Interesting answers from individual on Quora.
First one from James Packer:
For every instance of dishonesty you catch, there are likely three or more times you didn’t. Dishonesty tends to be a pattern, not a one-time occurrence. Genuine repentance requires full disclosure of past wrongdoings, not just the ones uncovered, alongside a sincere change of heart. Without this, apologies are often just a reaction to being caught rather than true remorse. True repentance is marked by humility, a commitment to truth, and a willingness to stop self-deception.
Full quote :
Here is something I figured out long ago, and it generally has proven true, time and time again. It’s something I call the RULE OF THREE. Basically, the Rule of Three states, that for every one time you catch someone doing something they’re not supposed to be doing, you can more or less assume there are at the very least, three other occasions when you did not catch them, and quite possibly more. So…..an honest and heart felt confession, after the fact, will include not only an admission of the current incident, but will also include a voluntary confession of instances you did not know about and would likely not have discovered without the admission. 9 times out of 10, the first time you catch someone being dishonest isn’t the first time they’ve been dishonest to you. If you are a store manager, and catch one of your employees taking money out of the register, can you actually believe it was the very first time, or merely the very first time you caught them? Dishonesty is a pattern of behavior and dishonest people keep telling lies, because lying snowballs. The more lies you tell, the harder it is to tell the truth and the easier it is to continue lying.
When someone shows you who they really are, pay attention. If you catch your wife cheating on you, are you actually going to be gullible enough to believe it was the first time, or that it just happened? If she doesn’t volunteer information you wouldn’t have discovered, she is still lying to you. Count on it. I know some men think of themselves as accomplished liars, but they have nothing on women. A woman can make herself believe her own lies, which is why they will always be able to out lie a man.
A truly repentant woman will not only stop lying to you, but she will stop lying to herself first. That is the only way she will experience guilt over what she has done. That means telling the whole truth, no matter how ugly or mortifying. Until you get it, you’re still being had. You can either forgive her or not, it’s entirely your life snd completely up to you, but never forgive a liar who has not laid themselves bare first. You don’t just want someone to confess because they’ve been caught. They have to have a genuine change of heart. That is what repentance means. The difference between being truly repentant and simply being sorry, is about a mile of humility and the certain unambiguous knowledge that you are wrong, accompanied by the conviction not to repeat those wrongs. “Sorry” just means they regret having to face the consequences of what they’ve done, not that they did it in the first place or wouldn’t do it again if they thought they could get away with it.
Source : https://www.quora.com/Should-I-forgive-my-lying-wife
Another answer from River McDunne:
When a relationship is damaged by cheating, violence, or verbal abuse, it becomes nearly impossible to recover fully. Trust, once broken, cannot be easily restored. Many people remain in unhealthy relationships out of fear of being alone or in an attempt to repair their ego, but staying only perpetuates the damage. True healing and self-respect come from leaving situations that no longer serve you. Cheaters rarely change, and staying with them often empowers their behavior rather than encouraging growth. Walking away can be an act of self-love and liberation.
Full quote:
Sure you can. It’s totally up to you.
But two things – the relationship will most likely not be the same . If this meant something to you, and it hurt you, the relationship is dead and from now on- you’ll just be hanging on to something dead and trying to convince yourself it’s alive.
If you didn’t have any fear about finding someone else or being loved again, would you stay? Anytime we stay because we are afraid or we let fear dictate our lives – you’re not living.
You can forgive someone and walk away.
I have never seen anyone or any relationship truly overcome three things once they happened. Cheating, violence and verbal abuse. Those three things just kill relationships and the more you try to make it work or try to change the person and think you can fix them . The more horrible the situation gets.
Like you shouldn’t be in a relationship with anyone who you can’t trust. Most people after the trust is broken – make their partners basically repent .. they have to tell them where they are all the time. Check in. Show them their phones . Basically someone is being treated like a child and someone is living like a bad kid. Neither is love.
Trust is a choice. You either trust someone or you don’t. No one can convince you to trust them if you don’t.
And really the thing is when people cheat on us, our ego gets really hurt. Most of the reason why we stay with people who cheat is because we want them to repair our ego. When they bow down and beg and cry and plead – all that is just blowing up our ego. Repairing our ego.
We think this person who hurt us can repair our ego- but really we so lack the self esteem that we don’t even know that leaving something bad and unhealthy for us would make us feel the best.
There is nothing anyone can do that is stronger than learn to leave people and things behind that no longer serve them.
Cheaters also don’t change. The only real chance of them changing is going to be when someone they care about actually leaves them because of cheating. Selfish people need to be hurt to stop hurting other people. So you’re not teaching him or her anything by staying . And they will do it again.
Once that line has been crossed, you can’t write it again and push everyone backwards again. Its crossed. Its done. In fact staying with them empowers them to know that you will put up with anything.
Its done. Its dead and yeah that’s a shame . But you’ll only hurt yourself the more you lie about it.
Source: https://www.quora.com/Can-you-ever-forgive-someone-for-cheating
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