TomLovesBecky
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 5, 2008
- Messages
- 778
Exactly. It is so easy to say what you would do, when you have not been in that situation. I know someone who was adamant that cheating was a deal breaker. If she knew someone in that situation, it was all about throwing the bum to the curb. She was tough. Until..........she found out her husband was having an affair. She was so incredible. She refused to end the marriage, and worked so hard at getting back on track. It was amazing. She was heartsick and physically sick, but when faced with ending her 18 year marriage, she couldn't do it. She wasn't going to give her husband up to another woman, so she fought, and she fought hard. I have not been in touch with her for a few years, but last I knew they were doing great. They were almost back to a normal, happy family.
Ever since this happened, I have decided that I really don't know what i would do. I have stopped passing judgement the people who stay.
Bottom line, until you have walked in those shoes, you really don't know what you would do. JMO
That's the storybook ending. In reality, some of us KNOW we could not tolerate a cheater. Your friend was operating on the assumption that to give up an 18 year marriage would be worse than leaving someone who had disrespected her, humiliated her, and risked her life. I don't feel the same way. I think it's a very romanticized view of life, to think that your friend is a heroine for what she did. She made her choice, did what was best for her. I don't fault her for that. But I don't think that makes her better than anyone else. I think it makes her a human being with different fears, priorities, and choices than me. I don't pass judgment on those who stay, but I believe the VAST majority of American spouses would eventually end a marriage over infidelity. Divorce is so common these days that it's really not a stigma anymore, especially when the other spouse is the cheater and there is a socially acceptable "reason" to leave. I should know, I have been divorced (not because of cheating, however), and not one person ever made a disparaging remark about me being divorced. I know I felt like a failure for it for a while, but not because anyone said something to me. I would never feel pressure to stay with a cheater, and yes I know this 100%. Would it be hard on my kids, yes. I see what divorce, even though it was the right thing to do, has done to my older two. But that doesn't make it right to swallow that much anger and sadness and live everyday with the knowledge that my husband had sex with another woman and then came home and slept with me. Absolutely unforgivable in my eyes no matter how you slice it.