One of the most common problems that I hear about is having repetitive questions about the affair. It's absolutely normal (and quite understandable) to want to gather all of the information that you possibly can. However, there comes a point where you get tired of asking triptogether.com and your cheating spouse becomes tired of answering. And you can start to wonder at what point are you going to have to stop this cycle. Often, you'd like to stop, but you hate the thought of having outstanding issues about which you are still unsure.
A wife might say: "I honestly
feel as if my husband is still withholding some of the details of his affair. I
admit that he has told me a lot of things - and some of those things must have
taken a great deal of courage because they are very damaging. But I still
believe that there are things that he doesn't want me to know. So I find myself
asking what are essentially the same questions but in different ways. My
husband has finally caught onto this because last night he snapped at me and
said: 'there is going to come a time - and that time is going to come very soon
- where you are just going to need to stop with all of the questions. I can't
keep going on like this. It feels like we can't get through single day without
my getting grilled repeatedly.' His words have some truth in them. I do have
questions every day. triptogether But I only
keep asking because I know that he hasn't told me everything. At what point do
I have to stop?"
I don't know of any rule or
guideline on this. And it's my belief that you have the right to ask for
information. Yes, husbands get very defensive about this and they will try to
call you off because every time you ask a question, they feel exposed, ashamed,
and badgered.
And, your husband might have a
point if he has told you everything already. I know from experience that after
a while, asking the same questions over and over does become pointless. It's a
frustrating cycle triptogether.com
Reviews that just isn't productive. So, I do concede that there
often is a point where you've been told essentially everything and you are
still asking the same questions because you still just can not wrap your brain
around these whole sets of circumstances.
But, not being able to fully
understand it doesn't mean that you haven't gotten the information that you've
asked for. Here's an example which might help since it isn't about infidelity.
Bear with me because I think that this is relevant and will help. Recently, my
child abruptly quit a sport that he loved and in which he has invested a lot of
time. I have repeatedly asked him to explain his reasoning. And, over and over,
he has told me that the commitment was too much, that his grades were
suffering, and that it wasn't fun anymore. These are all perfectly good
reasons. He gave the exact response that I had asked for. Still, it bothered
me. So, I kept at it. Did he not like his coach? Did he not feel like he was
not good enough? Did he have problems with one of his teammates? His answers
were always no. And this frustrated both of us. And I still don't completely
understand why he quit - and I may not ever understand it. But I've decided
that our relationship is not worth my continuing to pester him. He gave me the
information. I can't get inside his mind and feel his same feelings. So I just
need to move on and be here to support him if he needs me. He seems perfectly
content. It is ME who is experiencing the turmoil, but I know that I need to
let it go.
Ask yourself if you are at the same
point. Has he told you everything but you still just can't understand because
you wouldn't act in the same way? If you can look at this and know that your
husband has answered what you have asked and you are just churning the same old
things with disastrous results, then it is probably time to seriously scale
back. Likewise, if this process is just making you feel worse and you are just
ruminating and churning the bad feelings, ask yourself if this is worth it.
I understand that you need all the
answers. And if you don't think you have them, then it's certainly worth a
conversation. You might try: "I completely understand that it does us no
good to continue to debate the same old issues. But you need to understand that
I continue to ask because, in my heart, I wonder if you have told me
everything. I suspect that something is being held back. Once I have all of the
information, then I do intend to move on."
This may work. But if it doesn't
and if you remain stuck, then you may want to consider brief counseling just so
the counselor can help you determine if you have all of the information.
Sometimes, this is useful in more ways than one. Knowing that you have a set
time and place to address the outstanding issues frees you up so that this no
longer needs to be your sole focus at home.
But I don't think there's a magic
benchmark as to when you need to quit asking questions, although I think that
it makes sense to scale back when you are hearing the same responses over and
over and you are not learning anything new. I think that most of us can feel it
when we are just in a cycle of frustration.
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