How would you handle it?
Posted: Fri Aug 04, 2006 8:08 am
This question is meant to apply to both sides of this little cautionary tale. I ran across this story out of the web and I thought I'd throw it up for discussion. A man and woman are married for twenty years, with three children. In their first year of marriage, following the birth of their first child, she had an extra-marital affair. He caught her. What followed is the usual mess of shouting, screaming, tears, and therapy; followed by a decision to try and save their marriage. Which they did, mostly. I say mostly because while she's been faithful ever since (this story was her POV so you can take that with as big a grain of salt as you wish) and they've been mostly happy, there is one serious fly in the ointment. Everytime they have a serious argument, he plays the "you cheated on me" card and she feels driven by her guilt to back down.
My problems here are two.
The first is, once a cheater, always a cheater. You can't take it back, or make it unhappen. It's done. And the odds are damn high that it will be done again. That being the case, in the man's shoes, I'd have filed for divorce forthwith. He can never trust her again.
My second problem is with his behavior now. Forgiveness is a process, but once it's done, it's like marriage *should* be. You're either in it all the way, or you aren't in it at all. You'll never forget as long as you live, but once you forgive, that's it. His using her mistake as a bludgeon to get his way borders on emotional abuse. He should have cut her free years ago, rather than put both of them through this....either that or he needs to grow the hell up and honor *his* commitment to forgive her.
Opinions?
My problems here are two.
The first is, once a cheater, always a cheater. You can't take it back, or make it unhappen. It's done. And the odds are damn high that it will be done again. That being the case, in the man's shoes, I'd have filed for divorce forthwith. He can never trust her again.
My second problem is with his behavior now. Forgiveness is a process, but once it's done, it's like marriage *should* be. You're either in it all the way, or you aren't in it at all. You'll never forget as long as you live, but once you forgive, that's it. His using her mistake as a bludgeon to get his way borders on emotional abuse. He should have cut her free years ago, rather than put both of them through this....either that or he needs to grow the hell up and honor *his* commitment to forgive her.
Opinions?