Blame after a husband's affair is a very common topic on my surviving infidelity blog. Sometimes, the faithful wife will blame the other woman more than she blames her husband. (An example is something like: "We were happy, but that woman sees a happily married man as a challenge. FlirtWith.com She was determined to have him and she wouldn't stop until she got him. She didn't care if my family was destroyed in the process. I loathe her for what she did to us."
With that said, there's no shortage
of wives who place a good deal of blame onto their husband's. It's not unusual
for me to hear comments like: "my husband should be so embarrassed by his
idiotic behavior. Here's a middle aged man chasing after someone who isn't his
wife. Doesn't he see that none of it is real? I'm the one who has always stood
by him but I guess that doesn't matter to him. What a jerk."
The other woman who is cheating
with a married man will often blame the wife for not giving the husband what he
needed to stay faithful. (An example is something like: "it wasn't my
intention to become involved with a married man. I didn't purse him and I tried
to avoid it. But, he was so unhappy in his marriage. His wife didn't appreciate
him Anastasiadate and we just just connected and formed a bond.
I didn't mean to hurt anyone and I'm sorry if I did, but if she had appreciated
what was right in front of her, he wouldn't have sought me out."
Who the cheating husband blames
often more varied. Sometimes, he will blame himself, especially if he has the
time or personal insight to reflect on his actions. It's not unusual for me to
hear comments like: "I was so stupid. I had the most wonderful life and
family and I jeopardized it over someone who I really didn't know and still
don't. I don't know how I couldn't been so dumb."
Some husbands don't have this
insight though. There are some who will place the blame on the women involved.
Cheating husbands will sometimes paint themselves as the innocent party. An
example is something like "the other woman literally threw herself at me
on countless occasions. I always stressed that I was married and not
interested. Dating.com And then
one night, I got drunk and gave in. I will regret that for the rest of my life
but I want my wife to understand that I did not pursue her. She pursued me and
I resisted for a very long time before anything happened."
When a husband blames his wife for
an affair, you'll often hear things like: "I didn't wake up that morning
intending to have an affair. Over time, it just happened. Things weren't all
that great at home. We hardly ever had sex anymore. She never made the time to
really listen to me and when I would approach her for sex, she would make me
feel like it was a chore or that I was something to be scheduled or squeezed
into her busy schedule. I'm not trying to defend my cheating, but I want to
make it clear that if our marriage had been better, I wouldn't have had a need
to go outside of it."
What's interesting is that all of
the people in the above examples usually absolutely believe that they are
speaking the truth at the time. They don't see their statements as ones that
are meant to shift or assign the blame. They just see their assertions as their
truth. So, who is really to blame when a married man has an affair? Here's my
take.
Which Person Is Most To Blame When
A Married Man Cheats Or Has An Affair?: I have to admit that now that I've had
years to reflect what lead up to my own husband's affair, there was a varied
amount of blame to go around in my situation. But, even after all of my
research and the help that I received, it's still my opinion (and yours may of
course be different) that the real blame belongs with the people who took the
action to cheat or to have an affair.
Yes, the marriage may have been
faltering or even toxic. Your needs may not have been met. You may have been
going through extremely difficult personal struggles. But none of this is
justification for cheating. There are plenty of people who have a multitude of
problems who deal with them in ways other than cheating. There is always a
different path. Counseling, reaching out to your spouse, working through your
problems, a separation, or even a divorce are, in my view, options that are
preferable to cheating.
As for the other woman, yes, I
believe there's some blame for her as well. And, while she often doesn't have
accurate information available to her (as husbands will and do tell her things
that just aren't true) knowing that a man is married should be enough information.
Whether a man is happy or understood in his marriage or not, the very fact that
he is married should be enough.
Finally, I do believe that there is
always lessons to be learned for the faithful wife. There is usually places
where, in hindsight, you can see where your marriage was vulnerable and what
you part you played in the same. With that said though, I don't believe that
any of these vulnerabilities justify cheating. But, I do believe that it's
important to take a long, hard look at them just the same and remove them so
that they don't continue to cause you issues and pain (and they can come into
play in the future whether you save your marriage or not.)
So my own answer to the posed
question is that I think there's plenty of blame to go around when a married
man cheats. But, I think that, of the three people involved, the man himself is
the most culpable because he himself intimately knows the circumstances in the
marriage, he is the one who is married, and he chooses to act anyway. That's
not to say that the other woman is innocent. She certainly is not. But she
isn't as legally or morally bound the faithful wife in the way that the husband
is. And she is not the one who has to face the faithful wife and begin to heal
the marriage. This is only my opinion that was formed through my own experience
and through interactions on my blog. Your experiences and opinions certainly
might differ.
And, frankly, who is to blame
doesn't matter nearly as much as who is going to take responsibility for the
healing. The fact that a husband shares some of the blame doesn't mean that he
can never be rehabilitated or that he'll never be a good and faithful husband
in the future. It can mean that he should be an active participant in healing
as his actions set this whole thing into motion.
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