** Member to Member ** (but my mod hat is on)
We have here a number of unsubstantiated generalizations about men.
Someone, I don't remember who, said they focus on a male perspective because they're male, so they can't speak for women.
The thing is, no single man and no small group of men knows enough to speak for men, either - one can speak only for oneself.
I don't understand how a person gives themself a pass on speaking without sense or permission for one gender without giving themself a pass on speaking for another gender. Speaking for others without data and without permission is committing the same fallacy no matter who one presumes to speak for.
There's no need to violate the 'no (over-)generalization guideline.
*****
I agree there are men who look miserable in R. I believe Eric accepts some things from his W that I don't think I would, but I could be wrong. In any case, Eric's posts don't show misery - they've been showing optimism and confidence, with good reason.
So I'm reluctant to judge or draw conclusions about my fellow SI members. Maybe they include all relevant data in their posts - in all likelihood, however, none of us do that. We're all too complex to be totally accurate in posting a few words on the web.
My reco is: be slow to judge, and be slow to draw conclusions, because we don't know much about each other here.
*****
As far as I can see, WHes who redeem themselves say essentially the same thing that WWs do. Don't get me wrong - as a BH, I had a hard time. It's just that I think WHes stand on the same moral low ground that WWs do. A remorseful WW is still a WS. A remorseful WH is still a WS. They should never have needed to redeem themselves. Still, I can accept a redeemed WS as a brother or sister. I won't do that for an unredeemed WS, of any gender. I just haven't seen meaningful differences between genders. Maybe that's because I focus on healing, surviving, and thriving instead of endless analysis of how s/he did me wrong.
I think there may be differences between men and women that affect healing, but I haven't seen any in my own experience or reading about infidelity, which includes 15+ years on SI.
And healing is what counts, because it's healing from being betrayed that leads to surviving and thriving.
And this is crucial: one heals as an individual, not as a member of a group. One heals by doing what one needs to do for themself. IMO, it's best to focus on figuring out and doing what one needs to do.
That means looking inside, not looking outside, which can tell one only what other people have needed to do to heal them.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 5:45 PM, Friday, April 17th]