Why does it matter?
Cheating, affair, adultery, infidelity.
If it doesn't matter, I guess I'm confused as to why there would be an objection to using terms like "unfaithful" and "adultery" or in having something of a "MeToo" moment that truly recognizes the abusive nature of adultery.
I think it would be rather healthy. We saw the same movement with respect to domestic violence in the past, and date rape, and other issues. We know that social capital is being demolished in our society due to adultery, which is increasingly rampant. As current BS's and former WS's it would seem to me we would want to embrace such an accounting to prevent the same pain for others in the future.
I'd go back to my earlier example of the South African Truth and Reconciliation (reconciliation being a key word here) Commission as conceived by Archbishop Tutu and others. The intent there was not to punish at all. The intent was to air the truth, as ugly and as painful as that was, and to have a national accounting.
The intent insofar as my starting the thread was:
1. I was struck by the argument I had composed and the fairly airtight logic of it.
2. I think thought experiments are a useful way of testing ideas, and ideas and the importance of words are both very much wrapped up in how we should think about adultery and deal with it.
3. I'm trying to test my own assumptions as much as anyone else's here.
As far as my advocacy on the use of the word "adultery," my intent is not to punish, at least from my standpoint, but rather to avoid euphemizing our language into doublespeak. As well, to truly look at what the thing is in and of itself, thus the thought experiment around how we view and treat other forms of abuse in marital settings.
As George Orwell put it succinctly, “Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”
By "political language" he meant language which was less concrete, less specific, tending toward euphemisms, and full of elisions.
And this is at least part of why I think this thread is a useful and very healthy discussion.
I'm a little nonplussed by some of the reactions on it being unhelpful or confused about why we'd be discussing this. Isn't this the very point of SI? To deal with and grapple with all facets of the impact of adultery on real human beings in real three dimensional time and space? To bear witness to the pain? To be a place for healing? Wouldn't healing in such cases all but require an airing of the truth about the nature of the thing, the truth of what BS's experience?
While I do think that SI has made a point of welcoming WS's, the guidelines are pretty clear that this site is intended to be something of a safe space primarily for betrayed spouses to suss out and grapple with the impact of infidelity on their lives. Isn't that so?
I think I noted earlier in this thread that adultery is such a thorny, complex problem with so many downstream effects and different facets it's like a multi-faceted stone we must turn around in our hand to truly grapple with and contemplate the complexity. It's probably the thorniest and most complex set of problems most of us have ever experienced or are likely to experience.
That's a little bit of what I'm trying to do here, or at least I hope I am, and what I hope others are doing here as well. I'm also obviously interested in understanding, contemplating and processing my own experience. One way I do that is through writing and discussion.
Again, I hope it's helpful.
[This message edited by Thumos at 4:49 PM, October 7th (Wednesday)]