JaneFW
Well-Known Member
That assumption is in your mind only.Post 227.
By suggesting that undisclosed porn use would be grounds for divorce in the same sentence you talked about disclosing CSA it's pretty clear that you were implying that someone said that undisclosed CSA was grounds for divorce.
Have you suffered CSA? Have you any idea what that does to a person? Do you remember the man who posted on FL a long time ago, who was having sex problems, and what it finally boiled down to - after he had talked and talked to his wife, and done some thinking and praying about it - was that his stepmom had sexually abused him as a child. His whole interplay with his wife had been screwed up for x years because he could not face what his stepmom had done to him. He had tucked it away at the back of his mind and was not even aware that it was continuing to impact his sexuality or affect his wife and marriage. That's what people do. They are ashamed. The memories are painful and humiliating. It's very very difficult - I suspect more so for men - to admit the things that were done to them to anyone. Many are also threatened not to tell. You don't just overcome that in a heartbeat. That guy had not. Many others do not either.Bottom line though is that it's wrong to not disclose something, be it CSA or porn use or whatever that's likely to have such a deep and lasting impact on the marriage, be it in the area of sex or in any other area. I absolutely reject the idea that being a victim of CSA or anything else excuses someone from being open and honest about something that has such a potential for such serious long lasting effects on both spouses and the marriage as a whole.
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