing that”. Well- guess what? 18 years in I found out (completely blindsided!!) my husband was cheating. Never ever in a million years would I (or his/my family) have thought he’d ever do this. Perfect family man and husband and all. We had a great sex life/great marriage/relationship.
I have heard from numerous other people similar stories. It’s some weird psychological way of confessing without confessing and testing the waters.