No, of course not, there’s no monopoly on pain, and it isn’t a pain Olympics to see who has the most. What I am saying, men will more likely than women forgive an EA only as long as there was no sex. That’s just facts. Most men who have been betrayed where the EA didn’t cross the physical line all say the same "if it had become physical I’m gone". Again, no, not all men. And no shortage of women who are beyond devastated by WH having sex with AP. Generally, most women are upset over I love you and the emotional connection, I am in the camp of once I found out it was both PA and EA everything changed and I was able to stand up to the crap I was being thrown. Read all of the BH stories on here, almost all of them are able to keep fighting for the marriage because they suspect the A hadn’t crossed the physical barrier.
Oof. No.
The reason we do not speak in generalities here is because they are presented as facts.
It’s just not true that men value physical intimacy more than women do. Or that men do not have the complexity to be hurt about an EA. It shortchanges who we are in a human level.
I think it’s more about the individual than the gender. There are men who feel they have been emasculated in their wife’s affair, just like there are women who feel that same ego strike, it simply doesn’t have a name. The path through is to accept your wife never owned your masculinity. Your masculinity belongs to you. Just like females who have been cheated on can feel a strike about their appearance or sexual prowess, they have to get to the place they can see their husband is not and end all be all judge to that.
In my situation, my husband was more upset about my extreme attachment to the other man. We had the whole hysterical bonding in two long cycles. In his affair there wasn’t a big emotional connection, but it was extremely sexual. That fucked me up. I could t have sex with him, and when we did I would have mind movies and have to stop. I knew her and interacted with her all the time and the setting was our house. So with that level of familiarity, the movies were vivid. There were many times I thought we should divorce because I truly thought we may never recover a sex life again.
Being called a whore constantly has little to do with OP wanting a divorce.
I can be patient with a new bs who is still reeling when it comes to yelling, name calling, throwing stuff…that is all normal behavior.
The timeline she released to him three years ago. Being called a whore on a regular basis is a way that he is wearing her down. It’s unacceptable. I am not sure I would tolerate it past once. This is a verbally abusive relationship, and her bs is not taking any responsibility for himself. This is not normal and we should NOT normalize it.
I
don’t normally condone this, but have you considered something like a separation or something similar, and allow him to be with other women? In my situation, though I didn’t take her up on it, something that has allowed me to move forward is that my WW willingly agreed that if I wanted to I could. And it was all about me having sex with other women, not about relationships or a revenge affair. In fact she brought it up, and admitted how horrible it would be for her, but that she knew if it was important for us to continue she accepted it as a consequence. For me, just her willingness was more than enough and has allowed me to start healing.
The reason it’s enough for you is because your wife found her empathy in the middle of this conversation. That is what helped you the most. She was able to see how painful it would be.
To execute this is a bigger mess waiting to happen. First, there would be this whole other innocent person you are now dragging into the relationship to be potentially hurt. Secondly, if you think this would cause no resentment you are wrong. Humans can’t do things that neatly. Third, it would expose another potential hazard to the relationship because affairs are highly addictive. And fourth, you don’t fight fire with fire, you fight it with water. Escalating the situation will only make it go off the rails further.
Also as a former ws, I will say that my belief system is much stronger now, but when my husband cheated after I did all it did was make me angry that he spent three years being upset about something that suddenly he must have felt was okay. That he couldn’t possibly value fidelity like he was saying.
Of course, that wasn’t exactly true either. There is no getting evn, it just doesn’t work that way. Had I given him a hall pass, it would have been to try and get him to shut up about it.
Healing is the only way through this shit show. And healing can entail being together or getting a divorce. And the other person can’t help you do that. They can only provide an environment in which you can do that work.
I personally think if he is unwilling to get professional help, then she is left with no choice but to divorce him.
[This message edited by hikingout at 6:18 PM, Thursday, March 14th]