I stick around because I got a lot of help healing from SI, and I'd like to give back. And I'm arrogant/confident enough to think that I can.
My aim is to help people heal. For some, that's R. For others, it's D. For still others, it's something else.
But like the SIers who responded above, I can see patterns in what people say. I can ask about the anomalies I see - but I also know that an SIer can post only the top of their mind; they can post only a small part of what they think, feel, and perceive. We can respond only to what an SIer posts, and that's only a small part of the story.
But it's natural for human beings to jump to conclusions....
There are other factors, though. Some people have tried R and ended up suffering further hurts. A portion of those project their experience onto others.
A portion of people for whom R didn't work assume that they should have done the opposite of what they did, and they think D is the olny alternative to R. In fact, however, there are many options open to a couple besides the 2 most obvious - there's a wide spectrum between and outside D & R, but some SIers don't accept or realize that.
A BS needs to do a lot of work to heal, as DaddyDom and hikingout have said. BSes, IMO, have to process anger, grief, fear, and shame out of their bodies - but they also have to process the feelings that are triggered by the infidelity-related pain. If they don't do that processing, they won't heal.
Some members need a few years to realize that they just don't want to live the rest of their lives with their WSes or that they remain turned off by their WSes.
Some members look to me like they're stuck in their pain, lash out at all WSes, so they counsel D.
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The most meaningful thing that was said to me after while I was deciding between D & R was, in brief:
R requires 3 healings.
BS heals BS.
WS heals WS.
They both work together to heal the M.
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The M is never the same after an A, true. It's also true that Ms - all Ms - change over time.
For the last several years, my W's A is one of a few traumas I've experienced in life, but not the worst. I remember the A and it's aftermath. One trauma was so painful I still recall at remembering it; it predated the A by 3 years.
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My recos when reading posts:
1) Check out how long someone has been dealing with infidelity - start dates and posts and sometimes peoples' profiles provide that info. People who started about when you did can give guidance about what they're feeling now. People who started a year or 2 before you did can offer feedback on hoe their process proceeded.
2) Checkout what people say. Click on 'Recent Posts' in the profile. You'll see some people counsel one outcome in post after post. Others seem to counsel questioners to figure out what the questioner wants and can do, irrespective of outcome.
3) Some posters say, 'Do this!' Others say, 'I see this, and draw these conclusions' without counseling one outcome or another. I think one approach is more valuable to new BSes than the other - but each new BS has to make their own choice.
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** Not posting as staff **
I will say with 99.9999% confidence that there is not a single BS on this forum that had only a single DDay - unless they immediately left their WS.... Every day, there's a member who joined SI 2, 5, 10 years ago, and comes back for DDay nth.
Huh? You aren't reading the posts - you're just looking at them and seeing what you want to see. Of course you're 'trapped' - you've told us clearly that you've trapped yourself.
You say you've stayed M for financial reasons more than any others. If your WS is really a parasite, you may be better off financially paying support than actually supporting him. Every year you stay in your M, you add to the alimony you'd owe. And what happens if your H finds someone he falls in love with and sues you for D? Just think of what you'd save on medical insurance.
I urge you to rethink. D may be worse than staying M ... but it might be way better.