I think "comparing" affairs is an exercise in futility. There are no winners - we are all losers. The worst affair you can ever experience is the one that happened to you. It's easy to look at the experiences of others and think "I could NEVER forgive THAT though...." and I will be honest that I catch myself doing it all the time, but the truth is, if there is one thing that this experience has taught me, it is that I had no idea what I'd do until I was actually put in the position to do it.
I also don't think the degree of affair badness is NECESSARILY correlated with the ability of the BS to "get over it". It's not like a math equation where as long as you don't go over a certain level of badness things are going to be okay. I see people making this mental connection all the time and it makes my brain hurt a little bit. Any affair is bad and should, in theory, by unforgivable... and yet here we are. I have seen people R in circumstances that I would have assumed were unrecoverable from. I have seen people divorce due to infidelities that I would have considered "more minor". None of it happens in a vacuum. There are so many other factors at play.
- is a WS easier to forgive if you as the BS honestly know your marriage was on the verge of breaking down before the affair as opposed to a WS cheating during a happy marriage?
I was someone who was cheated on at the beginning of my marriage but we had been 10 years at the time. Things were generally good. We were trying to have a baby. There were some external stressors that were wearing us down a little but as between the two of us, we were fine. It meant that I really doubted myself and my perception of the relationship and whether he could be safe - if you're willing to cheat when things were good, can you ever be a safe partner? The flip of that was that made it easier for me to really see/understand/believe that it wasn't about the marriage or about me, but about him. I also think that the fact that our relationship was mostly strong made it easier to heal from. There were a lot fewer issues to fix and distractions to get weighed down by and patterns to rectify. Our "work" was more focused, as we hadn't fallen into the dysfunctional muscle memory that I know so many marriages can fall into over time.
- is a 6week affair easier to forgive than a 6month affair?
Again, I don't 'think it's about the length of the A or the badness of the cheating that determines whether R will be successful or not. I think what is more important is the motivation and effort of the parties in it. That said, I think a shorter A would.... in theory. be easier to handle than a longer one because less marital history is wrapped up in the A. The flip is that in a longer A, I think there is more time for the WS and the AP to see the "real" other person rather than the idealized fantasy they had built up in their minds which might make the fog easier to break. Doesn't mean they will necessarily, but they might be able to have a more nuanced view of the person than someone who had only ever seen the AP on their very best behaviour. I know my husband talks about a time period that occurred in the course of his A where it had hit him how wrong what he was doing was, and what he risked losing. Despite having justified things in his own brain and done the separate boxes in his mind thing, he had a day where the fog lifted, and he was overcome with guilt and he really asked himself what the fuck he was doing and why and what his exit plan would be. He didn't execute on any of this exit plans, but I think having had these thoughts on his own beforehand, made it easier for him to know INSTANTANTLY on D-day that the lies he had told himself were not real.
- is an EA easier to forgive than a PA?
Again, I think it's going to depend on the parties. For some people, they would say absolutely and that would be true for them. My husband's A was mainly a PA - not a TON of emotional connection (no "I love yous" or plans to run away together). And as hard as it was to deal with the sex stuff (and I'm not dowplaying it one little bit), I know that my greatest fear in R was that I would find out that he secretly loved her and was just biding his time to be with her.
is an affair easier to forgive from a WS when you know they have come from a tough upbringing rather than someone who had everything given to them in life?
Again, I think people get really confused about whys when they treat them like mitigating circumstances. They aren't that. They don't excuse any of the behaviour of the person in the A, I think they just help us - as the BS - understand the dysfunctional thought processes that the WS has and how those dysfunctional thought processes came to exist. I don't' think that the bar for fidelity or being a good partner should be any lower for someone who had a crappy childhood than someone who had a good one. I also think that someone who had a reasonably "good" childhood can still develop dysfunctional coping skills through no real fault of their own. Things like avoidance and distraction and the drive for external validation can absolutely be adaptive in certain circumstances. I know I worked incredibly hard in school in order to get the praise from others and ego boost I received from knowing I'd done a good job - the fact that I found that motivating was incredibly adaptive in my life (and my husband's) in terms of achieving success in our careers. That same trait in my husband became maladaptive when he started tying his worth as a person to his achievements and he into a hole of shame when something didn't go the way he had hoped at work.
Again, if anything, the healthier the WS is as a person, the easier I think it is - in theory - to R, because there is less shit to work through.
BUT holy shit this forgiveness thing is a tough gig.
It's early Webbit. Don't try too hard to force it. I will tell you I went into R without planning on ever being able to forgive it. It felt like an unforgivable thing and I could'nt comprehend ever thinking it was okay so I never tried. I focused instead on trying to understand it and working on my own resentments while he worked on his shit. Over time, I think forgiveness just sort of happened. I'll tell you, it certianly wasn't in a few months post Dday.