Confessing Adultry to Your Spouse

  • Thread starter Thread starter freerf
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
…EasterJoy, I appreciate your comment. It gives me something to think about, i.e. what kind of discussions could strengthen and affair-proof a marriage. The fictitious discussions I created were totally tongue-in-cheek, wondering at how surreal it would be for someone to suddenly and abruptly approach their spouse about the subject. But frankly, I did not have a really useful idea about how to start such a conversation.

I would like to think that if you are in a marriage (and in a good marriage, not something ugly and beyond repair), you would daily pay attention and talk as necessary about your spouse’s and your own needs and well-being, and such communication should ideally (most of the time) prevent tensions from ever escalating to the point at which one spouse cheats on the other. Kind of like parents having a good communication with their children should ideally (most of the time) prevent “Columbine High School shooting sprees”. But maybe not all the time. :o Tragedies happen despite our best efforts.

Trying to translate your advice to a “Columbine shooting spree” - just to make sure I understand it right - a discussion shouldn’t start with something abrupt us “OK, Son, so if you are going to shoot up your high school”. It’s more like there should be more frequent, ongoing communication about how your child feels at school, whether the atmosphere is good or is there any tension or bullying, etc…
Right. But when we talk to the kids about shooting sprees, for instance, we would be careful to say that the shooters aren’t necessarily monsters. We talk about how isolation and bullying can warp a person’s thinking. We talk about how important it is to have adults to talk to, both parents and otherwise. We talk about how important it is to talk to an adult when a friend even jokes around about doing something violent to themselves or others. Our kids know that they can arrange to talk to our pastor at any time–an adult whose discretion is beyond question–and there will be no questions asked. Maybe that would be to talk about contacting the parents of a suicidal classmate, maybe about their own struggles with chastity, maybe about questions having to do with a vocation to the priesthood. The main thing is, they know they can have that talk and we’re going to help them without butting in and wanting to have a reason.

I’ve always thought it important to teach my kids that good kids are capable of getting into drugs, that good people sometimes become alcoholics or addicts, and that nice families have problems that lead to divorce. Rather than preventing falls, I think that to pretending otherwise courts arrogance before the fall and despair afterwards. IMHO, pride and shame get many people into deep holes that they didn’t ever need to dig themselves into.

I think that good marriages and good families have to have boundaries in place…but if you can’t talk about the fact that a fall is possible for a “good person,” how do you talk about boundaries? If you can’t admit that decent people have affairs, how can you ask “Something is wrong. Are you seeing someone else?” without also saying “Are you a terrible treacherous person who is doing something unthinkable?” Perhaps no one can guarantee that he or she would be able to get past an affair, but how could a spouse come clean after a fall, if he or she knows that condemnation for the act will be swift and automatic? In that case, it is not realistic to think that an adulterer will ever confess.

Even if my husband is going to have lunch out in a public place with a woman, even for business, he always tells me, and vice versa. Generally speaking, it is assumed that we are invited, as well. That’s what we’re comfortable with. Other couples don’t admit any socializing except same-gender or couple socializing. I think that is the right way to approach it…talking about the falls that can happen in otherwise good marriages and deciding together what boundaries are prudent. Approaching it that way requires communication, though.

As for your dad, my kids know what a sociopath is, too, although not by that name. They know that there are people out there that can lie as easily as they can give you the time, because they just don’t connect with others. They know that some people are this way from birth, but that addiction can do it to nearly anyone.

I remember Craig Ferguson saying that the difference between an alcoholic and a meth addict is this: An alcoholic will steal your purse and punish themselves with guilt over it. A meth addict will steal your purse, then help you look for it. The message to me is clear: Addiction spawns liars. Curing the addiction requires somewhere safe to tell the truth…I don’t mean a place that is safe from consequences, but a place that is safe from being rejected as a person. If a person is both addicted and can’t tell the truth without being totally rejected, what is the way out? Yet the Lord wants no one in chains. The way to tell the truth has to be there, somewhere. I think that accepting that anyone can sin is that way, and that the consequences of coming clean are far to be preferred over the consequences of continuing in chains.

PS I’d not want to know, but I think my husband would have to tell, anyway. He just doesn’t do well in keeping anything from me…or anyone else, for that matter. That’s OK, too, and he knows it. I am more likely to keep things to myself when it would do me good to talk to somebody. I’m trying to get over that. I would hope that if I were ever to have an affair, I would not presume to keep that information to myself on my own discretion. I think having that confirmed by a second opinion from a confessor is* de rigeur*.
 
I’m pretty sure you’re wrong and that what I wrote is correct, but I don’t care enough to go searching through the Catechism to find what I was referring to.
Huh, that’s weird. Seems indicative of an unhealthy marriage, if one feels secrets should be kept.
normal marriages go through terrible times
 
Great. Spent 3 hours talking. They thought it was best if I just meet with one person. He is great. And wasn’t all nervous about getting everything out in the open. Went over everything about me, my husband and about how I am not there for the children. He asked a ton of questions. He also wants to meet with my husband. But so far my husband refuses. But I’ll keep pushing. I am doing a mini-retreat tomorrow. So daily mass, counseling, testing and surrounding myself with better people. I feel more engaged now.
I am so so in awe of your courage! You go girl!!!
 
Serap, your comment and EasterJoy’s comment (I quote her below) forced me to think a bit seriously about possible “conversations”.

I have seen some good marriages, and marriages that were more than bad - some ugly marriages. One good marriage is my sister’s marriage. Indeed, in her marriage, there’s no talking about “if you are ever going to cheat on me, (tell me) or (don’t tell me)”. A conversation like that would be similar to me telling my mom, whom I adore, “Mom, if you ever show up with an AK-47 to shoot me”, or my mom telling me, “Son, if you are ever going to hurl a live grenade into our dining room during family lunch on Sunday”. :eek: It would just be - surreal. I adore my family, and tend to think that nothing short of being bitten by a rabid dog and going insane myself with rabies would ever make me hurl live grenades into my family’s living room (or anybody else’s living room, short of being in a war zone and fighting the terrorists or something).

Now, ugly marriages are a different business… My father was a cheater, but he was also someone who would lie to you face-to-face, and I think no amount of discussion would have made him come to his senses. Discussion with my father was futile… Finally it came to separation and divorce, when I was 5 years old. And that divorce is frankly the best thing that could happen to us. Peace and happiness only returned to our home after dad was gone.

.
My marriage has gone through a terrible time the past year and we got through it. Now we are getting along again. It was just too much stress on our marriage.

that’s life though and for one of us to cheat (IMO) would be just running away.

God brought us together and we have to deal with things and the cards we have been dealt. We are adults and we have to behave like adults…

hmm…wish I could stop being so immature when I’m fighting with DH :rolleyes:
 
Violette, I think that’s a wonderful idea to have a good Christian man meet your husband and mediate between you and him. It truly saddens me to hear that your husband refuses. Does he love you at all? Does he care at all?

Praying for you and your family.
He refuses because of the religion. I have asked him to meet my friend from church multiple times and it has always been no. He wants nothing to do with the Catholic Church except for show. He goes to mass with us every Sunday because it looks good. If it was one of my weightlifting friends, he would have no problem meeting him. I am not giving up.

I think he loves and cares about me. He just does not know how to show it. He shows love with money. I would prefer affection.
 
He refuses because of the religion. I have asked him to meet my friend from church multiple times and it has always been no. He wants nothing to do with the Catholic Church except for show. He goes to mass with us every Sunday because it looks good. If it was one of my weightlifting friends, he would have no problem meeting him. I am not giving up.

I think he loves and cares about me. He just does not know how to show it. He shows love with money. I would prefer affection.
Tough situation. Is your husband non-Catholic, Violette? Or is he Catholic, but just really dislikes the Church? I wonder if he would be willing to meet with a marriage therapist instead of meeting somebody from the Church. He does seem like a man set in his ways. He might be thinking right now, “Hey, it’s a waste of time to talk about our marriage. There’s nothing wrong with our marriage. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

I did include your family in my Mass intentions and will continue to do so.
 
I can’t believe anyone actually chose that last option. :o
Actually, I’m thinking that many might have chosen the last option except that they took the stated scenario at face value. When you come down to it, for someone in a Christian marriage, where vows were taken to love and honor the spouse for life, and the spouses meant them and live by those vows, adultery is simply not an option.
 
Tough situation. Is your husband non-Catholic, Violette? Or is he Catholic, but just really dislikes the Church? I wonder if he would be willing to meet with a marriage therapist instead of meeting somebody from the Church. He does seem like a man set in his ways. He might be thinking right now, “Hey, it’s a waste of time to talk about our marriage. There’s nothing wrong with our marriage. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

I did include your family in my Mass intentions and will continue to do so.
He was raised Catholic. He just doesn’t believe in the Church teachings. He gets a little nervous with all the religious stuff I have been doing.

I asked him if he would go to a Knights of Columbus meeting with my friend. And then asked him to go to a retreat tomorrow with me. And asked if he would just go out to eat with my friend. Never discussed marriage. He thinks our marriage is fine.

Forgot - after I have been in therapy and feel more confident, I am going to suggest marriage counseling. If he refuses, I don’t think our marriage can survive.
 
You won’t get an STD if your spouse is engaging in an emotional affair or phone sex, but most women I know would still consider that adultery. You aren’t saying that the reason to tell is because STD’s can kill people? The truth is that 50% of Americans who have ever been sexually active have HPV. Most don’t know it.



Certainly if a person is aware of having a disease that could be passed to their spouse, they have to let their spouse know, regardless of how they got the disease. Conversely, though, a spouse who knows by the nature of his or her infidelity that it is impossible to have contracted an STD still has to weigh whether to come clean about the infidelity. Most of the time, the majority of the damage done is above and beyond that.
Mostly, I’m still stuck weighing the practical consequences of having physical sex (as opposed to phone sex, non-physical emotional affairs, etc). But I agree that the consequences go beyond the physical, and that they have to be dealt with in such cases also in which there’s no risk of passing STDs to the spouse.

My basic premise is this: if there’s a risk of STDs, it’s better to tell than not to tell. And this is based purely on weighing the physical consequences (the risk of STDs), without having yet touched on the spiritual consequences.

I do not believe that if I physically had sex with someone else than my spouse, then it’s enough to take a few tests for STDs, and if I am free of any symptoms of STDs, and if my tests also come back negative, to just sit back and relax and hope that I’m TRULY free of STDs and that I TRULY didn’t infect my spouse. I still insist that it is possible to get infected, but never to become aware of it, because someone may stay free of symptoms, their tests may yield false negative results (or never even check for certain STDs in the first place!), and yet they may pass on dangerous and even life-threatening disease to their spouse.

Thus, instead of asking, “how far should I go at a minimum to protect my conscience and justify not telling to my spouse”, I would rather ask, “is there anything else I could do to further reduce the risk, to better protect my spouse against a possible STD infection?”. Thus, I would have some STD tests done on myself and watch my own body, but I would also have my spouse take her own STD tests and let her know that she should watch her own body as well, for years to come. Because some of the consequences, such as with HIV/AIDS and with HPV, may take years to show up.

I’m going to make another post after this, about HPV. Truly, as many as 50% of Americans will get infected with genital HPV at a certain point of time during their lives, and not all of them will develop cervical cancer, cancer of the vulva or vagina, head and neck cancer, or genital warts. Not all subtypes of genital HPV are carcinogenic or have the ability to cause warts. Thus, these people are lucky and will not suffer serious consequences. Yet other people do get infected with carcinogenic subtypes, but their bodies (their own immune systems) manage to clear the infection fast enough, before the persistent presence of HPV will cause cancer. Yet others, are not so lucky. And they do develop cancer, chiefly cervical cancer (women) and head and neck cancer (men).

It’s not HPV, but someone I know had a lesson to learn some years ago. This guy, about one year into his marriage, showed symptoms of gonorrhea plus chlamydia. It was a shock to him, since he never had relations with anyone else than his wife. And his wife was free of symptoms, and was adamant that she had no relations with anyone else than her husband. So finally, the guy got treated and came to the conclusion that it must have been his wife. There were indications that his wife kept seeing an old boyfriend, in secret. And she probably got infected from him, but she was free of symptoms, and she was sure that her old boyfriend (and now partner in extra-marital affair) did not have sexual relations with anyone else. Well, sometimes people are in for surprises. 🤷
 
Mostly, I’m still stuck weighing the practical consequences of having physical sex (as opposed to phone sex, non-physical emotional affairs, etc). But I agree that the consequences go beyond the physical, and that they have to be dealt with in such cases also in which there’s no risk of passing STDs to the spouse.

My basic premise is this: if there’s a risk of STDs, it’s better to tell than not to tell. And this is based purely on weighing the physical consequences (the risk of STDs), without having yet touched on the spiritual consequences.

I do not believe that if I physically had sex with someone else than my spouse, then it’s enough to take a few tests for STDs, and if I am free of any symptoms of STDs, and if my tests also come back negative, to just sit back and relax and hope that I’m TRULY free of STDs and that I TRULY didn’t infect my spouse. I still insist that it is possible to get infected, but never to become aware of it, because someone may stay free of symptoms, their tests may yield false negative results (or never even check for certain STDs in the first place!), and yet they may pass on dangerous and even life-threatening disease to their spouse.

Thus, instead of asking, “how far should I go at a minimum to protect my conscience and justify not telling to my spouse”, I would rather ask, “is there anything else I could do to further reduce the risk, to better protect my spouse against a possible STD infection?”. Thus, I would have some STD tests done on myself and watch my own body, but I would also have my spouse take her own STD tests and let her know that she should watch her own body as well, for years to come. Because some of the consequences, such as with HIV/AIDS and with HPV, may take years to show up.

I’m going to make another post after this, about HPV. Truly, as many as 50% of Americans will get infected with genital HPV at a certain point of time during their lives, and not all of them will develop cervical cancer, cancer of the vulva or vagina, head and neck cancer, or genital warts. Not all subtypes of genital HPV are carcinogenic or have the ability to cause warts. Thus, these people are lucky and will not suffer serious consequences. Yet other people do get infected with carcinogenic subtypes, but their bodies (their own immune systems) manage to clear the infection fast enough, before the persistent presence of HPV will cause cancer. Yet others, are not so lucky. And they do develop cancer, chiefly cervical cancer (women) and head and neck cancer (men).

It’s not HPV, but someone I know had a lesson to learn some years ago. This guy, about one year into his marriage, showed symptoms of gonorrhea plus chlamydia. It was a shock to him, since he never had relations with anyone else than his wife. And his wife was free of symptoms, and was adamant that she had no relations with anyone else than her husband. So finally, the guy got treated and came to the conclusion that it must have been his wife. There were indications that his wife kept seeing an old boyfriend, in secret. And she probably got infected from him, but she was free of symptoms, and she was sure that her old boyfriend (and now partner in extra-marital affair) did not have sexual relations with anyone else. Well, sometimes people are in for surprises. 🤷
You have a point, there. The tests are not perfect, and of course a Catholic may not withhold from their spouse without giving a just cause. A certain amount of delay in order to obtain spiritual counsel would be OK, but it probably could not be for very long. Of course, all of this is a very good reason to remain chaste in the first place.

There is now a vaccine for boys against HPV. Some people don’t even want their girls getting the vaccine, because they think it gives their daughters the wrong idea about their expectations. Considering that by one unchaste act in his past or by even having a first wife who was unchaste at any time in her past, a man could give a deadly disease to a beloved wife who had never had access to the vaccine and never done anything to get the disease herself, it seems reasonable to even have boys vaccinated. It isn’t winking at sin. It is a nod to the fact that anyone can fall, it only takes once, and as you say, people have suffered profoundly from these “surprises.”

Having said that, since many of us would be willing to marry someone who was sexually active prior to dating us, I suppose we have a certain tolerance for risk. I guess I would still rather not know, unless there was a known STD. You’re right, that really requires immediate disclosure, as it could be life-threatening. That ramps up the seriousness of the need to know even more.

I am not so sure that it does not make disclosure of physical infidelity an obligation even if the spouse does not want to know. Perhaps that is a job for the Moral Theology forum.
 
First of all… I’m in the camp that I’d want to know.

THAT SAID… Joseph, I’m quite concerned about the fact you think we simply don’t have a test for HPV… As a female who happened to visit an OB/GYN YESTERDAY… There was a HUGE poster talking about the HPV test that tests for all 13 strains of HPV that cause cancer.

This test is recommended for women over 30, (their explanation for why NOT women under 30 relates, I think to the assumed number of partners…🤷)and in addition to a regular Pap. If you test clean without any sort of bad pap… they don’t want to see you for another 3 years.

Now… my question is… am I to trust my health care professional that these tests which are FDA approved (for whatever that’s worth now adays) are REAL and accurate… Or do you have some sort of professional source that these are some sort of fake tests being administered causing a false sense of security, and costing an arm and a leg?

You are right however, that some tests aren’t able to detect a disease that hasn’t really settled in right away. It’s kind of like a PG test… you need to be PG for just a little while before they will show a positive!
Faithfully, here’s what I know about HPV tests. What you say, that the OB/GYN has a test for HPV in Pap smear (and in Pap smear only!), and what I say, that there’s no “general HPV test”, similar to a blood test for HIV/AIDS, for making sure that one is not a carrier and that they cannot infect someone else, both are true. There’s no real contradiction between the two statements, although they seem to contradict each other at a superficial glance. 😛

Let’s look at the question of what an OB/GYNs HPV test, which checks for the presence/absence of ACTIVE (active = not dormant) HPV IN PAP SMEARS ONLY, can do and cannot do for the patient.

If the HPV test from Pap smear truly tests for all 13 subtypes (strains) that are carcinogenic, that’s pretty cool. By contrast Merck’s Gardasil vaccine for girls, which is not a DIAGNOSTIC TEST but rather a VACCINE, will only protect against 2 major carcinogenic and another 2 major wart-causing strains. Protecting for only 2 carcinogenic strains when there are 13 (and possibly more) out there, means in practice that according to Merck, the vaccine only protects against 75% of cervical cancer cases and “up to 50%” (whatever that means) of vulvar cancer cases.

If a woman had more than one sexual partner, and/or she married someone who had other partners before, there’s always a risk that she may have been infected with HPV. But the HPV test you saw in the OB/GYN’s office will not give a definitive answer to the question of whether a woman is infected. More exactly, a positive test result does prove that she is infected, while a negative test result does not rule out that she is infected. Why? HPV can be present on the skin and mucous membranes of the genital areas, anus, cervix, and mouth and throat. So, if a HPV test from a Pap smear, which is a sample of cervical cells, is negative, that still doesn’t rule out the presence of HPV in other areas of the body such as, let’s say, on the skin of the genital area. Also, HPV can become dormant, and dormant HPV does not show up on a Pap smear. Dormant HPV can stay dormant indefinitely, or be reactivated at a later point in time when the immune system of the person is compromised, perhaps due to some other disease. Thus, one can have a HPV test from Pap smear that shows a negative result, and yet a new Pap smear can suddenly become positive later on, not because the person got newly infected after her first Pap, but because the dormant HPV got reactivated in her body. To get a truly comprehensive HPV test, one would need methods to sample not only the patient’s cervix (which the Pap smear does), but also the skin from the genital areas and around the anus, and the mucous membrane of the buccal cavity (mouth and throat). Moreover, the test would need to have the ability to show the presence of dormant HPV. Since the HPV test from Pap smear cannot do all those things, since it can only check the presence of active (non-dormant) HPV in one single, albeit important, area of the body (in the cervix), hence it is true that we do not have a comprehensive test for answering this simple question: “Am I infected with HPV or not?”.

continued…
 
…continued

Also, if one walks in to a facility to get tested for STDs, they will test for various things such as HIV, gonorrhea, syphilis, etc, but not for HPV. Why not? Because there’s no comprehensive test for HPV. And that means, everybody should think twice before sleeping around, and before messing around (simply messing around, and having contact of the genital areas not covered by a condom, or genital area to mouth as in oral sex, without full sexual intercourse, can transmit HPV!!). There’s no test to tell if they have been infected with HPV, and there’s no drug to cure HPV. But there can be consequences, such as cervical cancer, and head and neck cancer caused by HPV infection.

To return to the “HPV test in Pap smear” you saw advertised in the OB/GYN’s office, if it truly can detect all 13 carcinogenic strains known so far (there may be more than 13, out there), that would be a pretty worthy thing. Why? The female patient comes in for a Pap smear. Traditionally, the lab will look at the microscopic appearance of cells taken from the surface of the cervix, to see if they look healthy, or, conversely, do they contain “dysplastic” (dysplasia = pre-cancerous state), or cancerous cells. If there are no cells that look dysplastic or cancerous, by simple microscopic examination, that’s a good thing. The patient looks healthy. The “HPV test in Pap smear” would add another thing, namely it would check whether active carcinogenic strains of HPV virus are present in those cervical cells collected in the Pap smear. If there’s no sign of such cells that carry active, carcinogenic HPV strains, that will add further peace of mind that not only the patient has no pre-cancerous or cancerous cells on her cervix, but there’s no sign of an active HPV infection, either, on her cervix. (The patient may still be infected, only the HPV in her cervical cells is dormant and may or may not reactivate later, she may still be infected, let’s say, on her skin of the genital area or in her mouth and throat, etc. Yet, for a practical purpose, it’s good to know that the one organ that’s most vulnerable to HPV-induced cancer in women, namely the cervix, showns no signs of an ongoing active infection with HPV).

The recommendation that women should have Pap testing after the age of 30 is based on this: Before the age of 30, HPV infections are just as frequent, and even more frequent (more promiscuity), than after 30. But in young women, the body tends to clear up the infection (the immune system fights off and eliminates HPV) within 1-2 years of the infection. 70% of infections go away within 1 year, 90% go away within 2 years, in young women below the age of 30. When this happens, cervical dysplasia (pre-cancerous state) or cervical cancer will not develop because the HPV infection fails to persist long enough to cause cancer. But in women older than 30, HPV infection tends to persist longer (the immune system is less active) and they are more likely to develop dysplasia or even cervical cancer as a result. Of course, this is not to mean that all women younger than 30 can safely mess around. It’s pretty heart-breaking when we hear of 25-y.o. women diagnosed with cervical cancer. Infection with a carcinogenic strain of HPV increases the risk of cervical cancer 200-fold (!!!) and young women can get it, too.

Disclaimer: I did not mean to give medical advice to you, Faithfully, or to anyone else. I only wanted to satisfy your scientific curiosity. 🙂 If you are interested in this, EasterJoy also mentions things about HPV in her posts.
 
I did not mean to give medical advice to you, Faithfully, or to anyone else. I only wanted to satisfy your scientific curiosity. 🙂 If you are interested in this, EasterJoy also mentions things about HPV in her posts.
No, this is where medical facts are needed to consider matters of moral theology.
 
You have a point, there. The tests are not perfect, and of course a Catholic may not withhold from their spouse without giving a just cause. A certain amount of delay in order to obtain spiritual counsel would be OK, but it probably could not be for very long. Of course, all of this is a very good reason to remain chaste in the first place.

There is now a vaccine for boys against HPV. Some people don’t even want their girls getting the vaccine, because they think it gives their daughters the wrong idea about their expectations. Considering that by one unchaste act in his past or by even having a first wife who was unchaste at any time in her past, a man could give a deadly disease to a beloved wife who had never had access to the vaccine and never done anything to get the disease herself, it seems reasonable to even have boys vaccinated. It isn’t winking at sin. It is a nod to the fact that anyone can fall, it only takes once, and as you say, people have suffered profoundly from these “surprises.”

Having said that, since many of us would be willing to marry someone who was sexually active prior to dating us, I suppose we have a certain tolerance for risk. I guess I would still rather not know, unless there was a known STD. You’re right, that really requires immediate disclosure, as it could be life-threatening. That ramps up the seriousness of the need to know even more.

I am not so sure that it does not make disclosure of physical infidelity an obligation even if the spouse does not want to know. Perhaps that is a job for the Moral Theology forum.
EasterJoy, I agree that vaccinating girls and boys against HPV is not a wink at sin. I am aware that there are issues with the efficacy and safety of Gardasil vaccine for girls, and there is an ongoing debate on whether vaccination of girls is worth the efforts and the risks (risks of side-effects). Merck, the manufacturer, lobbies hard to make vaccination of girls compulsory, but many doctors caution that Gardasil only fights 70-75% of cervical cancer cases since it only protects against the 2 most common carcinogenic strains of HPV, and more troublingly, there appear to have been deaths linked to reaction to the vaccine. Regarding the vaccine for boys, I don’t know whether it’s based on the same Merck technology used in girls’ Gardasil vaccine, and whether it’s fraught with the same concerns of efficacy and safety. But those are medical issues and not moral issues. I don’t think it would be immoral to vaccinate both girls and boys if a safe and effective vaccine was available against HPV.

And I also see your point about balancing the risks of life. We might take on a certain risk by marrying someone with a sexual past, and by not wanting to hear about possible failures of our spouse, but life is just a risky business as it is.

Regarding the question of whether we have a moral duty to disclose, to a spouse who doesn’t want to hear, indeed that gets complicated, especially when we don’t deal with a certainty, only with a possibility. If I am certain that I got infected with something contagious (well, all STDs are contagious :o), it seems clear-cut that I must disclose it to my spouse, and make sure that she gets medical attention, even if she previously told me that she wouldn’t want to know if I ever cheated on her. In such case technically I would disclose not my cheating but rather the fact that I have been infected and that my spouse needs to be checked medically for possible infection as well, but the effect and the heart-break would be the same as just telling her straight that I have cheated on her. :o But if I am not certain that I got infected, yet there is a risk that I caught something and I may have infected my spouse as well, and if my spouse told me she wouldn’t want to know if I cheated on her, that would indeed cause a moral dilemma.

So, maybe this is one of those cases that should remind me that being single has its advantages. Because I am single, and this moral dilemma can never move from hypothetical to actual in my life, as long as I stay single. 😃
 
hmm…wish I could stop being so immature when I’m fighting with DH :rolleyes:
I will pray for St. Andre Bessette’s intercession for your family, Serap. You might want to pray for me and my family, too. 😃
 
He was raised Catholic. He just doesn’t believe in the Church teachings. He gets a little nervous with all the religious stuff I have been doing.

I asked him if he would go to a Knights of Columbus meeting with my friend. And then asked him to go to a retreat tomorrow with me. And asked if he would just go out to eat with my friend. Never discussed marriage. He thinks our marriage is fine.

Forgot - after I have been in therapy and feel more confident, I am going to suggest marriage counseling. If he refuses, I don’t think our marriage can survive.
Please do not make predictions right now. Take it one day at a time, you are very early in your recovery and you don’t want to make threats you don’t intend to carry out. You do not need to take action at this time. Give it some time and prayer - there are a whole lot of us out here saying prayers on your behalf and that of your family.

One step at a time.
 
.

Disclaimer: I did not mean to give medical advice to you, Faithfully, or to anyone else. I only wanted to satisfy your scientific curiosity. 🙂 If you are interested in this, EasterJoy also mentions things about HPV in her posts.
No worries… as I’m pretty up to date on this stuff. I do think it’s VERY important to realize that the timing of tests are a BIG deal. That there are NO guarantees I mean I know several women with false test PG, with children… 😉

It’s all good info for others to reaseach in depth…
 
Well, it is really unfair for the cheated-upon spouse to be the only one who doesn’t know. And, other people probably know.

I find it distressing that the first twenty people to answer the poll think their spouse is capable of cheating.
If a person doesn’t believe their spouse is capable of cheating they are deceiving themselves. For all have sinned and come short of the glory… We are all human and given the right circumstances we are all capable of doing some pretty dispicable things. Otherwise, what need would we have for a Savior. Do you think the Lord God would send His precious Son to die for perfect sinless people??? I have been the victim of deceit and believe me – when you find out – that is when it hurts - not when you don’t know. (and this deceit was not adultery FYI – there are other types of deceit between spouses). But, in truth, there is some problem in a marriage where one of the spouses commits adultery. That is what needs to be discussed by the partners – not the adultery. :twocents:
 
I’m a woman, and I wouldn’t want to know. Let the dead bury the dead, so to speak. I’d rather he turned his energies on fixing whatever it is in himself or in the marriage (or both) that precipitated the cheating in the first place, and keep his mouth shut. There is no useful purpose to be served by “confessing” to me, and it would just be hurtful.

As far as health-related issues are concerned, that’s why I go to my doctor for an annual physical.
👍
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top