Anonymous wrote:Would you date someone who admitted to a failed marriage due to cheating? This is someone who is good-looking with a good career and appears to be a good parent. But loss of love/X led to cheating. Not sure if this is worth exploring further.
Anonymous wrote:Would you date someone who admitted to a failed marriage due to cheating? This is someone who is good-looking with a good career and appears to be a good parent. But loss of love/X led to cheating. Not sure if this is worth exploring further.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most divorced men have cheated so that narrows the dating pool a ton.
Classic DCUM, toss around "most X have done Y" like you personally conducted a statisically valid survey. Can the unearned confidence and give OP an actual experience you can describe which she might find helpful. But throwing around huge generalizations means nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with so many of these posts, specifically about the loss of love thing. Marriage is hard and love takes on different forms throughout and as time goes on. To cheat because you don't feel same love for a spouse, rather than talk to them and try really hard to work through it, shows a real lack of character and integrity as many others have said. I would not risk it as you already feel some trust issues and that's too important to sacrifice.
+1
People who constantly seek that passionate kind of love after 10+ years of marriage with kids are immature emotionally and mentally.
Marriage has its ups and downs, boredom, challenges. But, it's a commitment to that marriage.
If you don't think you can handle that, then don't get married, at the least, don't have children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you date someone who admitted to a failed marriage due to cheating? This is someone who is good-looking with a good career and appears to be a good parent. But loss of love/X led to cheating. Not sure if this is worth exploring further.
I don’t judge as harshly as I did when I was younger, having an affair after 25 years of marriage where the previous eight had no warmth or affection is a lot different than sleeping with an Applebee’s hostess when your wife is on bedrest.
I’d have to ask more questions about what the relationship was like in the years leading up to his cheating, his cheating could’ve been an absolute relief to his wife, maybe she didn’t have the courage to end the relationship without citing some major offense, she could have purposely withheld affection and emotional intimacy to isolate and drive him away. Ask more questions then make the call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if you all shot and killed someone, no one should give you a second chance?
What the fuck?
Why would I ever be shooting (and killing) anyone? What a bizarre leap. But no, I don't think I'd want to date a murder either...
Cheating is like murder of a relationship I guess?
The point is giving second chances… So quick to judge.
The point is there's nothing wrong with not wanting to date a murderer or a cheater. But I guess you can always start writing prisoners if you want to give them a second chance!
Glad you all are not called for jury duty. Every defendant would hang.
Anonymous wrote:Would you date someone who admitted to a failed marriage due to cheating? This is someone who is good-looking with a good career and appears to be a good parent. But loss of love/X led to cheating. Not sure if this is worth exploring further.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with so many of these posts, specifically about the loss of love thing. Marriage is hard and love takes on different forms throughout and as time goes on. To cheat because you don't feel same love for a spouse, rather than talk to them and try really hard to work through it, shows a real lack of character and integrity as many others have said. I would not risk it as you already feel some trust issues and that's too important to sacrifice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if you all shot and killed someone, no one should give you a second chance?
What the fuck?
Why would I ever be shooting (and killing) anyone? What a bizarre leap. But no, I don't think I'd want to date a murder either...
Cheating is like murder of a relationship I guess?
The point is giving second chances… So quick to judge.
The point is there's nothing wrong with not wanting to date a murderer or a cheater. But I guess you can always start writing prisoners if you want to give them a second chance!
Anonymous wrote:Would you date someone who admitted to a failed marriage due to cheating? This is someone who is good-looking with a good career and appears to be a good parent. But loss of love/X led to cheating. Not sure if this is worth exploring further.