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Old 01-15-2011, 10:03 PM
 
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To me, I think people today get so riled up over cheating when its not even that big a deal imo. I understand some cases where you would be upset and it really is a big deal such as A woman that cheated gets pregnant by the person she cheated with or a man having another womans baby to worry about. But other than that, when I hear stories such as "We've been dating for a year, I found out he/she kissed another woman/man" the reaction I get is "really? Thats so devastating to you? One kiss?". If I had a wife/girlfriend and I found out she cheated in any way and told me I would not be mad at her almost at all. Disappointed yes, mad, no. To me there's other things you can do to hurt someone in a relationship that's actually serious such as abuse. I'm not saying we should be swingers and just do other people outside the relationship, but honestly cheating isn't a deal breaker to me and I would not break up with a girl even after a 2nd time that she did
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Old 01-15-2011, 10:20 PM
 
Location: Middle of the valley
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That's fine for you. Not for me, or my SO.
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Old 01-15-2011, 10:28 PM
 
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People see the issue of cheating differently. Cheating is a deal breaker to me because it relates to trust and I don't trust people that easily. I dont wear my heart on my sleeve.
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Old 01-15-2011, 10:58 PM
 
Location: The D-M-V area
13,691 posts, read 18,473,529 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vizualizax90 View Post
To me, I think people today get so riled up over cheating when its not even that big a deal imo. I understand some cases where you would be upset and it really is a big deal such as A woman that cheated gets pregnant by the person she cheated with or a man having another womans baby to worry about. But other than that, when I hear stories such as "We've been dating for a year, I found out he/she kissed another woman/man" the reaction I get is "really? Thats so devastating to you? One kiss?". If I had a wife/girlfriend and I found out she cheated in any way and told me I would not be mad at her almost at all. Disappointed yes, mad, no. To me there's other things you can do to hurt someone in a relationship that's actually serious such as abuse. I'm not saying we should be swingers and just do other people outside the relationship, but honestly cheating isn't a deal breaker to me and I would not break up with a girl even after a 2nd time that she did
That's your opinion. For some people cheating means infidelity and many won't stand for that in a relationship.
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Old 01-16-2011, 01:37 AM
 
Location: state of procrastination
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I think that is somewhat weird, but not pathologically weird. I know this guy who is so codependent on his horrible gf (now wife) who cheated on him constantly, kicks him out of his own house as she is cheating on him leaving him on the steps, has a child with another guy that she cheated with. All his friends hate her. But he ends up marrying her (and accepting her child as his) though he gets lots of offers from women as he is in the entertainment industry. But he doesn't take the offers, as she would not let him. I think this is a very extreme example but points to some deeper, underlying psychiatric problem on his part.
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Old 01-16-2011, 03:16 AM
 
Location: North Carolina
10,215 posts, read 17,911,599 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vizualizax90 View Post
To me, I think people today get so riled up over cheating when its not even that big a deal imo. I understand some cases where you would be upset and it really is a big deal such as A woman that cheated gets pregnant by the person she cheated with or a man having another womans baby to worry about. But other than that, when I hear stories such as "We've been dating for a year, I found out he/she kissed another woman/man" the reaction I get is "really? Thats so devastating to you? One kiss?". If I had a wife/girlfriend and I found out she cheated in any way and told me I would not be mad at her almost at all. Disappointed yes, mad, no. To me there's other things you can do to hurt someone in a relationship that's actually serious such as abuse. I'm not saying we should be swingers and just do other people outside the relationship, but honestly cheating isn't a deal breaker to me and I would not break up with a girl even after a 2nd time that she did
I think repetitive cheating is actually a form of emotional abuse. The consistent lack of concern or consideration of ones feelings, particular of one you are supposed to love... that's a pretty big issue. People tend to only stay in relationships like this because they have low self esteem.
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Old 01-16-2011, 04:17 AM
 
Location: Oxford, England
13,026 posts, read 24,647,452 times
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Cheating shows disrespect and is a breach of trust. As such to me what is weird is people who ignore or accept it. IMO most people do not genuinely accept it anyway but pretend to because they are terrified of being alone .

Anyone who abuses the person they are supposed to love most in such a blatant manner deserves to be kicked to the curb.

I need to trust and respect the person I am with. Not sure what is weird about that. If people enjoy being in open relationships that is perfectly fine with me as long as BOTH partners are happy about this arrangement ( that is genuinely happy not simply pandering to the other) and mutually consenting.

I am quite sure the vast majority of cheats would have a hissy fit if their spouse started to play hide the sausage on the side too... Double standards seem to apply to those kinds of relationships in my experience and hypocrisy.

I love my Husband totally conditionally because of the man he is. Loyal and faithful to me, someone who loves and desires me and has no desire to play the field. If this turned out to be a lie , I would not only be devastated but angry as hell.


Relationships have to be built on a solid foundation. Finding out your other half is a lying, cheating scuzzbag is just about as far away from this as is imaginable.

Nobody is putting a gun to somebody's head to be in an exclusive relationship. If someone wants to remain a promiscuous individual that it fine AS LONG as they make no promises and do not entice somebody into a relationship under false pretences.

Some of us take faithfulness and loyalty very seriously. My husband knew from day one I would never tolerate cheating and that straying would mean being shown the door. Ie: I was open and honest about my feelings on the issue and he could not claim he was unaware of them. He knew what kind of woman he chose to marry. Fortunately for me he feels the same from his side and I would also expect to be given the boot should I ever stray from the path. That is fair. Neither of us should feel aggrieved when we both made our feelings very clear from the beginning. We discussed it frankly and openly, in a mature manner from the very blossoming of our relationship. This was one of the big issues we discussed ( with other important ideological issues such as whether we wanted kids , political ideals and general life goals).


You chose a life partner based on who they are ( ie who they appear to the best of your knowledge to be). I would not be well pleased either if my Husband all of a sudden declared himself to have been a sexist, racist, homophobic bigot for the last twnty years. Deception is NOT acceptable especially for something like a tumble in the hay which is completely avoidable and is a choice. One chooses to cheat, One chooses to be a bastard, one chooses to hurt someone, so one must accept the consequences of one's actions.... Cheating is a choice.

It does not simply "happen". One does not simply happen to put one's genitals into another human being's or inset one's tongue into their mouth. There is no such thing as an "accident" when it comes to cheating and it is not a "mistake". A mistake is getting on the wrong bus, or buying the wrong type of milk . Having sex or even kissing someone who is not your spouse/partner is not a mistake. It is a wilful act of deception and very much a choice.

We all have the power to say no, the power to understand the hurt and upset we will cause the people we love most. We chose to hurt, deceive, lie and cheat. None of these are mistakes, accidents or any such things.

Trying to mitigate the seriousness of our transgression is not only futile, but intellectually disingenuous and quite frankly pathetic.

You no longer love and desire someone enough to be exclusive with them , you get some "cojones", and behave like a grown up, take it on the chin and simply tell the other you want someone else. Period. Anything else is cowardly and puerile.


Love is about thinking about the other's feeling and showing consideration. Emotional abuse is not big and it's not clever and trying to blame the injured party seems pretty rancid and vile IMO.

Last edited by Mooseketeer; 01-16-2011 at 05:16 AM..
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Old 01-16-2011, 05:37 AM
 
10,449 posts, read 12,475,982 times
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I'm right there with you. In fact my wife and I take it another step--we're open about being attracted to other people and wanting to date them. If she wants to date someone else too, fine with me. She feels the same way too. We won't love each other any less. And you know what, it has been great. It doesn't have to be emotionally abusive if no secrets are being kept in the first place. We've dated other people separately, and we're in a relationship with our roommate as a couple. I can honestly say it's only enriched our lives.

I'm not saying that works for everyone, but I do think it would work a lot better for many people. I think there are a lot of naturally polyamorous people out there that get shoved into the monogamous model. People should just be able to follow whatever dating model works for them, and seek partners with compatible models or who are okay with whatever model they follow personally. I think that would help solve "the cheating problem".

It would also save a lot of people pain if cheaters didn't have to be secretive but instead could be open about being attracted to other people too, and it would help if those who are cheated on understood that falling for another person doesn't always mean they love the person they cheated on less. And if they do, then it's a sign that maybe they should reevaluate their relationship.

I think "cheating" can actually be made into a positive thing and help people grow if they remove the secretiveness factor and the "pieces of a pie" model. A lot of people see their love as a piece of a pie. If you love one person 100%, you're devoted to them 100% and give them the whole pie. If you love two people, you can only love each one 50% or maybe something like 30% and 70%. But instead of viewing love as a finite source of pie, it helps to realize that love is infinite. Love runs deeper. Loving more than one person doesn't mean loving each person less--in fact, it means MORE love! I find that when I openly express my love for everyone, I love each person DEEPER, not less--more pie for all!

Like I said, I know polyamory is not for everyone, but I think it should be an option for the people it does work for, and that in itself would eliminate a lot of cheating.
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Old 01-16-2011, 05:46 AM
 
Location: North Carolina
10,215 posts, read 17,911,599 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nimchimpsky View Post
It doesn't have to be emotionally abusive if no secrets are being kept in the first place.
Having an open relationship is different. If both partners are genuinely happy with it, it's not cheating. But when one partner is not on board with it and the other has a complete lack of concern for their feelings, that is cheating and when it's repetitive, it's emotionally abusive. This is a topic about cheating, not open relationships. They are two very different things.
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Old 01-16-2011, 05:51 AM
 
10,449 posts, read 12,475,982 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PA2UK View Post
Having an open relationship is different. If both partners are genuinely happy with it, it's not cheating. But when one partner is not on board with it and the other has a complete lack of concern for their feelings, that is cheating and when it's repetitive, it's emotionally abusive. This is a topic about cheating, not open relationships. They are two very different things.
I know they are different. I'm saying I think open relationships are a solution to the cheating issue for many people. In other words, I'm saying I don't tolerate cheating--instead, my wife and I flip around what could be a negative scenario into a positive one by having an open relationship.

To answer the question of whether I would tolerate cheating, first I have to imagine that I'm exclusive. I would take it as a sign that my partner was either in love with more than one person or falling out of love with me. It would hurt like hell if they were falling out of love with me but it would still need to be acknowledged. So I would tolerate it in the sense that I would have a discussion with them about it as soon as I found out it was happening.
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