Yet, I have enough trust in the posters here who have responded to modify my thinking.
Thanks for that. I've experienced a similar evolution.
It's clear that what works for some doesn't work for all. There are multiple honorable ways to handle betrayal. Sometimes a person has difficulty finding the best path for them. When SIers are at their best, though, we help each other find the best path, however long it takes.
*****
There are ways to determine truth from falsehood that are close to 100% effective. We can all learn them. We can all use them.
Often there are reasons to believe someone is lying, even when one can't define exactly what the reasons may be. That little gut feeling is usually reliable.
A person gets an emotional payoff by refusing to believe, after several years, the WS who says the sex wasn't great. What is it?
The answer is specific to each individual, but I think in all cases, refusing to believe an answer beneficial to the questioners almost forces the questioners to feel awful about themselves.
For some, the refusal pretty clearly comes from uncertainty about their own ability to discern truth/falsehood.
For some, the refusal pretty clearly comes from a fear or other unwillingness to address their own issues.
It's normal and healthy to assume lack of truth for the first 1-2 years of questioning, whenever that starts.
If it takes longer than that to figure out if the WS has become honest, though, I believe the problem is in the BS, and the BS needs to get help.
Maybe the help needed is in learning to detect the difference between truth and falsehood - that is, maybe the BS needs to improve questioning techniques.
Maybe the help needed is figuring out if one's perceptions are reliable - that is, maybe the BS needs an objective observer to help evaluate the answers the BS has gotten.
But maybe the BS needs help knowing and loving themself.
If you refuse to believe your WS, I urge you to ask yourself some questions like these:
Is there something in the way your WS answers questions that makes you doubt your WS's veracity?
What happens to you - externally and internally/emotionally/psychologically - if your WS actually is telling the truth?
[This message edited by sisoon at 12:28 PM, March 1st (Monday)]