** member to member **
life is too short to keep patching a life raft with holes in it.
I'm not aware of people who have R'ed and who report they 'keep patching holes in a life raft.' Most of the people in R don't seem to give 3rd chances. Some people report doing some rug-sweeping and having that bite them years later, but that's not R, even though some (many? most?) experts recommend that approach.
Yes, to R, we all have to run a risk of our WSes repeating a betrayal - but everybody has to run a risk of being betrayed by new partners.
Yes, my W & I both have to work to maintain our M. Does anyone know someone who doesn't have to do that work?
I feel that people show you what they think of you, what you mean to them, or what their priorities are, and I pretty much take them at what it seems to be.
That reads as if it comes from a belief that the A(s) are pretty much about the BS. IMO, Affairs are about the WS's issues with themself, not with the BS or the M. Too many really great people are BSes for me to blame them for their partners' As.
In this case I was specifically interested in the reasons why some acts were unforgivable to some people and other acts were forgivable. Trying to gauge any logic or rational for these decisions. I think getting to the root of this could actually be quite clarifying.
You don't seem to accept the logic of R, which is one form or another of, 'i thought it was my best option.'
Maybe if you change how you formulate your questions, you'll get more out of the responses.
Hmmm, I am still wondering how this specifically relates to you and your experience. Why is this important to you? I mean, I'm curious about a ton of things and how people think of them sure. But why this? Have you asked yourself why you concentrate on this and not the birds in your yard or whatever?
Me, too.
I'd be interested in your answer, but that's irrelevant. You are the beneficiary of answering these questions for yourself.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 5:06 AM, Friday, August 22nd]
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex apDDay - 12/22/2010Recover'd and R'edYou don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.