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Confronting perceived biases (A post to avoid thread jacking )

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 DRSOOLERS (original poster member #85508) posted at 10:42 PM on Thursday, May 29th, 2025

Context: moving over a discussion with HikingOut to here so not to thread jack.

This is a very narrow and inaccurate depiction, and is at the heart as to why several people have said to you that you believe people who r are softer, and the way you describe it does lend itself to believe you do have a stance in what is strong and what is weak.

Well, I clearly disagree with this assessment and believe I could write extensively to explain why.

Firstly, it seems evident that individuals who are more forgiving and empathetic are generally more inclined to engage in reconciliation. While this might seem self-evident, consider this circumstantial evidence:

Empathy is generally observed to be higher in females than males. Interestingly, data on infidelity and divorce suggests that although men are statistically more likely to engage in infidelity, they are also more likely to divorce because of it. It seems unlikely that this is a mere coincidence; women's generally higher empathy levels might indeed correlate with a greater capacity for forgiveness or a stronger motivation to work through marital transgressions. Do you not consider this a relevant factor?

Similarly, reconciliation appears to be significantly more prevalent among religious individuals. Given that many religions emphasize forgiveness as a core virtue, it seems plausible that this religious inclination influences the outcome of infidelity.

I could elaborate on this point at length, but to me, it seems intuitive that there's a connection between an individual's empathetic nature, the value they place on forgiveness, and their openness to reconciliation. To suggest otherwise feels akin to denying a correlation between someone's proneness to anger and their potential for violence. While not every short-tempered person is violent, a clear correlation exists.

Now before anyone goes here, I'm aware correlation doesn't necessarily mean causation however circumstantially we have buckets of evidence in this case that it does.

Secondly, I agree that both sets of characteristics can be defined as strengths. I'm unsure why you believe I'm asserting one is preferable to the other. Perhaps there's a general unconscious bias surrounding the terms used, where "logical" and "principled" are often perceived as strong, while "empathetic" and "forgiving" are seen as soft. However, this is a general societal interpretation, and I concur that it takes considerable strength to be both forgiving and empathetic. Often strength I personally lack.

Truthfully, I think many people who R are independent thinkers

What leads you to this conclusion? I'm not necessarily saying you're wrong, but I don't immediately see the logical connection.

Highly Codependent people have a hard time reconciling a lot of times because in order to do it the codependency has to shift more towards independence.

Or perhaps nothing shifts at all, which I suspect might be the more common scenario.

What you've described is required for successful, by the book R perhaps. We can't know answer to this but what does your gut tell you the percentage of victims of infidelity that truly R and do the work required Vs those who simply stay together? I suspect far more stay together. I'm not wedded to that just seems to be the case from accounts I've followed.

I would agree highly codependent people may be more likely to rug sweep and stay married, but likely remain somewhat unhealed and unhappy.

Agreed. I'm falling into the whole staying together Vs reconciliation trap again aren't I?

My husband is not at all the codependent type. He is also not particularly empathetic or forgiving. He is very matter of fact and subscribes greatly to stoicism. I just think he has ultimately different values than you do. I would classify him as highly logical and principled. Despite his ws status- because he demonstrates that in so many ways in his life.

While I can't comment on your husband specifically, your assessment likely holds true. It's entirely possible for him to choose reconciliation even if it seems at odds with his core characteristics and principles. My point is that, on average, someone with his described traits is likely to find the process of reconciliation more challenging and therefore might be less inclined to pursue it / successful with should they do so.

All the bs on this site that did reconcile that I can recollect, took charge, required a lot more, and was willing to lose the marriage if those requirements were not met.

"All" of them? That's a very broad statement. Without naming specific individuals, it's quite clear to me that many members here have reconciled without necessarily adhering to all of those conditions. While I can't provide exact percentages, my observation suggests a roughly 50/50 split in terms of betrayed spouses firmly setting demands versus those who adopt a more accepting approach.

And as for divorce, I think many of the bs who did that are more the forgiving, empathetic type, but left due to their ws’s overall issues before or after the infidelity.

I completely agree with this point, and I don't believe it contradicts my earlier statements. The nature and behavior of the wayward spouse will significantly influence the outcome, regardless of the betrayed spouse's personality. My focus was on the betrayed spouse's inherent inclination or desire to pursue reconciliation in general. Sometimes, even if they wish to reconcile, the actions or character of their partner might make it impossible.

And a heck of a lot of bs’s here would have a mixture of these two personalities you just wrote about.

Agreed. Of course, these six traits I've mentioned are merely illustrative examples. Human personality is an intricate blend of countless characteristics, resulting in a vast spectrum of individual responses when faced with infidelity. These specific traits simply serve to highlight some clear distinctions in potential outcomes.

Ultimately, my core point is that it would be surprising if a detailed character analysis of individuals who have experienced infidelity didn't reveal a strong correlation between their inherent personality traits and their chosen path forward. While the characteristics of the wayward partner undoubtedly play a significant role, for someone who strongly embodies either the "empathetic/forgiving" or the "logical/principled" set of traits, their inherent disposition will likely heavily influence whether reconciliation or divorce becomes their eventual outcome, almost irrespective of the specific circumstances of the betrayal or the qualities of the betrayer

I do enjoy engaging with people of different mindsets, but I do see what Sissoon is saying because largely you do believe most people who reconcile are just afraid. (Weak?) That’s not true, reconciling is scary, raw, and incredibly difficult.

I do think that many (though not most) people reconcile from fear, do you not think this? I imagine you would concede that not all people who seek reconciliation do so from a position of strength. If so, then we broadly agree that a percentage of individuals reconcile due to fear. We can certainly debate the precise proportion of reconciliations born from fear versus strength, but this discussion would likely depend on the anecdotal examples we've each encountered, as I don't believe definitive data on this specific breakdown exists. Hypothetically, if I were to suggest that 60 percent of people reconcile due to fear, would you consider that an unreasonable estimate?

At this point I could revisit the familiar debate about whether reconciliation or divorce generally requires more strength, but I feel I've covered that ground quite a bit previously.

It's clear that compelling arguments can be made for either side, and I don't believe there's a definitive answer that applies universally.

Personally, for me, reconciliation would demand more strength because it would require a compromise of my core principles, which would be deeply unsettling. It's simply something I wouldn't be able to do.

However, speaking more broadly, two of the most common human fears are the fear of being alone and the fear of change. Divorce inherently forces an individual to confront these fears, while reconciliation does not. Therefore, although the answer varies depending on individual circumstances, I think a general tendency can be observed here.

[This message edited by DRSOOLERS at 10:36 AM, Friday, May 30th]

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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 12:02 AM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

Thanks for creating this thread.

I want to respond more fully but don’t have the time right now but I will address your first point because it’s probably it’s own post.

Men are more likely to divorce over infidelity. You are absolutely right. I learned that shortly after dday, and then read anything I could get my hands on about those stats.

However, there are many reasons why that is true.

-women are more likely to have exit affairs, and it’s harder to reconcile with someone who has an exit affair. A lot of times women develop feelings and don’t give up their AP.

-more men are still the providers. Many women still could not live on their own much less support children.

-Women being in the workforce more than ever lends to more opportunities to cheat —-the workplace is the number one place people find an ap. One would say yeah but that’s been 50 years- but not much has caught up- we have not evolved to keep up with the issues surrounding that women cheat more than men these days. This not only is resulting in more divorces, but it would be fascinating to see a study in why women their early 40’s are leading this pack.

-But the fact men have been the longer cheaters there are a lot of things passed down to us to minimize what that meant- boys wil be boys sort of bullshit. It’s simply more socially palatable to many when a man cheats than a woman. There are names for women who cheat-slut, whore, homewrecker, etc. I don’t know if any of these names for men.

-programming. Men are taught things that get their head and work against them for R. There are names for men whose women cheat- cuck being the top one. There are no such names for a woman. Therefore they are more likely to feel emasculation.

-sex means something different to men than women. I do not mean women do not enjoy sex, value sex, find it bonding. But there are all the evolutionary things mixed in- paternity being a big one, scarcity versus abundance, etc.

-lastly, emotional intelligence exists both in men a and women. To say they are not as empathetic, forgiving, short changes men. I believe it’s actually likely more generational. Each generation that passes the more we are teaching children of both sexes how to be emotionally intelligent. I think men from older generations are more likely to stuff their feelings rather than discuss them, not be as adept at processing them. Whereas women tend to grow up learning to talk about those things.

More later!

[This message edited by hikingout at 12:22 AM, Friday, May 30th]

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OnTheOtherSideOfHell ( member #82983) posted at 4:21 AM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

I didn’t divorce and I am admittedly one of the least forgiving, grudge holding, no empathy having person many have ever met, I am not proud of this but it’s true. I am not sure I have forgiven my husband to this day, while I have created a life I enjoy with him. I stayed for selfish reasons. I knew/know what I wanted in life and that remaining married was the surest way to create it. I did not stay out of love or mercy for him although I do have love for him. I stayed because my marriage continued to give me what I valued most in life. Those reasons are personal and unique to me and my situation, but make no mistake, empathy was not part of the equation. The only reason I never sought revenge against her or him was it would have ultimately hurt me as much as either of them. I was smart enough to not shoot myself in the foot, but boy did I fantasize about it. Anyways, just wanted to point out that not all reconcilers are extra empathetic and/or forgiving. This one is selfish, but happy. 🤪

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 DRSOOLERS (original poster member #85508) posted at 6:30 AM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

I stayed because my marriage continued to give me what I valued most in life.

This perspective makes perfect sense. If your highest values supersede your propensity to hold grudges, and if reconciliation allows you to uphold those values, then choosing to stay becomes a logical and expected outcome.

However, I acknowledge that the decision-making process is far more intricate than the simplified examples I've presented. Countless other personality traits, values, and principles contribute to this profound choice, far too many for a comprehensive exploration here.

For instance, consider someone who is both highly principled and deeply religious. In such a case, it's highly probable that their religious principles would guide them towards reconciliation rather than divorce. (I'm not suggesting this is the case in your specific scenario, merely illustrating a general point.)

Conversely, if an individual is highly principled, and one of their established, long-held principles dictates that infidelity is an absolute deal-breaker – especially when combined with their other inherent traits – then divorce would likely be their chosen path.

To me, this is purely logical: your inherent character traits fundamentally shape every reaction you will have to any given circumstance throughout your life. I am simply attempting to draw the clearest possible connections between specific traits and the outcomes of reconciliation versus divorce.

[This message edited by DRSOOLERS at 10:45 AM, Friday, May 30th]

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 DRSOOLERS (original poster member #85508) posted at 9:38 AM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

I'm unsure of the best way to proceed with this discussion; perhaps you could indicate whether you'd prefer to address all my points in a single response or take them one at a time.

However, there are many reasons why that is true.

I agree with all the reasons you've outlined; the situation is clearly multi-factored. I'm not arguing otherwise. However, are you suggesting that while all the factors you've presented are valid, the specific factor I've highlighted has absolutely no impact whatsoever? If so, could you explain why?

For context, and feel free to do your own readings on this, It seems studies irrefutably show a link between estrogen levels and empathy, (in a similar vein to how testosterone is linked with aggression) and it's evidently clear that empathy is crucial for reconciliation (if you don't think this, please expand) – yet you believe this factor doesn't come into play at all?

I just don't see the logic of refuting this.

For further context, and perhaps somewhat controversially to certain sectors of society, my mother works in transgender services within the NHS. As a nurse practitioner, she assists individuals undergoing gender transition. She would be among the first to highlight the profound character changes reported by people receiving hormonal treatment. For instance, those transitioning to female hormones often report becoming significantly more empathetic, emotional, and understanding. Conversely, individuals transitioning to male hormones frequently report feeling much more aggressive, assertive, and competitive. This clearly illustrates how incredibly influential hormones are on our character.

Though I do feel we are drifting of topic.

lastly, emotional intelligence exists both in men a and women. To say they are not as empathetic, forgiving, short changes men. I believe it’s actually likely more generational. Each generation that passes the more we are teaching children of both sexes how to be emotionally intelligent. I think men from older generations are more likely to stuff their feelings rather than discuss them, not be as adept at processing them. Whereas women tend to grow up learning to talk about those things."

I agree with this point as well. While I believe societal changes can generally shift the needle towards men exhibiting higher levels of emotional intelligence, this won't alter the overall trend of women generally being more empathetic than men. When I make this assertion, I'm not suggesting that you'll never find individual cases where men are more empathetic than women. It simply means that, when speaking broadly, the trend leans in that direction, making such a generalization more often correct than incorrect. This will therefore be reflected in the data. It's similar to physical strength: while many individual women are stronger than many individual men, it's still generally accurate to state that men are physically stronger than women.

I use this example as it's probably the most evidently true hormonal disparity.

In summary, all of this to say, I broadly agree with your response - I don't feel it in any way refutes my initial response.

[This message edited by DRSOOLERS at 10:44 AM, Friday, May 30th]

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Eric1964 ( member #84524) posted at 12:24 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

Similarly, reconciliation appears to be significantly more prevalent among religious individuals. Given that many religions emphasize forgiveness as a core virtue, it seems plausible that this religious inclination influences the outcome of infidelity.

Oooof. Do you not think that religion's attitude to sex, marriage and divorce ("... let no man put asunder ...") has something to do with this? I think there's a pretty fair case for saying that religion is the number one tool of the patriarchy.

WW always had a not-entirely negative attitude to affairs.Affair with ex-coworker, DDay1 2009-12-31; affair resumed almost immediately, DDay2 2010-06-11. Sex life poor. Possibly other affair(s) before 2009.

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Cooley2here ( member #62939) posted at 1:30 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

There are so many components in a marriage. Were both parties excited about the future? I know several ws who married that have told me they felt obligated. They had been together a long time, or they felt some obligation to their parents or the bs. To every one of them marrying was not a joyful occasion. Every one of them cheated their way out of marriage. Most of them were women but I know a man who did the same thing. It is hard to say no to a person who loves you when everyone thinks the marriage is a given. Friends, family have invested in the relationship. How do you look a caring person in the face and say, "I don’t want to get married."

The second thing is underlying contempt from either spouse. It can be subtle but it wears down the self esteem of the victim. If the ws cheated to feel better but is willing to R for the sake of children, or financial reasons, or religion or…. If the bs is the victim they may feel so helpless that starting all over again is terrifying. I think a power struggle in the marriage where one spouse always feels the loser sets up a place where cheating is seen as a way out of pain. Sometimes it was simply too much pleasure to so they did. There are thousands of excuses for cheating. The truth is they wanted to so they did. You are not just dealing with R between two people but reconciling internally to be able to live with it. I follow several bloggers and every single one of is still writing about their ws. They are R but it is easy to see how close to the surface the bs’s pain is.

To me, the ws would have to be empathetic enough to "get" how they wounded the bs. If they can’t they might agree to R but at what cost to the bs.

I don’t know anyone who has R. My husband cheated while traveling. We moved, he stopped traveling and years later I confronted him. He admitted but we had been ok for years. Going over it would have been useless. It embarrassed him that I knew. There was no need to discuss it. Both of us had grown up by then. So there was no confrontation at the time.

I think you can read a thousand books, go to MC, IC, but the bottom line is R will be two people dedicated to binding up the wounds and letting go. Being realistic that the ws is an imperfect person and coming to terms with the fact that someone relegated you to second, third or no place while cheating. Reality is very painful because it has to be dealt with and accepted.

When things go wrong, don’t go with them. Elvis

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Eric1964 ( member #84524) posted at 1:38 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

@Cooley2here: good post.

I think a power struggle in the marriage where one spouse always feels the loser sets up a place where cheating is seen as a way out of pain.

In our 20+ year marriage, I was often the "loser" because my WW set little value on our sex life, which ate me up. Yet it was she who cheated.

Most people who read that respond that I need to leave the marriage - and maybe I do - but what I think it illustrates is that, when it comes to sex and love, people (e.g. my wife) can act in very strange and apparently irrational ways.

WW always had a not-entirely negative attitude to affairs.Affair with ex-coworker, DDay1 2009-12-31; affair resumed almost immediately, DDay2 2010-06-11. Sex life poor. Possibly other affair(s) before 2009.

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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 2:34 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

I do still plan to respond to the original post in its entirety, but I would like to stay focused here for another beat.

I was baffled by your response. I m going to connect the dots as nearly as I can because I have no idea how what I wrote doesn’t seem logical.

You wrote a biased straw man argument towards people who reconcile are likely more empathetic than logical citing some of the proof of that is that men will divorce more often over infidelity.

I wrote that I don’t think empathy is needed by the bs to reconcile. And rebutted why men divorce more often when it comes to infidelity, and it has nothing to do with women being more empathetic.

I think this was a sound and logical argument considering my information was based on a lot of research that I did, and yours seems to be based on a conscious or unconscious bias.

It isn’t that I don’t think personality or principles can play a role in whether someone chooses to reconcile. I do think that is an aspect. But I am more of the opinion that at the end of the day reconciliation can only happen between two people who genuinely want to do so. Not because the bs has no choice or because they are more empathetic.

The bs who really do it are independent thinkers because despite all the societal norms, programming, and the grueling emotional battle they must go through, they have in the end decided the marriage meets their needs better than divorce.

And as far as religion goes, adultery is part of the Ten Commandments and many Christians believe is the one reason divorce is okay in the eyes of God. I have seen many people make that argument since I have been here. I can’t cite it or say what sectors or where it is written. However, I know it’s common enough that it has been brought up numerous times over the years.

[This message edited by hikingout at 2:44 PM, Friday, May 30th]

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 DRSOOLERS (original poster member #85508) posted at 3:43 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

You wrote a biased straw man argument towards people who reconcile are likely more empathetic than logical citing some of the proof of that is that men will divorce more often over infidelity.

Following clear logical path of thought is not what I would call a bias. It stands to reason that more empathetic people would be more inclined to reconcile, and I genuinely can't see the counter-point. Reconciliation undeniably requires great amounts of empathy. Therefore, generally speaking, more empathetic people are inclined to try reconciliation and are certainly more likely to be successful with it.

I simply can't understand what anyone would find controversial about this statement. I go back to my previous comment: 'To suggest otherwise feels akin to denying a correlation between someone's proneness to anger and their potential for violence. While not every short-tempered person is violent, a clear correlation exists.'

I wrote that I don’t think empathy is needed by the bs to reconcile. And rebutted why men divorce more often when it comes to infidelity, and it has nothing to do with women being more empathetic.

So, it's a coincidence then? I'm asserting that empathy is a trait that would lead to higher levels of reconciliation, then went on to show that women generally have higher levels of empathy and are more likely to reconcile. I accepted that other factors were also at play, as you outlined. Yet, for some reason, we are to dismiss this as a relevant factor while accepting all other factors? Why is this one factor not relevant, outside of it simply not aligning with a particular narrative?

Also, please note, I'm not suggesting your narrative is inherently biased in favor of reconciliation or divorce; I genuinely don't believe you hold a preference in either direction. Rather, I think your perspective is shaped by beliefs you're reluctant to re-evaluate, which makes it more difficult for you to accept what appears evident.

I think this was a sound and logical argument considering my information was based on a lot of research that I did, and yours seems to be based on a conscious or unconscious bias.

If you feel I'm uneducated on the matter, we'll have to agree to disagree. I have read extensively on the topic.

But I am more of the opinion that at the end of the day reconciliation can only happen between two people who genuinely want to do so.

Okay, this is the crux of our misunderstanding here. Let me try to emphasize this, because I see this section as the most important. What, then, are the reasons that a betrayed spouse would genuinely want to reconcile? What informs these reasons? The answer here is obviously multi-varied... but I'm arguing that their core characteristics (or "temperament," if you prefer) are the single biggest determining factor as to whether they would want to reconcile or not. (Though, as I previously outlined, circumstances always play a role; characteristics are not the sole reason.)

If they are a highly empathetic person, this trait will inherently inform their will and their wants. If you are not empathetic, you'd be less likely to genuinely want to reconcile. Even if you chose to reconcile for practical reasons but weren't particularly forgiving and empathetic, it would likely be a far more difficult journey for you and more prone to failure.

Let's consider a more clear-cut example to illustrate this point. If an argument escalates to one person physically assaulting another, while that remains a conscious decision, the desire to enact physical aggression is undeniably informed by their anger. One doesn't generally punch someone in the face without their choice being influenced by their temperament.

This isn't about denying choice. To use a personalized analogy: I wish I was the type of person who was, for example, highly competitive. I used to box, and I felt that my lack of competitive drive held me back in the sport. You can work on it, you can really try to force it, and you can certainly improve. However, ultimately, my temperament was never going to allow me to reach an elite level. I simply didn't have a crucial inherent trait within me to allow for this.

and as far as religion goes, adultery is part of the Ten Commandments and many Christians believe is the one reason divorce is okay in the eyes of God. I have seen many people make that argument since I have been here. I can’t cite it or say what sectors or where it is written. However, I know it’s common enough that it has been brought up numerous times over the years.

Firstly, I wanted to point out that Christianity isn't the only religion, and secondly even within Christianity, many sects don't accept divorce at all, irrespective of these scenarios, this brings me back to my point. I presume the consistent preaching of forgiveness in religious circles and the observed higher levels of reconciliation in these communities are yet another coincidence, then?

Why is it starting to feel like all of the reasoning I've used is always just based on coincidence?

[This message edited by DRSOOLERS at 4:00 PM, Friday, May 30th]

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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 4:09 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

I personally feel that one does not have to empathize with their ws to reconcile. I think the ws has to learn empathy. I am not trying to make it controversial, I am simple engaging in the debate that you have set up.

Ask anyone here who reconciled, and I bet that they would tell you that the reconciled despite not being understanding about the actual infidelity. They would tell you they do not deem any reason for infidelity to be a good reason.

Now, once reconciliation begins, they may feel their ws is being empathetic with them and may be empathetic about some of their ws struggles. And I do think it takes understanding what went into the affair so they know what needs to change and see that happen.

And ones further out may say they accept that the circumstances were real.

Some reconciled bs will tell you they do not actually forgive the affair. They may accept it happened, but they don’t forgive it. I do t think I am forgiven for mine.

What I think happens in a good reconciliation, and people can absolutely correct me if I am wrong - is that they love their ws despite it. They accept it happened, they see good changes in their ws, and therefore they are willing to move forward with an improved ws that has demonstrated remorse and willingness to make changes to become a safer partner.

I am more inclined to say that the majority of people that I see here who didn’t reconcile, it was because of some combo of seeing their ws for who they are, that they aren’t going to change, and/or had never been a good spouse to begin with. I think MOST BS have the inclination to R in the beginning, and some find they can’t move past it but most divorce because their ws is not a good rebuilder. This is antedoctal.

Also I am not saying you are uneducated. I am saying that you have a bias to believe that bs who reconcile are more empathetic, and you used the fact men divorce more often because they tend to be less empathetic. I think that is horse phooey. I know many men who are emotionally intelligent and empathetic. We have many males here that post very poignant descriptions of their emotions and how they balance them. I do not dispute that women and men are biologically different and that there are gender norms, but men do not divorce more because women are more empathetic. In fact, that largely ignores that women initiate over 70 percent of the divorces in general now a days.

So it’s not that I don’t think you are educated in the topic of affairs, I mean you seem to have an interest in them so I am sure. But I think your claims that men are less empathetic and file more as a result is an uneducated position when there are much larger things at play that create that stat.

I also do not think it’s wrong that maybe emotionally intelligent people may have an advantage in R, but R is not contingent on the bs having empathy over the ws’s circumstances.

[This message edited by hikingout at 4:21 PM, Friday, May 30th]

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 DRSOOLERS (original poster member #85508) posted at 4:44 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

Ask anyone here who reconciled, and I bet that they would tell you that the reconciled despite not being understanding about the actual infidelity. They would tell you they do not deem any reason for infidelity to be a good reason.

This isn't the same as them not having empathy, though. They have to be in some way sympathetic to their spouse. While not understanding the actual infidelity, they would have to accept that their partner messed up, lost themselves, or were in some way understanding of how such circumstances can arise without condoning them. This is all empathy.

If you simply thought cheating is never acceptable, you would never accept it. If it was never understandable, you would likely think they were just a bad person. You couldn't enter reconciliation with this mindset, or you wouldn't get far in the process. In fact, if you thought that way of your partner, you'd sharply fall out of love. I've noted this dozens of times: people saying their spouse wasn't themselves when the cheating occurred, that the marriage was in a bad place, that they weren't the perfect partner, or that they had a lot of stress or extenuating circumstances that led to the affair. Noting all of this is inherently empathy.

We don't see many posts saying, "My partner is a vile cheating idiot who had no good reason for what he did, how do I reconcile." If we did, it would likely be for circumstantial reasons. Not love.

Maybe this is coming down to how we each define empathy?

Also I am not saying you are uneducated. I am saying that you have a bias to believe that bs who reconcile are more empathetic, and you used the fact men divorce more often because they tend to be less empathetic. I think that is horse phooey.

I still don't see your reasoning as to why you dismiss this horse phooey.

I know many men who are emotionally intelligent and empathetic. We have many males here that post very poignant descriptions of their emotions and how they balance them.

We have many women who are physically stronger than many men individually. Does that mean women on the whole are physically stronger than men? When talking stats, you inherently generalize. Every rule has an expectation. I'm talking broadly.

that largely ignores that women initiate over 70 percent of the divorces in general now a days.

Being more prone to empathy doesn't mean you can't get bored, want change, grow resentful, or have any of the many other millions of reasons why people would divorce.

[This message edited by DRSOOLERS at 4:46 PM, Friday, May 30th]

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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 6:00 PM on Friday, May 30th, 2025

This isn't the same as them not having empathy, though. They have to be in some way sympathetic to their spouse. While not understanding the actual infidelity, they would have to accept that their partner messed up, lost themselves, or were in some way understanding of how such circumstances can arise without condoning them. This is all empathy.

I don’t think all ws have lost themselves or have issues that can be identified with. What I am trying to get across is this- reconciliation relies primarily on 1) the bs wishes to stay married 2) the ws finds the contributing factors that culminated in an affair and works to change them. And then as a result, has been able to rebuild trust and good standing in the marriage.

It doesn’t rely on the bs having any empathy or forgiveness. Successful reconciliation is primarily having enough reasons that it benefits the bs and feeling the ws is a safe enough bet to move forward with.

If the bs has empathy, great. I don’t expect it as the ws, nor do I feel I have been given it. Our reconciliation started for one reason- the thing you accurately cite- my husband did not want to make the changes. He didn’t want to give up the other things I offer him in our life. His love didn’t die the day I told him. So he required that if I were to stay to prove reliability where I had failed. Period. And in return he was willing to work on becoming vulnerable towards me again.

It’s not a continuation of marriage. It’s an entire process that requires a fair amount of detachment. My husband is good at detachment, and I think that was far more fundamental towards our success. He was willing to lose the marriage. He was willing to stand up for what he wanted and accept nothing less. Those re more typical traits I think that make reconciliation work. A bs needs to drive a hard line.

Mind you I am not saying empathy isn’t anywhere to be found, I am just saying I don’t think it’s key. Many bs here would say they are happily reconciled and do not forgive the affair. They were willing to do a reset, based on seeing and getting the things they needed.

If you simply thought cheating is never acceptable, you would never accept it. If it was never understandable, you would likely think they were just a bad person. You couldn't enter reconciliation with this mindset, or you wouldn't get far in the process. In fact, if you thought that way of your partner, you'd sharply fall out of love. I've noted this dozens of times: people saying their spouse wasn't themselves when the cheating occurred, that the marriage was in a bad place, that they weren't the perfect partner, or that they had a lot of stress or extenuating circumstances that led to the affair. Noting all of this is inherently empathy.

I disagree. I think bs’s who reconcile do think cheating is unacceptable. I think they simply recognize most humans are both light and dark. They may believe in redemption to a certain extent- meaning no more chances. We hired a person who worked for us for years- he had been to prison for murder. Who, by the way, his wife is who my husband had an affair with- wtf? Anyway, he is a good man. He made a bad decision, he paid his price, and he did, I fully believe wrestled his anger in prison until he finally found peace and let it go. I trusted him Implicitly, he had access codes to our home because sometimes he needed to get in to get things from our garage to do his job.

So what I am saying is no, you don’t have to do any of that, you only have to believe there is enough redeemable that you are willing to move past it.

Also I am not saying you are uneducated. I am saying that you have a bias to believe that bs who reconcile are more empathetic, and you used the fact men divorce more often because they tend to be less empathetic. I think that is horse phooey.

I still don't see your reasoning as to why you dismiss this horse phooey

Because I do not think men are largely devoid of empathy. I think a lot of men may feel more comfortable with logic, but they have the ability to identify with others emotions. I also know plenty of women devoid of empathy. All of us are capable of recognizing ourselves in others.

Herein lies the rub- I think empathy is most impactful when we ourselves have experienced the same feelings. And that’s in essence why I think many bs could not have a well of empathy for cheating because they have not done it. People arrive every day trying to reconcile and make sense of their ws’s behaviors. Yet, I have seen both women and men accurately describe their ws’s state of mind.

Sympathy is absolutely possible, but it’s not the same as empathy. Sympathy is more like "I am sorry you feel that way" or "I am sorry to see you go through this". Empathy means you can feel what they feel as much as another human can. And I think it’s not the bs’s job to give either of these things.

I know many men who are emotionally intelligent and empathetic. We have many males here that post very poignant descriptions of their emotions and how they balance them.

We have many women who are physically stronger than many men individually. Does that mean women on the whole are physically stronger than men? When talking stats, you inherently generalize. Every rule has an expectation. I'm talking broadly.

And broadly, I think men are as capable of all aspects of emotional intelligence that women are. They just use it differently. I do believe men and women are inherent different beings. I just think men are capable of feeling what another person goes through.I don’t think that is controversial or requires stats.

that largely ignores that women initiate over 70 percent of the divorces in general now a days.

Being more prone to empathy doesn't mean you can't get bored, want change, grow resentful, or have any of the many other millions of reasons why people would divorce.

I agree- but where is the empathy for her husbands shortcomings? That’s what I was getting at.

It boils down to reconciliation isn’t just about the softer parts. In fact, the softer parts often come towards the later stages.

[This message edited by hikingout at 10:42 PM, Friday, May 30th]

8 years of hard work - WS and BS - Reconciled

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