Anonymous wrote:To the PP's if your father or mother cheated have you cheated? do you think it makes their kids more likely to cheat since they share usually same personality traits?
Anonymous wrote:Haven't read through the pages, but my dad cheated on my mom repeatedly and left her for another woman (shockingly, it didn't work out). As an adult, I really don't think about it and am not hurt by it. He cheated on her, not me. Also, everyone makes mistakes, and there are two sides to every story. I just don't feel like it is my place to judge him too harshly for things he did a long time ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven't read through the pages, but my dad cheated on my mom repeatedly and left her for another woman (shockingly, it didn't work out). As an adult, I really don't think about it and am not hurt by it. He cheated on her, not me. Also, everyone makes mistakes, and there are two sides to every story. I just don't feel like it is my place to judge him too harshly for things he did a long time ago.
Yeah destroying a family and ruining your mom's life isn't a big deal. what's worse....murder?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the expectation that parents should allow their children's needs to completely supersede their own is damaging.
Bullshit. Putting your kids needs before your own is called "being a parent" and "being an adult".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ehh, I'm in the unusual spot that my Mom cheated. And actually left home to be with those guy(s) ... when I was like little-- in and out of my life from when I was 6-10. My parents eventually reconciled when my Mom realized she wasn't going to get any spousal support and would only see my brother and I on weekends. My parents are actually coming up on their 50th wedding anniversary this summer, so it all "worked out". I had a lot of anger towards my Mom when I was younger, but it's turned to mostly sadness now that I've had my own kids. I, for the life of me, cannot FATHOM either one of my boys (they are 2 and 4) being in elementary school and my wants and desires outweighing their need of a mom at home. My Dad is kind of, dull... but certainly not abusive/hard to live with, etc. A hardworker and very kind (obviously, since he took that cheatin hoe bag back - lol) so it wasn't like there was another side to the story that I'm missing. They married VERY young (like 19) and my Mom always said she was "sowing her wild oats". Like I said, everyone makes mistakes but I just can't imagine intentionally hurting my kids like she hurt me. It just breaks my heart to think that so many of my issues with trust and relationships (and even food to a certain extent, as I used it as a comfort) could have been entirely avoided had she not been interested in feeling good or happier or whatever.
OP - what is your relationship with her like now? It doesn't sound as if she is repentant at all. I have a lot of issues too, mostly trust issues, from my father's cheating. He would come home all happy and normal-acting after sleeping around with even close family friends. When someone you love and trust demonstrates such psychopathic behavior, it makes you realize on some level that you never really quite know anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You realize now as an adult that your father's cheating had nothing to do with his relationship with you, right?
That is horseshit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You realize now as an adult that your father's cheating had nothing to do with his relationship with you, right?
OP - you know, I still feel very personally hurt by it. Because of his actions, my childhood was full of fights between my parents and he ultimately destroyed my family, what was supposed to be my safe place. Now that I am a parent in my own right, I actually feel more contempt for him. If only for the sake of my young child, I would rather leave my marriage honorably than destroy it with sleeping around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the expectation that parents should allow their children's needs to completely supersede their own is damaging.
Bullshit. Putting your kids needs before your own is called "being a parent" and "being an adult".
Doing it to your detriment is called being a martyr.
There is no "detriment" associated with NOT CHEATING so your response is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:"It occurred to us, from observation and reasoning, that extramarital sex was not what really destroyed marriages, but rather the lies and deception that invariably accompanied it -- that was the culprit. So we decided to give ourselves permission to sleep with other partners if we wished -- as long as what we did was honest as well as private, and that neither of us exposed the family to scandal or disease. We had to be discreet and, if the word can be apt, honorable in our behavior, both to ourselves, to whomever else might be involved, and most of all, to the family. And for the most part, we were."
-- Ossie Davis
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the expectation that parents should allow their children's needs to completely supersede their own is damaging.
Bullshit. Putting your kids needs before your own is called "being a parent" and "being an adult".
Doing it to your detriment is called being a martyr.
Anonymous wrote:What about monogamish relationships? My DW and I are open and take other partners into our bed and it is not the business of our children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about monogamish relationships? My DW and I are open and take other partners into our bed and it is not the business of our children.
they will eventually know of your fetishes and will then think it's ok to break oaths when married.