Anonymous wrote:Yikes. All the people on this thread who think cheating is indicative of a mental disorder, sociopathic personality, evil, etc. Please read a book. Your post-industrial, western, protestant cultural values do not define mental illness and sociopathy. People have been "cheating" for forever and will continue to do so and it doesn't mean they're mentally ill or sociopaths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is not developing in the way some people had probably thought it would.
Seems like there's damn near a playbook as most cheaters follow very similar patterns, especially once they're caught. Bottom line is cheaters, especially those of the serial variety, will not change.
Anonymous wrote:All people are a mix of good and bad, rarely is a person just one thing or the other. Some people who are very accomplished professionally, for example, are not very nice personally. Other people are generally very nice, but have some failing or unhealthy trait. It is not hard to imagine that an extramarital cheater can also be a nice woman or a good guy, or even an asset to their families. Such things happen in life, accept it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is not developing in the way some people had probably thought it would.
For whom? It develops in the way that every single thread on cheating goes.
Cheater is an awful person who can never reform.
Divorce, leave, never consider reconciling.
Everyone (except for you) is an expert.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is not developing in the way some people had probably thought it would.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All people are a mix of good and bad, rarely is a person just one thing or the other. Some people who are very accomplished professionally, for example, are not very nice personally. Other people are generally very nice, but have some failing or unhealthy trait. It is not hard to imagine that an extramarital cheater can also be a nice woman or a good guy, or even an asset to their families. Such things happen in life, accept it.
Yeah. Not. I will not accept a spouse’s cheating.
Exactly. In PP's life all they've known is dysfunction, so it's more normalized. Like people who steal, do drugs, stay on welfare because those around them have modeled that behavior.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is not developing in the way some people had probably thought it would.
Anonymous wrote:I will say that my childhood friend exhibits a manipulative side. For example, he has a stable of stories about traumatic life experiences, all true, that I have seen him employ in a charm offensive over the years at parties, a part of his human seduction manual designed to garner sympathy, and portray himself as the good, sensitive guy. I have eyeroll only because I have heard them so many times over the years and know their purpose.
Also, he tends to have affairs with women who are suffering from low self-esteem, much younger women with weight issues, or women closer to his age whose husbands have left them. That said, his nurturing and supportive personality does give them some confidence. In the case of one young woman she has subsequently lost the weight and has become a professional rock star in his area of expertise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All people are a mix of good and bad, rarely is a person just one thing or the other. Some people who are very accomplished professionally, for example, are not very nice personally. Other people are generally very nice, but have some failing or unhealthy trait. It is not hard to imagine that an extramarital cheater can also be a nice woman or a good guy, or even an asset to their families. Such things happen in life, accept it.
Yeah. Not. I will not accept a spouse’s cheating.