Anonymous wrote:Your husband needs to get over it. He cheated.
It is his responsibility (and should be top priority) to make sure you feel safe, validated, loved, cared for, and given anything you need - emotionally - in order to continue healing from HIS infidelity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op should not even be fooling with this nonsense. The thought that she can make this marriage work is naive and stupid.
I think they are trying to work themselves out of this mess DH created. While OP has every right to do so, what she's doing is counter-productive getting to the end goal of saving the marriage.
I think you are right.
NP, never been cheated and never been cheated on (well, there was a woman in college who later admitted she "would have if he wanted to," and I'd had my suspicions that he scoffed at that time, but nothing happened, so I'm not counting it).
But look -- marriage can't be an indefinite penalty period. I'm not saying that he did wasn't terrible, or that anyone cheated on doesn't have a right to feel betrayed and eternally terribly changed, but then maybe the union is over. People do get to leave. They pay a price, and that is financial, in reputation, and in all kinds of ways -- but they can choose to pay the price, even if they did something terrible.
If you killed someone and served your time in prison, you pay a huge penalty -- both the imprisonment as well as the record as a felon. But if you go somewhere to start fresh, and you have paid the price, you ware never the same but you get to have a quiet life with it behind you. You aren't the same, and certainly the murder victim isn't, but you do get to look for a peaceful if constrained happiness.
Maybe it just cant be fixed sometimes. That's awful, but it's never going to be the case that someone has to stay with you if things continue to be unbearable. It just isn't. And I'm so sorry it happened to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is doomed.
Why do you say this?
You are never going to let it go. You will always have questions. Even 10 years from now you will have doubts and questions. He will get tired of eating shit.
Seems like if he doesn't want to eat shit, he shouldn't poop in the house. He's got to clean up the problem he made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is doomed.
Why do you say this?
You are never going to let it go. You will always have questions. Even 10 years from now you will have doubts and questions. He will get tired of eating shit.
Seems like if he doesn't want to eat shit, he shouldn't poop in the house. He's got to clean up the problem he made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is doomed.
Why do you say this?
You are never going to let it go. You will always have questions. Even 10 years from now you will have doubts and questions. He will get tired of eating shit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is doomed.
Why do you say this?
You are never going to let it go. You will always have questions. Even 10 years from now you will have doubts and questions. He will get tired of eating shit.
If he wants to stay with her, he will do what he needs to do to and will be patient.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is doomed.
Why do you say this?
You are never going to let it go. You will always have questions. Even 10 years from now you will have doubts and questions. He will get tired of eating shit.
If he wants to stay with her, he will do what he needs to do to and will be patient.
Anonymous wrote:Frustrated. We are close to completing an infidelity course/which included therapy sessions with an expert in this area. (3 month thing)
Affair is over, but it was an “I love you”, 8 month type thing. I literally think about it and things he said to her about me, our marriage, etc constantly (I have texts).
While my marriage is in a positive trending place, and I’m hopeful about the future, I still bring things up, ask questions and it seems to really annoy my husband. He knows he “should” answer but I worry that it’s causing problems for us even though my thoughts, questions, constant imagery is definitely causing problems for me.
Feeling very damned if I do, damned if I don’t dilemma
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is doomed.
Why do you say this?
You are never going to let it go. You will always have questions. Even 10 years from now you will have doubts and questions. He will get tired of eating shit.