** Posting as a member, by which I mean I'd post the same thing if I were not a guide. Also, below I state my personal opinions, and other guides and mods may very well disagree. **
I’ve come to the conclusion that people are misunderstanding because they want to misunderstand.
It's more likely that people misunderstand things that challenge their most deeply ingrained beliefs or trigger hidden pain.
If that misunderstanding offends your decision to R then that doesn’t mean that the initial post did not make sense. It did.
The initial post was edited significantly. At first, if you analyzed the sentences, it very easily could be read to say that R was pretty much always a result of trauma bonding. That proposition is simply not true.
Being offended by someone thrashing around in pain is par for the course on SI. But newbies read these threads, and I considered the proposition to be both wrong and misleading, so I confronted it, as did others.
And it’s offensive that abuse keeps getting downplayed because some BS think it makes them sound like victims.
That's a misreading.
Let me be clear: Some people focus on the abuse, not on getting out of the abuse, not on the feelings that come with being abuse, not on something that will heal them. That's taking on the Victim role in a Drama Triangle.
Sure, that's probably a phase the vast majority of BSes go through, but focusing on the abuse keeps one in the abuse.
Games People Play is in the public domain. You can find a no-charge downloadable PDF all over the web. I suggest you download it. In fact, it may be enough just to search the web on 'ain't it awful eric berne' (no quotes) - but reading the whole book will give you a better sense of what Berne learned from his clients.
I’ve never seen a domestic abuse victim being told it’s valid to stay with their spouse but when the abuse is infidelity, suddenly we’re all supposed to be very accepting of giving an abuser another chance.
Well, yes, ideally all members will accept another member's decision to R. I think we are here primarily to get support for our own path to surviving and thriving and secondarily to support others in finding their own path to surviving and thriving, whether their way is like ours or not. Someone who states they’ve chosen R should get support.
You generalize about WSes in ways that simply do not apply to a large number of WSes. You probably imply generalizations about BSes that do not apply to all BSes. (Note that I wrote ‘a large number’. I have no idea of the proportion of WSes your generalizations do not apply to, but remember that even a small percentage of a large number is also a large number.)
If you mean that people here tell others to R whether they want to or not, show us the posts.
If you mean that people here tell others that they have to give WSes the benefit of any doubt, show us the posts.
Womaninpain, I understand that you're in pain, by your posts and by the name you chose. You haven't posted about yourself, so there's really no way for me to post something supportive.
But I think there's a good chance you're misreading SI. When you're ready, post your story. See what support you receive. I think you may be pleasantly surprised. I know I was, and I know others have been, too, because they've said so.
*****
It's true that most people counsel an abuse victim to get away from the abuser.
What I don't understand is BSes who complain about abuse and don't get away from their WSes. Virtually every one here sees D as a valid outcome of betrayal. A WS can lose their M just because of cheating, no matter what else may be going on that militates for R. (I'm not sure of that construction; I hope my meaning is clear.)
If a BS posts something like, 'My WS abused me by cheating, so I'm dumping them,' I'll nod my head and think, 'That makes good sense. I'm glad that BS reached a conclusion.'
But that's not what we read from the OP and some others. We read, 'Infidelity is abuse,' and the implication has to be that all BSes should leave their WSes.
Again, I think adopting the Victim role in a Drama Triangle is just about unavoidable for BSes - but BSes don't have to stay in that role.
I'm good with 'I was abused and left.' I'm not good with, 'I was abused. You're being abused. And I'll imply that you should leave, even though I haven't.'
For many of us, the WS's behavior after d-day is no longer clearly abusive. Advice to those folks to leave immediately is not appropriate.
*****
Perhaps part of my thinking is this.
1) We have a LOT to say to each other to share our experience - thoughts that went through our heads, feelings, what worked for us, what didn't work for us. Our experiences are valid, and it's almost always going to help the poster and some readers to share one’s experiences.
2) Advice probably says more about the adviser than the person to whom the advice is given.
3) Advice about how to solve a problem can be very useful.
4) Advice to choose one outcome or another is probably marginally appropriate at best.
- Hell, even when my son was going through some infidelity I didn't think I could tell him whether to D or to R.
- I know my W better than I know any other human being, and I didn't know if she'd stay the course for R.
- I know myself better than any other human being, and it took me 3 months to decide I'd start R.