Originally Posted by
TheFifthElement
Well said Jozanny. There are so many reasons why a person might get involved with someone other than their spouse which have nothing to do with a sociopathic desire to deceive. If the human animal were so two dimensional, there'd be no reason to discuss this subject at all.
Interesting Sleepy. Throughout the discussion the focus has been on sex as though sex is the most important thing - the barrier you don't cross. If I put that into the context of my relationship with my husband, I'd be far more devastated to find he was in love with someone else albeit that he never touched them or that he was no longer in love with me, than if he had a casual sexual fling. I guess after 13 years of marriage I've come to see sex as something of small significance in the context of the wider relationship. If something happened, say for example my husband or I became paralysed and thus unable to perform sexually, I would still love him. It's lovely, but not critical. Taking that context forward, if my husband had no sexual desire, but I still did might I have casual sex in order to satisfy that desire? I might, and my husband might even tell me that it's okay to do that, I don't know - I think if the situation were reversed that's what I would do, because I love him and just because I can't experience something or don't have the desire to experience something doesn't mean that he shouldn't or should feel guilty about wanting to. Taking it the next step, if I did, and even if I had his blessing, might I hide it from him so he didn't feel as though he had let me down? Possibly. There are so many scenarios like that that I can think of where the morality or otherwise of a particular action falls into shades of grey. On that basis I think that it's impossible to play judge and jury on the subject.