DGU, nothing wrong with teaching forgiveness and reconciliation but I think it is difficult to make people on their mid/late teens or early 20’s to be so patient and considering as we are. Are remember how my husband reacted towards is dad OW (not MLC, FIL is a certified philanderer). And I know I would react at that age if my mum or dad had a MLC and, then, were taken back. I would have not respect the parent that had accepted the MLCer back and probably would had despised the MLCer parent.
Some things only come with time/age/life experience. I know I wouldn’t have had a problem with a regular affair (my uncle had OW and that never kept me apart from him or my aunt and I never hold a thing against the by then OW, now wife). But a regular affair, even if it ends in divorce, is totally different from MLC. The spouse that has the affair does not treat the spouse the way our MLCers treat us. In a regular affair the cheater normally tries to sort things out.
True, MLC is different from a dating relationship or a short time marriage but I think most kids don’t see that much of a difference. Plus, they know the abuse we’ve been through and how their parent abandoned them. It is not an easy thing to deal with.
Kikki, remembering me and my cousins when we were young, doubt and heartfelt apology from the MLCer would do it. More than responsibility, kids want actions, they need to see things.
Syn, It is not easy to try to explain MLC to adults. Most people don’t get it and some never will. Some get it and are not willing to accept it or to care about it. Maybe your friend will get it now, maybe she just choose to divorce and move forward.
As for kids, not certain given them paperwork printouts and so on is such a good idea. They are kids, they have their lives, they don’t want to know about it. My younger brother is 21, he is an intelligent young man, he cannot care less about husband’s MLC. His view is: he is an idiot, he deserves to loose everything, no way I’m ever going to respect that fool again. Pretty much what would had been my view when I was 21.
Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together. (Marilyn Monroe)