In posting on SI, it's best to share one's experience without projecting that experience onto someone else.
My bet is that 'prize' should be 'price'.
Probability of R is absolutely irrelevant.
In the first place, we can't know probabilities unless we have good statistics, and we don't have good statistics, so no one knows the probabilities of success/failure of the various outcomes of infidelity. No one even knows how to define success and failure - you may think you know the definitions, but I'd bet you'd get disagreement if you laid yours out. (Back to: don't project!) Each of us has to define success and failure for themself.
Much more important is the fact that probabilities refer to outcomes of a large number of cases. Probabilities say NOTHING about individual cases. Each of us needs to look at our specific situation in all its qualities and make one's own specific decisions. There is no one size fits all. Sometimes, a one in a gazillion probability actually occurs.
The sooner a person remembers that probabilities do not affect specific cases - does not affect their specific situation in particular - the better for that person.
What difference does it make what the BS considers first? I can't see any difference here. What's important is to consider as many options as one can think of, IMO.
The thing that most WS can not possibly understand, no matter how remorseful they are, is the Herculean, superhuman effort that it takes to even ATTEMPT to navigate R for a BS.
The BS has to attempt to process emotions that they'd rather run from. Hurt, anger, betrayal, disappointment, disgust, frustration, resentment, sadness, pain, fear, just to get an attempt at R off the ground. A BS is exhausted as soon as the work starts.
They have to do this in the presence of the person who they believed would not hurt them in this way...the person who they vowed to spend the rest of their days with, and care for until life ceased...at a time when they have recently discovered that this same person had hurt them and betrayed them in the most calloused manner imaginable./quote]
For me, R was much easier than I think D would have been. If I had thought D was easier, I probably would have chosen D.
I accept that recovery is difficult and extremely painful. Recovery requires processing and resolving emotions we'd rather run away from. But recovery is something we all have to go through no matter what resolution we choose.
Consider this: Because I stayed in the presence of my WS, I got support when I needed it. I got constant confirmation that she cheated because of her issues. I got constant confirmation that she loved me - confirmation that came via actions. I got answers to my questions, whenever I chose to ask. Also, I didn't have to go far for pleasure. None of that would have been available to me if I had dumped her.
there still is a high likelihood that the BS will NEVER fully recover.
I dont think you ever heal 100% The hit is just too traumatic.
Well, what the fuck is 'full recovery? What the fuck is '100% healing'?
I expect we all experience multiple traumas in our lives - losses of loved ones and injuries at the very least. My W's A is one of several traumas I've had to process. Different triggers bring up memories of different traumas. I'm OK with saying I'm not 100% healed from my W's A, as long as you realize that's true for every trauma that I remember. Isn't that the nature of trauma?
The fact that the traumas are different isn't all that important to me. They all hurt. They all cause pain without end. Memories of any trauma can trigger at any time. Thankfully, the pain diminishes over time. My W's A is the worst thing I've had to deal with, but not by much.
YMMV - but that's my point. I chose R as the easiest path for me. If you don't see it as your easiest path, don't choose R. But recognize that your experience is yours. It will be similar to the experiences of many other people - and it will be dissimilar to those of many others. Don't project.
A newly betrayed spouse, who is living in a completely distorted reality, not knowing who the person is that they have dedicated their life to..not knowing what has happened to their bombed out and depleted existence, not sure which way is up and which way is down....CANNOT POSSIBLY be able to count the cost of what R takes.
You're implying that they CAN count the cost of D. I disagree totally - if a new BS can't count the cost of R, they can't count the true cost of D.
There are many attempted Rs described on this site, and frankly, many are gut wrenching enough to have made me consider D as more palatable if I were reading them as a newly betrayed H.
I don't see any problem with that, unless one makes their decision entirely on the basis of what other people say.
IMO, you'll heal a lot faster if you go for what you actually want than if you go for what other people tell you you should want.
I was acknowledging R is a risk.
D is also a risk.
I'll assume you're saying that it's very possible that R will not lead to the life you really want. IMO, one runs a similar risk with D and with deciding not to decide. Life is risky.
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I'm all for R, in theory. If R scares you, I think your best bet is to resolve the fear before making a decision, because I believe fear is a trap. I'd say the same - and said the same - to those who won't D because they fear it.
But if R doesn't seem worth the price, don't choose R. If R means swallowing excrement, don't choose R.
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Share your experience. Share your calculus. Share the value you place on specific behaviors or conditions or boundaries or whatever. All of that helps readers discover their own values and calculus and make their own decisions.
Just don't assume that your calculus works for other specific people.
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I'll apologize in advance for my own projecting. If you see it, confront it.