The1stWife (original poster guide #58832) posted at 3:05 PM on Sunday, August 24th, 2025
I’ve been seeing much lately (in various places) about forgiveness. Today there was an article in our Sunday newspaper about it, and in watching Shrinking (Apple TV series) the topic came up as well.
I will admit it took me years to forgive my H. I’d like to think about 5-6 years is the timespan.
The article I read this morning defined forgiveness as "the point where you no longer seek revenge even though you could act". I thought this was funny at first but then wondered if this is true.
In the series Shrinking, the story centers around a therapist and his daughter who were impacted a year prior when a drunk driver hit their mom/wife’s car and she died as a result of the accident.
The dad, who is a therapist, just couldn’t cope and turned to drinking and pills to hide his pain. The neighbors started caring for the daughter to help out.
The daughter (18) meets with the drunk driver and while initially angry — she forgives him and they become friends. Her father finds out and feels betrayed and angry. The daughter tells her therapist how she feels better and less angry now that she has "moved forward".
All that led me to wonder how does forgiveness play a role in our healing as the BS? Does it matter if we forgive — as part of reconciliation?
Are we less happy if we do not forgive?
Interested in hearing from others about this.
PS - I think this is a very hard thing to do BTW
Survived two affairs and brink of Divorce. Happily reconciled. 12 years out from Dday. Reconciliation takes two committed people to be successful.
Cooley2here ( member #62939) posted at 3:31 PM on Sunday, August 24th, 2025
I think how egregious the cheating was is whether there can ever be forgiveness or not. In my case it was while he was traveling and both of us still young and stupid. I did not confront until yrs later. I asked, he admitted. We had matured, life went on. I have no feelings about it at all unless I pop on here.
If it involved cruelty(shaming, screaming, insults etc) I don’t see ever forgiving. Human nature is designed to remember danger. There is nothing but rape and murder more dangerous to the human psyche than being lied to, and cheated on. The longer it goes on the more "dangerous" it is. We are like elephants, we never forget.
When things go wrong, don’t go with them. Elvis
Unhinged ( member #47977) posted at 3:48 PM on Sunday, August 24th, 2025
Janis Spring, PhD, wrote a great book about forgiveness. I read it many years ago based on member recommendations.
I forgave my exww long ago. It is a release of a debt that could never be repaid. It's a good step, I think, on a healing journey, one that takes years to reach.
Married 2005
D-Day April, 2015
Divorced May, 2022
"The Universe is not short on wake-up calls. We're just quick to hit the snooze button." -Brene Brown
HellIsNotHalfFull ( member #83534) posted at 10:27 PM on Sunday, August 24th, 2025
I believe I can forgive WW for the affair as a person. What I mean by that is that as someone not my wife, as herself who massively fucked up, I can forgive that. As my wife, no I can’t. It’s unforgivable. There’s no forgiveness for an affair as a couple. Especially combined with the gaslighting, degradation, and honestly risking my health. I haven’t figured out everything by any means, but I have come to accept that she cheated on me.
I also don’t believe in an affair is forgivable as long as x y or z doesn’t happen. Cheating is a decision, and crossing the line is a deliberate act.
I believe in acceptance.
Me mid 40s BHHer 40s WW 3 year EA 1 year PA. DDAY 1 Feb 2022. DDAY 2 Jun 2022. DDAY 3/4/5/6/7 July 2024.
PurpleMoxie ( member #86385) posted at 11:35 PM on Sunday, August 24th, 2025
I think it is possible to move through the pain of infidelity and get to a place of not wanting to seek revenge, not wallowing, not stewing over it, but not forgiving it. It probably boils down to a semantic argument for some, but the distinction is meaningful to me. I don't label it as forgiveness. We all come to terms with the trauma of infidelity in whatever way works for us. And that's what works for me.
I do believe some things are unforgivable. The deliberate act of knowingly harming and causing trauma is, for me, one of those things.
[This message edited by PurpleMoxie at 2:03 AM, Monday, August 25th]
New profile. Previous, but not very active, member.
WB1340 ( member #85086) posted at 7:25 AM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
My wife will never hear me say I forgive you. Not once have I been cruel or mean or degrading towards her during our attempt to R. She destroyed 27 years of trust for purely selfish reasons and had the balls to get angry at me when I confronted her.
I don't hold what she did over her head but I will never say I forgive you.
D-day April 4th 2024. WW was sexting with a married male coworker. Started R a week later, still ongoing...
Copingmybest ( member #78962) posted at 9:15 AM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
I immediately after DDay educated myself on how a betrayer gets to the point of betraying their spouse. I learned about the steps it took to get there, how the dopamine rush becomes like an addiction, about how perhaps their mental state of mind leading into the affair could be affected by the state of the marriage. I learned about all of that so that I could better understand my WW’s position. I have forgiven her for the actual affair. What I couldn’t forgive her for was the complete lack of effort to repair the damage she had done to the marriage, the complete lack of remorse and empathy, and the emotional abuse through anger and distancing she parlayed onto me every time I felt sad about the affair or her lack of work to reconcile.
Chaos ( member #61031) posted at 1:25 PM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
Interesting topic! And makes me think hard on a Monday Morning.
As I am not fully coffee'd this post may be a bit all over the place :)
I think we are in a society that is too quick to jump to forgiveness for atrocities.
I think forgiveness should be earned. Proven behavior over time.
I feel redemption is something that someone can strive for. I think forgiveness can be earned. I feel that forgiveness for atrocities is something that over time can happen if all the stars align and are maintained.
It took me YEARS to forgive my WH. I can still remember the feeling of forgiveness that washed over me, when, where, what I was wearing AND the song that was playing.
But...what took longer yet gave me the most peace was forgiving myself. Forgiving myself for feeling that this was my fault somehow. Forgive myself for thinking that I wasn't "enough". Forgiving myself for not knowing what I didn't know when I didn't know it. Forgiving myself for having blind faith trust even when I probably shouldn't have. Forgive myself. THAT gave me a peace I can't describe. It took years. It took work. It took strength. I resented most of it. But I had to experience this journey. And in forgiving myself - the victim - the collateral damage of someone else's sickness - I found my peace.
BS-me/WH-4.5yrLTA Married 2+ decades-2 adult children. Multiple DDays w/same LAP until I told OBS 2018- Cease & Desist sent spring 2021 "Hello–My name is Chaos–You f***ed my husband-Prepare to Die!"
sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 3:21 PM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
"the point where you no longer seek revenge even though you could act".
I think that's one definition of many for 'forgiveness'.
I never could come up with a way to punish my W without adding to my own pain, so forgiving helped me. But it slipped up on me. I never set forgiveness as a goal, and I don't think I noticed when it happened. One day I just woke up and realized I hadn't thought of revenge for a long while. A couple of years later, I mentioned it in a post that y W read, and it was a big deal to her. It still isn't a big deal for me.
I 'forgave' my W on d-day, too, as a way of keeping myself from ruminating about 'How could she do this to me?' and 'Why me?' That forgiveness was definitely for me, and it definitely helped - when I felt sorry for myself, I cut the process short by reminding me that I 'forgave' my W.
I'm with Chaos - forgiveness has to be earned,. If my W had not been remorseful, I think I'd have trained myself not to think much about her, but I would probably still have wanted revenge.
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex apDDay - 12/22/2010Recover'd and R'edYou don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.
Superesse ( member #60731) posted at 3:30 PM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
Every one of these posts has good points to ponder.
I'd like to think by now I've forgiven my SAWH his cruel callous betrayals and lies that spanned from our dating years in the mid-90's through 2020, but forgiveness gets more complicated when there is no perceived shift in their other behaviors.As Cooley wrote, our brains are wired like an elephant - we never forget such trauma. But having to stay always on guard against repetitive betrayal of this magnitude takes a huge toll on the victim working towards true forgiveness of an offender's "past" behaviors...especially when you can connect the dots to all the little day-to-day, thoughtless behaviors they continue to exhibit! Makes the past live constantly "in your face."
My mind tells me if he can be this clueless about his supposedly-loved life partner in less-consequential moments, it isn't far-fetched of me to suspect he could cheat again.
I think my toughest challenge still today is to forgive, even though I will not forget, but yet not to keep re-swallowing the horrible experiences that are constantly evoked in my mind just living with a self-focused person. Yet a person who really wants to be married to me...or maybe hopes I will settle for what he can give. UGH.
Keep the good thoughts coming!
InkHulk ( member #80400) posted at 3:53 PM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
I also agree that forgiveness must be earned, and that it takes time commensurate with the offense. But I didn’t used to think that way. My parents did the whole "say you’re sorry, now say you forgive him" thing (which I sadly passed on to my children). My faith emphasizes the importance of forgiveness.
The parenting stuff is just lazy. The faith element is often taught (or maybe just understood by me) with half the story. I still love the parable of the Prodigal Son. The forgiveness is indeed radical, but it comes after a show of deep humility by the betrayer. It’s like we like to skip past that and just put all the burden on the wronged party.
I will say that still to this day I don’t really understand what people here mean that you can R without forgiving. That Venn diagram just doesn’t compute for me. I can’t see returning to a loving relationship worth being in without forgiveness (however you define that).
People are more important than the relationships they are in.
Cooley2here ( member #62939) posted at 4:08 PM on Monday, August 25th, 2025
Superesse, if you have to deal with a difficult person every day, it’s going to grind you down into nothing unless you learn how to stop it. I believe the word no is the best answer you can give to anyone who’s trying to harm you, rob you, lie to you, cheat on you. You have agency. You have rights. Those rights are to be in your own body without fear and without agony. If the person you live with continues to do things that literally harm you emotionally, you have to make two choices. You have to go to a life coach/therapist to figure out how to deal with that person or you need to separate. You can’t live like that.
I often ask a friend of mine, a therapist, about issues here. They can only talk in generalities but one thing we discuss nonstop is dealing with narcissists. The term personality disorder is used so often that it is almost background noise. But it is the basic character/personality of a person whose whole focus is on themselves to the exclusion of others. In fact the diagnoses are not given unless the person’s behavior meets a very rigid standard. So, for example, you have someone who nearly fits the definition but not quite. To the person having to deal with them the diagnosis is no help. The damage the person does is still damage.
I have a good, not perfect, marriage. For that I am thankful.
I was not prepared for dealing with a disordered person because her behaviors were very subtle. It took me several years to even see how she impacted my day. By then we were both involved in a group activity that had slowly been "trained" to allow her almost total control on how we did our activity. It was completely unspoken but once my vision cleared I could see as long as she was allowed she would shun anyone who bucked her authority. These were all very educated women. I had been trained/educated in these type issues and still got sucked in.
We marry/cohabit with someone we have given our most vulnerable selves. If they are disordered they will see your trust as weakness and use it against you. Remember that every disordered person requires, even demands, power. They will do anything they can to wrest it away from others.
When things go wrong, don’t go with them. Elvis