This came up in a discussion and some people found it helpful. So I'm posting it here. If it's helpful to you, great. If not, disregard. Otherwise, I'm interested in all perspectives on it:
1. Adultery is emotional and mental abuse (we see it said all the time "it's not about you" but of course it is; if it weren't about you, then we should all be able to say adultery is just innocent experimentation without intent to harm -- actually some people do say that, and others come perilously close, such as Esther Perel). We know that adultery once revealed causes physical and emotional and mental shock to the betrayed. We know the betrayed's physical mind is altered. We know PTSD is common, if not expected in due course.
2. Adultery is also physical abuse. We know the emotional pain is lived out in the body and can very often have dire physical health consequences. It also involves putting a faithful partner at risk for life threatening and life changing disease -- and even when disease hasn’t been transmitted, the genital micro biome has been permanently altered. A faithful spouse has been forced against his/her will and without his/her consent to participate in a threesome/foursome/moresome. That's essentially rape.
3. In almost every other case of abuse toward a spouse (usually abuse against a woman) divorce is recommended (rarely if ever is reconciliation recommended, and only after intensive therapy and work by the abusive spouse).
Often abused women will say they love their husbands and this is likely true. Yet it’s also true that a physically abused woman shouldn’t remain married to a husband (even if she loves him) when he punches her in the face.
The love for the abusive spouse and the need for divorce are always kept separate in most discussions, and rightfully so.
Yet it seems it’s only in the case of the particular form of abuse called adultery that we seem to get confused on this point.
Of course you love your adulterous spouse, or at least most faithful spouses do. Of course you do!
Most faithful spouses love unfaithful spouses.
That’s why they are faithful and it’s part and parcel (practically speaking) to being a betrayed spouse. Being a faithful, loyal spouse implies love, because love is a verb. We are what we repeatedly do.
Faithfulness and loyalty also imply empathy as well as the capacity for a relatively high level of executive functions in the brain.
But, and this is a key point, loving an unfaithful spouse is almost immaterial to the discussion.
Why so?
Imagine a website called “Surviving Rageaholics” or “Surviving Attempted Murder” or “Surviving Intentional Thievery of Your Home” or “Surviving Being Punched in the Face by Your Husband”
Reconciliation after a woman was punched in the face by an abusive husband would only be recommended with extreme, extreme caution. And I would warrant most therapists would be very hesitant to recommend it, especially right after an abused spouse "just found out" they'd been punched in the face.
Therapists would say something like “I understand you love your husband and that’s good because it means you are an empathetic person, but the love you feel for him is one thing and his abusive nature and the domestic violence he subjected you to is another thing. Let’s not get them confused.”
They would also recommend the abused spouse not get forgiveness and reconciliation confused or conflated.
And even if they thought reconciliation was a possibility, they would put major caveats around a possible reconciliation attempt -- such as “if your abusive husband is visiting the ‘Surviving Being Punched in the Face’ website and policing your threads and trying to control you on that, it doesn’t look like he is remorseful or really trying to work on his abusive tendencies. It may be you need to separate and get yourself to safety.”
Would a therapist say “oh but he only punched you in the face once” or “oh but he punched you in the face when you yelled at him” or “oh but he punched you in the face when you were asleep and you only realized it weeks later when he told you about it” or “oh he punched you in the face repeatedly for (months, years, etc) but he seems so contrite now”?
Some therapists might, and we'd say those are really bad therapists.
What would the recommendations be for a spouse on such a website? What do you think most people on such a site would be recommending to a woman whose husband had deliberately punched her in the face?
More bluntly speaking, adultery is on the level of a type of rape, taking away a faithful spouse’s autonomy and agency over their own body.
It is at the very least as bad as punching a spouse in the face, and actually a lot worse. I’m sure we can all agree on that.
Draw your own conclusions from this very logical pathway I’ve laid out.
[This message edited by Thumos at 4:48 PM, October 2nd (Friday)]