Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is something very primal that comes out when someone tries to directly come at your family in the way OW search social media about the wife and wish her ill will do they can win “the prize”. It’s a protection of children. Very mama bear.
Gross no. You primal “mama bear” instruct should be to leave your loser husband. The other woman is irrelevant
Gross is also cyberstalking the wife and her friends/family. These situations bring out the worst of all human behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is something very primal that comes out when someone tries to directly come at your family in the way OW search social media about the wife and wish her ill will do they can win “the prize”. It’s a protection of children. Very mama bear.
Gross no. You primal “mama bear” instruct should be to leave your loser husband. The other woman is irrelevant
Gross is also cyberstalking the wife and her friends/family. These situations bring out the worst of all human behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is something very primal that comes out when someone tries to directly come at your family in the way OW search social media about the wife and wish her ill will do they can win “the prize”. It’s a protection of children. Very mama bear.
Gross no. You primal “mama bear” instruct should be to leave your loser husband. The other woman is irrelevant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the (unmarried, anyway) AP didn't take a vow to be faithful to the wronged spouse.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
Or, if you are capable, think about how your child would feel if their spouse cheated on them. Do you really want to be the catalyst for causing another person, another family, that kind of pain?
Cheaters/APs/OW/OM
are unempathetic, selfish, self-centered people.
Unwilling to take any blame in a gross situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, the (unmarried, anyway) AP didn't take a vow to be faithful to the wronged spouse.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
Or, if you are capable, think about how your child would feel if their spouse cheated on them. Do you really want to be the catalyst for causing another person, another family, that kind of pain?
Anonymous wrote:There is something very primal that comes out when someone tries to directly come at your family in the way OW search social media about the wife and wish her ill will do they can win “the prize”. It’s a protection of children. Very mama bear.
Anonymous wrote:Well, the (unmarried, anyway) AP didn't take a vow to be faithful to the wronged spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They may not have known.
They know. Why can't they do to his house??? Why do they have to meet at odd times???
Most know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of them suck. I'm always amazed by the apologists.
I had a really, really crappy college boyfriend who cheated on me a ton (and told me it was on me to get over it! Nice!)
In my last year of college, I moved to DC for a semester internship - and kind of had a rebirth (dated guys who I wouldn't typically date, hung out with people outside my typical social circle, etc). For a brief one month period, I dated a guy with a girlfriend back home in Europe. I can tell you what was in my headspace: That someone had treated me so badly for 3 years that it was awesome to be the one with the power in the relationship and know I was helping f someone else over.
It's probably the least moral thing I've ever done, and just something I needed to get out of my system (and absolutely did make me feel better about my dating health). I met DH a few months later, and 25 years later we have (and have always had) an extremely healthy relationship.
But when I think about APs and being blameless... yeah, I just think back briefly to where my head was for that one month, and yeah it's clear that APs deserve almost as much blame as the cheater.
So hurt people hurt people?
Anonymous wrote:They may not have known.
Anonymous wrote:Both of them suck. I'm always amazed by the apologists.
I had a really, really crappy college boyfriend who cheated on me a ton (and told me it was on me to get over it! Nice!)
In my last year of college, I moved to DC for a semester internship - and kind of had a rebirth (dated guys who I wouldn't typically date, hung out with people outside my typical social circle, etc). For a brief one month period, I dated a guy with a girlfriend back home in Europe. I can tell you what was in my headspace: That someone had treated me so badly for 3 years that it was awesome to be the one with the power in the relationship and know I was helping f someone else over.
It's probably the least moral thing I've ever done, and just something I needed to get out of my system (and absolutely did make me feel better about my dating health). I met DH a few months later, and 25 years later we have (and have always had) an extremely healthy relationship.
But when I think about APs and being blameless... yeah, I just think back briefly to where my head was for that one month, and yeah it's clear that APs deserve almost as much blame as the cheater.
Anonymous wrote:I don't condone sleeping with married people, or other affair behavior. I certainly don't engage in that behavior myself. And I can understand feeling anger and hatred towards someone who slept with my spouse.
But there are many people out there who talk about a married man having an affair as if they are blameless, and the OW is the problem. They'll use words like "homewrecker" that imply this. Or they'll imply that she's the one deserving of consequences. I've heard of people whose husband had an affair at work, who have sought to have the OW fired (but not the husband). Or they'll work on forgiveness towards him, and not towards her. They'll be polite to him in front of the children (for their sake) but then awful to her (which is also hard for the children).
In my mind, if my husband had an affair, then both people would be doing something wrong, but only one of them would be doing it to me, and that's the person who made vows to me and broke them. Being more angry at or less forgiving towards the OW, implying it's more her fault than his, or that her behavior is more personal to me than his doesn't make sense to me.