I do get it. And, I get why saying "never" or that "I am safe" can truly be an arrogant thing to say.
"complacent in his strength and the longevity of his recovery work"
If I am an alcholic, I may always want to drink far long after I stopped. And, one day someone puts a drink in front of you and you think "I can handle it". You forget the pain it brought, you forget how quickly one drink becomes another, becomes another. And before you know it you have taken that slide all the way down again. I get it.
I guess it is kind of like when I said I never had a propensity to cheat, but then I did - so at some point I had that propensity or it wouldn't have happened. And this dove tails into what timespent is asking.
And, it's a fair statement and assessment of both of you.
When I say I never had the propensity - I guess I just mean before I never really looked at other men that way. I never had inappropriate boundaries or conversations with them. I never fantasized about other men. These all seem probably hard to believe, but I didn't. I had a lot of empathy, I wasn't selfish. And, you think, well you had an affair under these conditions where you had led a pretty pristine life. And, I had, and it did happen. So, of course one would be incredulous as to living in a world where it was so unlikely to happen and then it did - so why not again?
That's when I would probably just say - no one changes for anyone else. If that alcoholic isn't drinking because of someone else, if that cheater is doing it to keep his marriage - whether it's for children, religious reasons about not divorcing, not having to split money or lose things...then it's going to be whiteknuckling to some degree. A relapse is going to occur.
For me, it's not about anyone else - it's about my relationship with myself. My view of myself. Understanding how deep my needs are when it comes to upholding my own moral integrity. When the reasons are as strong internally as they are externally I think that's when you aren't whiteknuckling anything. You are choosing this is the way you want to spend your life. This is the person you want to be.
Sure, I wanted to keep my marriage, and I am very remorseful over what I did to my husband. And, I hated the pain we lived in for all those years. But, that can't be the only sustenance for what we build our foundations on. In the antidotal story that Jayne told - that man didn't have a strengthened character. He was not changed from the experience. He was holding onto the external reasons, not disappointing his wife, etc.
There are many BS on this site who say they would never cheat. And, I believe most of them. I was a wife who believed and said I would never cheat. I get you will never be able to say who will or who won't. But, cheating was not my propensity. My propensity was for avoiding hard things. Avoiding reality. Not coping well in a major life crisis. Feeling I had to earn the love of others rather than believing I was worth loving just for who I am. Not seeing my worth enough to uphold my own integrity. We change because we WANT to change, and the reasons have to include a good number of selfish ones. I simply want to be proud of my life and who I am and how I conduct myself. I have disappointed myself most of all.
I don't know if that illuminates it better or worse. Certainly, Jayne has given me no reason to need to convince him as he has said I know myself, but I went into most of that to try and answer timespent's question.
[This message edited by hikingout at 2:15 PM, September 24th (Tuesday)]