T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1257.1 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed May 06 1992 10:15 | 3 |
| From experience, when she starts to look else where. Its over. And
trust is something that can never be again. Seek a ground fault of
'Adultery'. And stick to it to the end.
|
1257.2 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Wed May 06 1992 10:20 | 14 |
| > Do I really *want* to do any of the above? I think I do.
That says it all. You love your wife. She says she loves you. She has
hurt you very deeply. It will take time, lots of it, to heal.
Trust is easy to lose and hard to gain. Your wife should know that it will take
a while before you can trust her completely again.
It's good that you are getting counseling. Your wife needs it too.
I sincerely hope you two can work things out.
Bob
|
1257.3 | Joint counseling may help | DNEAST::FIKE_MIKE | | Wed May 06 1992 10:27 | 33 |
|
How could I ever believe her again?
How could I ever trust her again?
- The plain fact of human interaction is that most everyone lies about
something at some point. This doesn't mean that they will ALWAYS lie or
ALWAYS be untrustworthy. It just means that circumstances occurred
which led them to feel that the lie was "better" than the truth. She
may be perfect for you for the rest of your life or she could lie to
you forever- you just have to decide whether or not your relationship
is worth the risk. From what you say and given the fact that there's
kids involved- I'd say you'd want to risk it.
How do I overcome the deep feeling of betrayal?
How could I justify forgiveness?
How do I erase the mental pictures of her with him during our marriage?
-It may be hard not to feel betrayed, but the fact is that for most
people having an affair is not something that they can do in the open.
Betrayal is a given, but only because we believe that sex outside of
our marraige is unacceptable. Normally it's not like your spouse can
say "honey, I'm attracted to someone else right now so if you don't
mind, I'll be coming home late tonight." Not gonna happen. Hence the
lies, betrayal etc. It sounds like it may be worthwhile to get some
joint counseling to help you get over your negative feelings about the
situation because you sound like you thought you had a great
relationship going and want to get back to that point. I bet if you
had never heard from that ***** about the affair with her husband,
you'd still think everything was just peachy. You got to wonder about
peoples motivation when they pull stunts like that.
You can get past this if it's really what you want.
|
1257.4 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | it ain't easy; being green | Wed May 06 1992 10:37 | 13 |
| Only you can decide whether you can ever believe her again
Only you can decide whether you can ever trust her again.
If my wife and I were ever to have the conversations that you recounted
to us, I would be MOST flabbergasted that I had seen no hints of that
before. That the level of trust had fallen that far, and I had no
emotional clues that something was going on. I would feel the need to
try to understand how our relationship had become so distant that I had
become unable to identify any signals of such a rift. I would feel the
need to seek some professional counseling
herb
|
1257.5 | | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Wed May 06 1992 10:45 | 30 |
|
Re .0 -
I'd say go with your own sense of integrity. If you feel betrayed
and that goes beyond forgiveness, go for ending your marriage. If
you feel that forgiveness is possible - without losing face - go for
a reconstruction and working it out.
What you'd want to avoid is losing your integrity or sense of self
respect for the sake of "saving the marriage" or "the kids". Your
resentment of her betrayal and your consequent self-betrayal in
this case could eventually manefest in some oblique manner which would
be a very unhealthy situation - for all of your family. If you choose
to just keep it a "secret", that secret will get (acted) out and effect
the emotional health of your children in a profound, negative way.
Actually, it would be better for the kids that you demonstrate
your sense of personal integrity in action, than it would be to
betray that sense "for their sake". She made the decision to go
off and do whatever, instead of confronting you if there was a
problem, so now there's consequences for making that choice and
she's responsible for dealing with it. The ball is trully in
your court.
IMHO, of course. I'm sorry to hear that you've been presented
with such a painful situation, time in your life and decision to make.
I understand that it must be really tough for you now. Hope this
helps,
Joe
|
1257.6 | another way of looking at it | ASDS::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Wed May 06 1992 13:44 | 45 |
|
I have another way of looking at things. I would suggest that
your wife cheated on you because she was emotionally/physically
vulnerable to doing that. The previous noter assumed that she
did nothing to make you aware of her vulnerability. Perhaps he
is wrong and she did try to make you aware. If you could think back to
that time and see that she tried to get your help, then you could
possibly feel partially responsible for the situation she was in. If
you feel partially responsible, then you have not only her to be
upset with but yourself too. If you believe that you are paritally
responsible for the problem, that would give you ammunition to
believe that you can prevent it from happening again.
I understand from reading/friends/etc that the following things
could each make her vulnerable:
did/does she feel that you find her attractive physically?
did/does she feel that you find her attractive emotionally &
intellectually?
did/does she feel ignored?
did/does she try to get you to go on "dates" or vacations alone and
you turn her down?
did/does she believe that you are satisfied and happy in the
marriage?
did/does she feel that you had/have as much emotion invested in the
relationship as she does?
was/is there still romance in the marriage? (kissing and other
passionate displays of affection)
I believe that all of the above things could make a person vulnerable.
ie: if she feels unattractive to you and/or ignored then all someone
needs to do is pay attention to her and if that's what she craves, then
she is very vulnerable. I am not saying that you have done anything
wrong or mean. I am trying to show that there are many reasons a
person cheats on their mate and most of those reasons involve the
relationship they are in. Since a "relationship" is involved then both
people are probably partially responsibile for the situation.
I hope you will take my comments as they are meant - in a constructive
manner. I don't mean to make you feel any worse than you already do.
I'm just trying to show that you probably do have some level of
control.
Rachael
|
1257.8 | | CSLALL::DOUGHERTY | So much for dreams... | Wed May 06 1992 15:09 | 10 |
| I'm not pointing to any replys in this note...so let's get that out of
the way right now....but I've got a question (bascially because I've
noticed this alot with friends/family).
Has anyone ever noticed how differently husbands act to the wife having
an affair - as opposed to the wife finding out and how she deals with
it?
Lynne
|
1257.9 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | it ain't easy; being green | Wed May 06 1992 15:19 | 6 |
| i think that's worth a separate topic.
In addition, I sure would hate to clutter up this man's "call for help"
with a discussion on male/female differences wrt infidelity.
herb
|
1257.10 | It can never be the way it was... | ADNERB::MAHON | | Wed May 06 1992 17:37 | 10 |
| I have know people in your situation and it's very touchy.
Everyone says "If you really love someone, you'd take them back..."
Then there's the other that say "How could you take them back. You
give your life and sole to this other person and for a stupid sense
of insecurity they go have an affair."
Uh Uh, I don't care if I were married to I don't know who....once
this happens, you can never go back to the way it was.
|
1257.11 | ciao. | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | and here's another profound note | Wed May 06 1992 19:35 | 11 |
| re:.0
Oh man.
That's the kind of thing that could make me pack my bags and leave,
and never once look back.
If my wife/woman/SO/girlfriend has an affair, I want to know about it
from HER, not someone else.
I feel for ya...
|
1257.12 | | YOSMTE::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed May 06 1992 20:50 | 10 |
| I don't think this is a subject of saving face, but rather can I still
love or trust this person.
I don't know how I'd react if my partner were to do this. I'd at least
have to leave the situation for a while. Just couldn't handle being in
the same space.
Then go from there. Time to reflect and re-evaluate for both of you.
cindy
|
1257.13 | It is possible, if the motivation is mutual | LJOHUB::GODIN | PC Centric: The Natural Order | Thu May 07 1992 09:30 | 21 |
| I have family members who have gone through this, and they have proved
that you can rebuild the marriage--IF both partners are willing to do
the work involved.
No, it's not the same as it was before. From my perspective it looks
better. Sure, there was a lot of hurt and anger and distrust to over-
come--ON BOTH SIDES, because there's lots of truth in the previous note
that pointed out that both of you may have been party to the
infidelity in one way or another. But they were motivated to overcome
BECAUSE they truly love each other and wanted to fix the problems both
of them had caused and rebuild.
It took years, and some times were better than others. But both were
committed to the rebuilding, and with appropriate counseling and family
support, they've made a success of it.
If you think it's worth the effort, go for it. But get her
whole-hearted buy in, too.
Good luck to both of you.
Karen
|
1257.14 | | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Thu May 07 1992 12:19 | 23 |
|
Maybe it's not a matter of "saving face". However...
I do feel that if a person's chosen action has to come to
having an affair to simply communicate that there's a problem,
that's just like _such_ a dysfunctional and dangerous way to go
about it that it really does approach the inexcusable.
This is regardless of the lack of "perceptiveness" on the part
of the husband in this case. If your man is "unresponsive", going
off and bedding with some other guy is *absolutely inappropriate*
as a way of letting him know you're having some, however serious,
problem with him. I'd think it inappropriate while *dating* let
alone under marriage!
My guess is that the basenoter would have to have something
in him that goes far beyond most people's tolerance to make this
work now. It is indeed possible, but it will take a lot. My advice
was simply to not sell himself and his own morals short in whatever
effort is takes to resolve this. The consequential damage would be,
IMHO, "manifold".
Joe
|
1257.15 | | YOSMTE::SCARBERRY_CI | | Thu May 07 1992 13:42 | 23 |
| I don't think a person has an affair so that he/she can communicate to
their partner that there's a problem. I don't see how it could done so
consciensiousily.
Next, who wins? You both want to win. He divorces, he loses the woman
he loves. The family unit (apparently strong) is broken. No matter,
whether they break up or stay together, it's a hard road.
What does his wife learn? That she regrets her affair and (apparently)
wants to keep her family. So, what does she do. Continues her life,
finds another mate and doesn't have an affair. Isn't that what the
husband wants now?
There probably isn't no hard and fast rule. Maybe this woman just needs
more attention than anyone could possibly give. Maybe she needs
attention from other sources. This husband will have decide whether he
can deal with that or not.
Perhaps writing down on paper, the negative and positive about your
relationship. Any relationship will deteroiate without balance. Both
partners have to feel that they're getting what they need or want.
cindy
|
1257.17 | choices | ASDG::CALL | | Thu May 07 1992 17:47 | 7 |
| It looks to me like she made her choice. When it came right down to
it she chose YOU. She moved with YOU. She is with YOU. In my
opinion the woman that called you with the news is trying to destroy
your marriage. She must be jealous of your wife and wants to ruin
what she has. If I were you I'd try to put it behind me and go on.
Don't put your wife through the mill and try not to go through the
mill your self. It happened...it's in the past. Leave it there.
|
1257.18 | | GBMMKT::SHIELDS | | Thu May 07 1992 17:47 | 29 |
| Re. .13 I agree with your perceptions 100%! A close friend of mine
had an affair and I did not condemn her for it, but tried to understand
why. He did find out about it, it did end in divorce, however, he
consistently failed to try and understand the 'why'. Even though it
was wrong, this woman was just lonely to the bone and needed someone to
talk too. Then someone to be with. Then someone to love and love her.
I can't condemn her for that.
As for .16, send 'her' for counseling? Well how about him? Isn't it
THEIR marriage. She had the affair, yet there isn't enough money in
the world for me to believe that it was for no reason at all. I don't
believe a happy spouse can be that easily lured from his/her home.
Next, what prompted the other man's wife to contact you now? What was
her motive? How cruel on her part!
Then we are all ignoring the FACT that your wife did stay with you even
after the affair was over. Seems to me she made her decision, probably
felt sorry as hell about the affair and hoped it would be buried along
with her someday. I think she's hurting here to.
There isn't any easy solution here, as you know. But, I will pray for
both of you and your children. After a 14 year investment in this
relationship, I certainly hope it ends happily for ALL 4 OF YOU!
God Bless & Best Wishes!
Estelle
|
1257.19 | | HEYYOU::ZARLENGA | and here's another profound note | Thu May 07 1992 18:18 | 17 |
| .17> It looks to me like she made her choice. When it came right down to
.17> it she chose YOU. She moved with YOU. She is with YOU. In my
You think so, eh?
.0> a year and only was broken off because me and my family had
.0> to relocate elsewhere. She said my wife had continued to phone
.0> him while they were married (he has since left her) and also
.0> written him letters. I said I would have to see proof so she
Looks to me like she stopped seeing the other guy because she moved
too far away to make it feasible. And she still maintained telephone
contact even after the move.
You call that a choice?!
Looks to me like the decision was made for her.
|
1257.20 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri May 08 1992 09:28 | 2 |
| .18 Sorry, if I wasn't clear. Both parties. And if she doesn't want
go. Then get an attorney. And dig in deep.
|
1257.21 | | BROKE::BNELSON | Keep the candle burning | Fri May 08 1992 12:06 | 58 |
|
My first thought is that right now you are probably (I know I would!)
far too emotional to make such important decisions. Most likely you
have all kinds of emotions raging through you depending on your mood,
what's happening around you, what song is on the radio, etc. Doesn't
sound like a good environment for rational thought. (I'm basing this
on my experience, some/all of this may not be true for you.)
I would take some time for things to settle down, for your emotions to
swing back from the extremes to something approaching the middle
ground. At that time you'll have a better frame of mind to start
thinking about where you want to go with this. And once the opacity of
emotion has been lifted, it may even be clear to you where you want to
go.
The bottom line is that you're the only one who can make these
decisions because you're the one who's going to have to live with them.
So make sure they're the right ones for *you*.
> The why turned out to be because she felt I didn't need her and
> she wanted attention elsewhere. (shock to me!)
[Insert big flag here.] Sounds to me like there's a communication
problem here (usually is with this type of scenario). Either she
wasn't communicating her needs, or you weren't listening (or noticing)
hard enough. Most likely some of both. This is something that would
need to be worked on if you decide to stay.
> I've seen a lawyer and a marriage counselor. I cannot decide
> what to do. My wife and I are on speaking terms to try and hide
> the situation from the kids. We both love them dearly. I think I
> love her yet hate her for what she's done. (Never gave much real
> thought about what a 'love-hate' relationship really was.)
I can understand you're having difficulty deciding what to do.
Like I said, give it some time -- even though that's probably the
hardest thing to do right now!
I think it's possible to get past this, work on the relationship
and *heal* together. It depends on how much you're both willing to
try and how much damage has been done.
Good luck.
Brian
|
1257.22 | An update | GIAMEM::JLAMOTTE | Come next Monday | Fri May 08 1992 12:19 | 47 |
| A reply from the anonymous author of .0
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Would you please enter this for me. Anonymously of course.
I really appreciate your help.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
>> trust is something that can never be again
I sincerely hope you are wrong. There's only one
way I could ever 'feel' married again and that
would be to trust my mate. I don't feel towrds her
like I used to. I hear it takes time.
Forgive and forget?
Never forget. Maybe forgive.
>> you can never go back to the way it was.
That's a fact I realize. I was happy, she was not.
I guess I never asked much 'are you happy?'. Then
again I never much asked 'are you stepping out on me?'
either. When I did, she lied. I always tried to make her
feel unrestricted and counted on her to make the right
decisions. Clearly we didn't talk enough.
>> what prompted the other man's spouse to call
She said he had left her and wondered if I knew where he
might be. Some seem to think this lady did something
wrong. I do not. She has not lied as far as I can tell.
She may be bitter but she was upset too. I do not hold
this against her at all.
I've just finished reading 'Private Lies' by Frank Pittman. It's
an excellent book for anyone who has experienced an affair, either
as the cuckold (his term for the betrayed), the infidel, or the
affairee. It tries to explain why people have affairs and why they
lie about it. There are many different types of affairs. Accidental,
romantic, philandering, and marital arrangement. I feel my wife's
was accidental. It tries to explain the infidelity after we moved
(yes, letters and phone calls ARE infidelity). He talks about some-
thing called 'accidental divorce'. I may still divorce, but it
will be after a lot of soul searching and a lot of talking.
I still find myself doubting what she says. I still get angry. I
still feel betrayed, still get very sad. She knows how I feel.
She seems genuinely sorry. Guilty. Afraid. We talk, a lot.
She has agreed to see the marriage councilor.
|
1257.23 | | CSLALL::DOUGHERTY | I believe in White Dragons | Fri May 08 1992 12:37 | 4 |
| > We talk, a lot.
IMHO - that's half the battle right there.
|
1257.25 | | CSLALL::DOUGHERTY | I believe in White Dragons | Fri May 08 1992 14:36 | 6 |
| > Open minds and open hearts will make it work.
> keep some of the cards to yourself if she decided to renege.
???????????????
|
1257.26 | .25 | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri May 08 1992 14:50 | 1 |
| Trust em as far as you can throw em..... Thats the message.....:)
|
1257.27 | | CSLALL::DOUGHERTY | I believe in White Dragons | Fri May 08 1992 15:20 | 3 |
| I feel sorry for you dearheart. You must have been burnt VERY badly.
:) not withstanding. ;-)
|
1257.29 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | Hard wear engineer | Fri May 08 1992 17:43 | 11 |
| "Turn and learn or crash and burn."
I've seen people cling to remnant of relationships like drowning people
cling to flotsam from a shipwreck. Let it go and swim to shore.
Better yet, if you check, you'll probably find that the water ain't
that deep anyway.
Take the short term pain and get it over with. If you try to
reconcile, you will have years of grief and doubt and inner turmoil all
for a person who didn't value her commitment to you, herself and god
enough to stay honest.
|
1257.30 | in the words of Andrew Dice Clay | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | gonna get ver-ti-cal! | Fri May 08 1992 20:27 | 1 |
| "I trust that chick about as far as I can bowl 'er."
|
1257.31 | | CSLALL::DOUGHERTY | I believe in White Dragons | Sat May 09 1992 09:58 | 6 |
| re: .28
I *DO* feel for the basenoter. But I also keep in mind that it's HIS
decision...the one that HE has to live with. Not all situations like
his wind up in divorce....
|
1257.33 | You made a good decision | MAGEE::SKOWRONEK | | Mon May 11 1992 12:18 | 23 |
| To the basenoter,
Good for you and best of luck. I am glad to hear that you both are
willing to work at it. It seems to me that you wife knows she made a
mistake (maybe that is why she lied to you when you first confronted
her), and I don't feel it is good to forget, but it is very healthy to
forgive, and you will probably end up with a much stronger marriage due
to this. Infidelity has been going on for years. I've known people
who were married 40 - 50 years, and their spouse had had an affair 5 -
10 years into the marriage, but they decided to stay together and work
it out (even the children did not know until they were married
themselves and going through problems).
Divorce is easy --- working it out is the tough thing, and if you
really love each other you will work it out. If your wife did not care
for you she would not have relocated with you and she would not be
willing to work it out -- in other words she would not be with you
today, she would be with the "other man" or someone else.
Best of luck, I see a happy ending to this story . . . .
Debby
|
1257.34 | take your time.... | ARRODS::CARTER | Windows on the world... | Mon May 11 1992 13:34 | 23 |
| I read somewhere that MOST marriages do not split up following a
one-off affair.
Yes, it will take time, but I believe that you should give it a go -
you have an awful lot too lose if you just give up.
If your wife wanted to leave you she would have done so, or she might
have started another affair. It sounds to me like her affair was
symptomatic and opportunistic.
Whilst I would not discredit anyone else's opinions here I think you
are getting aome very black/white advise from people which is based on
their experiences and hurts - sometime's I feel that the advise given
in this notesfile come predominantly from people who have "been
through the mill" (me included!) as someone is more likely to seek a
conference like this after/during a personal bad experience.
I know that's how I came to this conference, and at the time and
shortly after I know I was not able to give well-balanced opinion.
Xtine
|
1257.36 | Anonymous reply | QUARK::MODERATOR | | Mon May 11 1992 15:14 | 70 |
| The following reply has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to QUARK::MODERATOR, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Steve
Dear Anon,
I'll try to give you some insight from the other side, having
been there. Why did I do it? I had tried to tell my husband that
there was a problem. I tried to tell him what it was. Our
communication skills were not good. He didn't understand what I was
trying to say or I didn't tell him in a way he could understand.
Either way, it wasn't understood. I believed I was being very clear.
I can remember sitting in the dining room and telling him that
maybe we needed to separate and try to find what we had lost. He
didn't think I was serious. In fact, he took it so unseriously that
he didn't remember the conversation until I reminded him of it!
So, someone else came along and offered me what I was looking
for (or so I thought). Things got so bad I asked for a divorce. The
next 2 years were hell, for both of us. We went to joint counseling,
I went to individual counseling. We are still married and our
marriage is better than it was before.
I realized very shortly after filing that I had made a
mistake. Unfortunately (or maybe fortunately) it wasn't as easy as
saying "I made a mistake". I withdrew my petition, he filed. We
continued counseling and living as husband and wife. We even bought a
freezer four days before going to court for the hearing on his
petition for divorce!
I thank God for the judge we had. I had filed a petition for
dismissal of his on the grounds that the marriage did in fact exist in
all areas and that there was no "irreconcilable damages", or whatever
it's called. After hearing from both lawyers and both of us, the
judge granted my petition.
That wasn't the end of things. My husband sorta moved out
(that's a whole story in itself). He stated he was going to refile.
At this point I said fine, I've done all I can. I told him I still
loved him, still believed in the marriage. BUT....I went my way, did
things with friends (always invited him, but went even if he didn't
want to). I let him know I would have preferred he joined us, yet I
was going to go anyway.
As it turned out, one of the real obstacles he had to get over
was his belief that I "needed to be married" as opposed to I "wanted
to be married to him".
It can work out. It takes a lot of patience, belief and
COMMUNICATING! Each person HAS to LISTEN to the other and be willing
to admit that maybe they hadn't heard what the other was really
saying. One thing I had to learn was how my husband showed me he
loved me. It wasn't in the way I was looking for, but it was there.
All I had to do was understand how he demonstrated his love. It is a
matter of accepting that the other person may not communicate like you
do, may not do things the same way you do or want.
Good luck.
|
1257.37 | sounds like you're doing O.K. | DNEAST::FIKE_MIKE | | Mon May 11 1992 15:18 | 10 |
| To the basenoter:
It sounds like you're on the right track and doing the right thing.
Good luck- hope it all works out for you.
From reading the replies, it obvious that there are some very
bitter judgemental people out there who remind me of the kids
when you are young that love to play "Let's you and him fight!"
They're miserable and just LOVE company. They know who they are.
Ignore 'em. Love 'em in spite of themselves. It drives 'em nuts.
|
1257.38 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | who? ME? | Mon May 11 1992 20:28 | 4 |
| Marriage sure sounds like a lot of work.
Doesn't anyone have a marriage that just works out on its own, or
do they all require this much attention and effort to last?
|
1257.39 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | it ain't easy; being green | Tue May 12 1992 09:47 | 7 |
| I doubt if any marriage works 'on its own', but we have certainly never
had the magnitude of problems that have recently be recounted here.
herb
|
1257.40 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | Roberta, DTN 237-2270 | Tue May 12 1992 10:59 | 5 |
| Mike, you sound like my husband. He feels a marriage should just
"flow", and if you have to work at it, then it isn't worth having.
It's not a very productive attitude to say the least.
|
1257.41 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Tue May 12 1992 11:28 | 5 |
| Well, I think it would depend on how you define "work" (at a marriage).
If it's an exhausting, draining hassle, all day every day, then with
friends (family) like that, who needs enemies?
Leslie
|
1257.42 | | HEYYOU::ZARLENGA | who? ME? | Tue May 12 1992 13:18 | 3 |
| re:.40
What you call unproductive I call optimistic.
|
1257.43 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | Hard wear engineer | Tue May 12 1992 17:37 | 2 |
| What, Mike? You think a marriage is supposed to be enjoyed rather than
endured? Boy, are you *ever* optimistic.
|
1257.44 | | YOSMTE::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed May 13 1992 13:52 | 20 |
| re.36
Although our situation didn't involve an "romanitc affair", we did
encounter the same sort of situation where our needs weren't met but
yet we still loved each other. It was wierd. We fought. We separated.
We considered custody rights. Finances were considered.
And after all that, we're together. Our unity is different than
before that tremendous hurdle. I've come to accept these episodes of
anger and disagreements. Also, I've come to understand that love comes
in many ways.
I'll probably never understand just what love is exactly suppose to be,
but it has helped me to know that there isn't any suppose to be.
Seems to me that if after all the fighting, arguing and anger; and the
person you love still wants you and vice versa then maybe that's all I
can ask for.
cindy
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