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Just Found Out :
A Cheater Who Swears He Will Change, But Isn't Because He Got Caught

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 RisingEverytime (original poster new member #87309) posted at 12:47 PM on Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

Humiliation is when you realise that the man you gave everything to - the one you sacrificed for, stood beside, built a life with - respected you so little that he became a repeat adulterer.

And really, what’s an acceptable number of one-night stands - one, two, five, ten, more? Betrayal doesn’t need volume, but somehow, in his world, the math matters, because if it is only two, then it isn’t as bad as she’s making it out to be. And so comes his favourite defence: you can’t accuse him of an affair if it ended before it began. As if duration could cleanse deceit. The semantics of the guilty are always fascinating - the way they dress betrayal in language, as though a string of momentary trespasses is somehow nobler than one sustained deception.

How do you come back from that? Should you even try?

How does the person disrespected find her footing again when the cheating husband now begs for a second chance, speaking of repentance and renewal - desperate to change, to be better, to be the man she could respect again - but isn't it only because he’s been caught?

Let’s not kid ourselves. Repentance discovered is not repentance lived. If the lies had not unravelled, life would have continued as it was - a fine family life served on a silver platter, the perfect balance of comfort and indulgence. The thrill of the secret. The game at play. The chest-thumping pride of not being caught. So really, who’s the joke on - the wife or the husband?

It reminds her of that old Bee Gees song - "I started a joke, which started the whole world crying... but I didn’t see, that the joke was on me."

Because that’s the thing about betrayal - the cheater always laughs first, until the truth hits like a punchline they never saw coming.

Well, he had it all. The best eighty percent anyway: family, stability, respect, comfort, convenience, a home built on effort (not his own). Yet twenty percent of boredom was all it took for him to gamble it away - chasing lust, validation, the illusion of youth. No complex arithmetic here. Just a simple equation of greed over gratitude. He risked decades of shared memories and the promise of many more, for a string of transient pleasures - meaningless he said, but consuming all the same.

And sadly, every time she washes off another layer of humiliation and stands up with grace, something new hits her in the gut - another memory, another story from the past that surfaces through friends’ casual conversations, another confession from one of his drinking pals about a night best forgotten.

"Indiscretions."
That word has always amused her. If you knew how to keep quiet, life would go on. That’s what they really mean, isn’t it?

So where is the line - that invisible moral threshold that separates "it was bad" from "it could have been worse"? Why must betrayal be weighed on a scale of degrees? Why can’t bad just be bad?

Because only the person disrespected knows what she gave up - her trust, her safety, her faith - believing good judgement would protect the life they built from ever breaking this way. And that is why there is no coming back. Not for him. Not ever.

(I write stories about what I am going through, hoping someone else might find the words they have been unable to say aloud.)

RMP

posts: 8   ·   registered: May. 2nd, 2026   ·   location: Asia
id 8895582
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crazycatlady ( member #12849) posted at 2:18 PM on Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

Brilliant but devastating. I want to say it’s excellent writing (it truly is) but at the same time it hit me in the gut reminding me of the pain of betrayal.
I’m so sorry.

Love all, trust a few. Do wrong to none.William Shakespeare "All's Well That Ends Well"D-Day: Nov 30, 2006"For I have sworn thee fair, and thought thee bright, who art as black as hell, as dark as night." William Shakespeare

posts: 1888   ·   registered: Dec. 4th, 2006   ·   location: Etherville
id 8895583
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The1stWife ( Guide #58832) posted at 2:22 PM on Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

The line is where you draw it. Period.

You never will believe the words of a cheater. It is only their actions that count. Actions and true remorse and counseling and commitment are what is needed.

Like you, I had no intention of reconciling with my H after his second affair. I had my plan B ready to go just in case. Well at dday2 of affair2 I had enough of the lying and cheating and knew I could not stay married to him.

But in 30 days he did enough to turn it around. It took me a solid year to stop waking up every day thinking "I can’t do this. I need to D him". But he showed, through his actions that he deserved a second chance.

In your case I think you are at a crossroads. You may want to reconcile but don’t feel you have anything to show you he deserves another chance.

My suggestion is this. Don’t do anything for 30 days (except prepare to D). Get your finances in order and possibly schedule a consult with an attorney. But don’t tell the cheater. Let the cheater decide to Reconcile and see if he does anything positive on his own.

Some things you should see:

He freely gives you access to his phone
He gets counseling (initiated by him)
He is open and transparent about where he is and who he is with
He is open to making amends and talking about anything you need to talk about anytime you need to discuss something
He bends over backwards to help you heal from the betrayal

And this goes on for longer than a few weeks or months- these changes are something he commits to forever.

Then maybe you might feel like you can survive the affairs or cheating or whatever you call it.

Survived two affairs and brink of Divorce. Happily reconciled. 12 years out from Dday. Reconciliation takes two committed people to be successful.

posts: 15511   ·   registered: May. 19th, 2017
id 8895584
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 RisingEverytime (original poster new member #87309) posted at 3:47 PM on Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

Crazycatlady - I am sorry too.

1st wife - thank you for taking the time to share, but if you read my other 3 previous stories, you would realise that he lies as well as he cheats. I found out 7 months ago that he has been cheating for most of our marriage of 20+years, maybe even all of it, what do I know right. I certainly was blinded sided getting here and in realising that I have been so thoroughly betrayed.

So NO, there will never a second chance, cause he burnt every one of those, every time he chose to cheat - each was a choice not a mistake and of yeah, he is a serial cheater.

RMP

posts: 8   ·   registered: May. 2nd, 2026   ·   location: Asia
id 8895590
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