Therapist Says Wife Can’t Have Moral High Ground After Hu…
The Original Post
My husband of 10 years had an affair.
Heâs in individual therapy. Weâre in couples therapy. He has taken full responsibility for cheating. Heâs said it was completely wrong, cowardly, morally reprehensible. He says he sees how devastating itâs been. He says if he had the emotional awareness and reasoning ability he has now, he would have just separated instead of cheating.
And that sentence is like a destroys me and I feel abandoned.
What I hear is: âIf I had been healthier, I would have left you.â
He keeps saying the affair is 100% on him. But he also says it was a response to being emotionally lonely in a marriage that had already become bad for both of us. Not to justify to understand.
Years ago, I had a late-term miscarriage. It destroyed me. I developed postpartum anxiety and rage. I was volatile and I said cruel things sometimes. I was grieving and hormonal and honestly not stable. He tried to support me. I wonât take that away from him. But he took everything I said personally. Every emotional outburst became about how I was hurting him. I didnât feel given grace for the fact that my body and brain were wrecked. I felt like I had to manage his feelings and thatâs when I built resentment I never really processed. I never forgave him for not holding me better during the hardest time of my life. I needed his grace and softness even if it was hard for him.
Then he lost his job. Then his mom died.
I wanted to show up for him but I couldnât get past the internal wall of, âWhere was this compassion when I needed it?â I was colder than I should have been. I can admit that now.
But he cheated.
Our therapist has given us individual exercises on how to make each other feel safe again and. He has a lot of specific rebuilding exercises like transparency, reassurance, check-ins, empathy work.
But the big rule for the next three months is this:
No one gets to hold the moral high ground.
No âyou did this.â
We both just âown our partsâ in how the marriage deteriorated.
The therapist says blame only makes people talk over each other and that accountability right now needs to come from within. She said verbatim; âyou both seem stuck in your own point of viewsâ
And I hate her rules they feels wrong. It feels like him âowningâ the affair isnât enough if I donât get to hold him accountable for it in real time.
He says he owes it to me to make it right because he cheated on me. That hurts too. I donât want to be chosen because he owes me. I tell him this, he tells me heâs sorry but heâs working on shifting the mindset of âowingâ me to actually wanting to do everything because he âwantsâ to. And when he says that in a healthier state he would have just left, it makes me feel like I was a placeholder and it makes me feel even more abandoned and alone.
Iâve been confiding in my sister. She gave me tough love and said the therapist is actually giving us excellent advice. She said if Iâm choosing reconciliation, I need to let go of the desire to hold him accountable if heâs already given the structure to do so himself by our therapist. And if I canât live with this structure, then I need to make a decision.
I HATE this. I want the moral high ground. It feels like proof it was not all on me.
He crossed the line. I feel confused, heartbroken, defensive, and honestly more resentful since starting therapy.
What Reddit Said
Reddit was deeply divided on this therapeutic approach. Many users called out OP’s black-and-white thinking, pointing out her need to be “100% right” while making her husband “100% wrong.” However, others felt the therapist was essentially silencing the victim of infidelity.
The harshest critics questioned why OP wanted to reconcile at all. They pointed out years of mutual resentment and emotional distance. Moreover, several commenters suggested OP might be staying out of fear of abandonment rather than genuine love.
The Verdict
Reddit’s consensus leaned toward supporting the therapist’s “no moral high ground” approach, though with sympathy for OP’s pain. Most agreed that clinging to moral superiority wouldn’t rebuild their marriage. This complex case of infidelity highlights how therapy approaches can feel counterintuitive but may be necessary for healing.
Original post from r/TrueOffMyChest (1,005 upvotes, 582 comments)