Anonymous wrote:Well, I'm a DW with a young child under 5 who cheated with a DH with a young child under 5. Guess we are both going to rot in hell...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh please. Women on here are so clueless when it comes to why people cheat. You think "ethics" and "morals" is going to keep your DH home at night. Cheating is about opportunity but MOST men who have a fruitful life at home are not looking to seize on the opportunity. And some of you even refuse to acknowledge that your mate raised this issue before stepping out the door. You become humorless shrews and expect your DH to just sit there and take sex whenever you dole it out. If your DH or DW cheats, something is missing at home. Period!
Statistics? Please educate yourself on this. People (especially men) cheat even when happily married. Women who cheat are more likely looking for an exit affair - once that causes the implosion of the marriage. Men are just looking for an easy lay.
Right...because STATISTICS have the answer especially when they validate what women already think. Men and women alike cheat for the same reasons - because shit is not right at home. You and all those other wives can cite whatever statistics prove your point - but anyone who uses statistics as a reason that their marriage went South is delusional. If that is the case, your DH is ALWAYS one willing woman away from cheating no matter how well things are going. That does not sound like snake oil to you? If that is the case, marriage is a hopeless endeavor.
Anonymous wrote:The thread about comfort level with DH's female friends got me thinking. There is a special place in hell for women who cheat with married men with young kids. I'm not excusing the husbands' behavior; they are unquestionably responsible, but there are two players in every affair. Maybe a 20 year old girl gets some kind of pass for being clueless about what new parenthood (or marriage or adulthood) is like. But holy heck, ladies, how about a little solidarity with our fellow moms? You may have your own baggage to deal with, but if you're even close to a boundary with a married recent father, couldn't you just pause for a minute to remember yourself as a new mom, have some empathy for his wife, and not make her already challenging few years complete misery?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh please. Happiness coming from within can just as easily hold the cheated on spouse to blame. After all, they should find happiness with and not blame others, right?
Interesting. So if, say, a burglar breaks into my home and steals my silver, or my DH decides to pawn it, I should blame myself? Because happiness comes from within?
I am increasingly convinced that you are incapable of rational thought.
Classic DCUM mistake, you are addressing more than one poster who disagrees with you.
And your logic makes no sense. Inatimate objects do not participate in relationships nor are men who have affairs "stolen" with zero culpability. You are flawed.
You are really the most ludicrous person. You just said that happiness comes from within, so if someone wrongs you, it is your fault. There is no way to blame anyone who actually acts against you. That is precisely what you said. And now you are trying to claim that I think "inanimate objects" are in relationships? WHAT?
I have, however, gone beyond thinking that you are irrational. I now think you are an especially moronic troll. There is no way that a person with an IQ over 75 would not understand the original analogy.
I did not say that!!! You are (mis)quoting me. You are quoting TWO posters and I AM NOT the poster who said happiness comes from within.
Stop assuming you are responding to one person. Multiple people respond here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There are certainly people who Drink because they are unhappy in their marriages. Men and women. There are also people who Drink for the hell of it. Men and women. Marriages do not go bad on their own. I think that people use these things to justify each other more often than appropriate. "I was unhappy so I drink" is certainly true some of the time. It is not victim blaming.
Or shoot heroin
Or gamble
Or eat
It's the marriage that causes all these ills of life.
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You understand nothing about addiction.
Yes I do.
You said that marriage causes people to drink, shoot heroin, gamble and eat. Complete nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh please. Happiness coming from within can just as easily hold the cheated on spouse to blame. After all, they should find happiness with and not blame others, right?
Interesting. So if, say, a burglar breaks into my home and steals my silver, or my DH decides to pawn it, I should blame myself? Because happiness comes from within?
I am increasingly convinced that you are incapable of rational thought.
Classic DCUM mistake, you are addressing more than one poster who disagrees with you.
And your logic makes no sense. Inatimate objects do not participate in relationships nor are men who have affairs "stolen" with zero culpability. You are flawed.
You are really the most ludicrous person. You just said that happiness comes from within, so if someone wrongs you, it is your fault. There is no way to blame anyone who actually acts against you. That is precisely what you said. And now you are trying to claim that I think "inanimate objects" are in relationships? WHAT?
I have, however, gone beyond thinking that you are irrational. I now think you are an especially moronic troll. There is no way that a person with an IQ over 75 would not understand the original analogy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There are certainly people who Drink because they are unhappy in their marriages. Men and women. There are also people who Drink for the hell of it. Men and women. Marriages do not go bad on their own. I think that people use these things to justify each other more often than appropriate. "I was unhappy so I drink" is certainly true some of the time. It is not victim blaming.
Or shoot heroin
Or gamble
Or eat
It's the marriage that causes all these ills of life.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
You understand nothing about addiction.
Yes I do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh please. Happiness coming from within can just as easily hold the cheated on spouse to blame. After all, they should find happiness with and not blame others, right?
Interesting. So if, say, a burglar breaks into my home and steals my silver, or my DH decides to pawn it, I should blame myself? Because happiness comes from within?
I am increasingly convinced that you are incapable of rational thought.
Classic DCUM mistake, you are addressing more than one poster who disagrees with you.
And your logic makes no sense. Inatimate objects do not participate in relationships nor are men who have affairs "stolen" with zero culpability. You are flawed.
You are really the most ludicrous person. You just said that happiness comes from within, so if someone wrongs you, it is your fault. There is no way to blame anyone who actually acts against you. That is precisely what you said. And now you are trying to claim that I think "inanimate objects" are in relationships? WHAT?
I have, however, gone beyond thinking that you are irrational. I now think you are an especially moronic troll. There is no way that a person with an IQ over 75 would not understand the original analogy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There are certainly people who Drink because they are unhappy in their marriages. Men and women. There are also people who Drink for the hell of it. Men and women. Marriages do not go bad on their own. I think that people use these things to justify each other more often than appropriate. "I was unhappy so I drink" is certainly true some of the time. It is not victim blaming.
Or shoot heroin
Or gamble
Or eat
It's the marriage that causes all these ills of life.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
You understand nothing about addiction.
Anonymous wrote:
There are certainly people who Drink because they are unhappy in their marriages. Men and women. There are also people who Drink for the hell of it. Men and women. Marriages do not go bad on their own. I think that people use these things to justify each other more often than appropriate. "I was unhappy so I drink" is certainly true some of the time. It is not victim blaming.
Or shoot heroin
Or gamble
Or eat
It's the marriage that causes all these ills of life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh please. Happiness coming from within can just as easily hold the cheated on spouse to blame. After all, they should find happiness with and not blame others, right?
Interesting. So if, say, a burglar breaks into my home and steals my silver, or my DH decides to pawn it, I should blame myself? Because happiness comes from within?
I am increasingly convinced that you are incapable of rational thought.
Classic DCUM mistake, you are addressing more than one poster who disagrees with you.
And your logic makes no sense. Inatimate objects do not participate in relationships nor are men who have affairs "stolen" with zero culpability. You are flawed.
Anonymous wrote:Former OW here. I never wanted him to leave his wife. I was terrified of her finding out, his kids finding out, ruining their image of him as a father. I still feel intense guilt about the fact that she doesn't know this about him. But then I think maybe it's better for her since it's over, or maybe she sort of suspected but didn't dig in to find out.
There is a special place in hell for us though, and it's right here on earth. I fell deeply in love with him, but couldn't be with him. Even if he had wanted a divorce I wouldn't have wanted him that way, his kids heartbroken, his family tirn apart.
So I'm trying to accept life the way it is, let go and move on. But don't worry about OWs feeling no pain. I guarantee you from reading other boards we are mostly a miserable, self-loathing group trying to build self-esteem without the MM.