SmackDown: Can A Cheating Spouse Still Be A Good Parent?
Filed under: Opinions
Lipstick on you collar: Two moms duke it out on whether or not cheaters can be good parents. Credit: jupiterimages
Cheaters Are Only Fooling Themselves.
by Amy Hatch
If you can't be counted on to maintain your loyalty to your spouse, despite the fact that you made a solemn vow to do so, how can you possibly be counted on to be a good parent?
When you are married with children, an extramarital affair goes far beyond hurting your husband or wife. You damage the central unit of the family. If you think the fall-out doesn't affect your kids, you're kidding yourself.
You're busy running around, setting up clandestine trysts and trying to hide them from your significant other, you can't possibly be present and available for your child.
Any parent can do a rant on what it's like to just get out of the house. If trying to get a babysitter to go to a doctor's appointment is like planning the invasion of Normandy, what kind of time and energy does it take to arrange for an afternoon delight and then hide it from the rest of the world? Some of that time has to be taken from your children.
Take Tiger Woods, who was forced to admit to the world the other day that he missed his son's first birthday because he was in rehab. He will never have that moment back again, and neither will his child. There are no photographs, no memories to share of this significant milestone in his child's life. Now go ahead and tell me that the flings which lead him there didn't take away from his children. His son was clearly the loser.
While this double-life is going on, and you think you're doing a grand job of keeping it under wraps, remember that kids have sensitive antennae. I know that in my house, every small disagreement I have with my husband causes a bit of anxiety for our kids. They sense tension, and they can tell when something isn't quite right -- even when no one else can.
But say you do let the affair bleed into your life. Say that you're in love, and you can't completely hide it. Suddenly you're singing in the shower. You're doing your hair and make-up a little more carefully than usual. So your spouse looks a little more closely at the mobile-phone bill or the credit-card statement. He keeps a close watch on your Facebook page or your Tweets. And blammo! You're caught.
Now what?
There's fall-out, of course, and sometimes the marriage ends. Even if you manage to stay married, the emotional upheaval is intense and your kids are part of that. There are tears and recriminations, sometimes there is therapy. There is the erosion of trust and the painful rebuilding of your relationship.
It's crazy -- or delusional -- to believe your kids aren't going to feel at least some of that.
Being so unhappy in your marriage that you're compelled to stray has to be a terrible situation, one that I wouldn't wish on anyone. However, when you become a parent you are responsible for protecting that child no matter what, even from your own whims, desires and pain.
Adultery and the ensuing chaos creates a sense of instability and fear that kids carry with them for the rest of their lives, and in some cases right into their own adult, romantic relationships.
When you cheat, your children pay the highest price.
Jo and I want to know what you think. Join the debate in the Comments section below.
Jo Parente is the ParentDish nom de plume, a pen name, used by female members of our editorial team when we want to spill our dirty little secrets but still keep our dignity, and families, intact.
Cheaters Are Not Necessarily Bad Parents.
by Jo Parente
There are alcoholics who are brilliant singers. There are drug addicts who are amazing actors. There are certifiable lunatics who are masterful artists. And there are gazillions of married folks who cheat on their spouses and still come home and function as good parents.
One thing has nothing to do with the other.
That's not to say that every cheating spouse can keep his infidelity separate from his home life, but the parents that I know who've cheated are really good at compartmentalizing their lives and not neglecting their children.
I was one of them.
A few years ago, my marriage was in the toilet and I knew it was just a matter of time until the dissolution was formalized. In the midst of my despair, I did what many miserable spouses do: I called a former flame. Suffice it to say that the relationship rekindled quickly.
And here is the strangest part. I became a better parent for it. I was happier, so naturally that lift permeated other parts of my life.
But like most rebound relationships, that one eventually hit the pavement, yet I was grateful for the perspective it gave me. Number one: I discovered I was still lovable (which I'd stopped believing). Number two: I realized I was doing the right thing by ending my very, very bad marriage. (When your family sees the charming side of your husband and not the ugly parts, it's hard to convince them that you're not living happily ever after.)
Now about that Tiger Woods guy. None of us have a clue as to the effect that Tiger's multiple straying has had, or not had, on his kids. He's a cheater, granted, but I, for one, have to hand it to him and his wife Elin for keeping the nitty gritty details completely apart from the public. No doubt a book will come out one day, but for now, it's none of our business.
So we're left to wonder, is it possible that Tiger is a great dad? Of course it is.
When things unraveled for Tiger last Thanksgiving, Baby Charlie was all of 9 months and daughter Sam going on 2 1/2 years old. I highly doubt that Tiger was bringing up the discussion of a "new mommy" at the dinner table with his kids.
The guy has a job that keeps him on the road, and according to news reports, that's where a lot of the cheating happened. But even if the hook-ups took place in the house, it stands to reason that the professional swinger (pun intended) was keeping it all secret and going about his home life normally, loving and caring for his children in the way that every good parent does.
Think about it. Cheating isn't cheating unless it's a secret. There are plenty of things we keep hidden from our children that are perfectly legitimate, but are for adults only. Parents aren't readily sharing the humiliating details of the day they got axed from their job, or how they had to sell a treasured heirloom to put food on the table, or how they got blotto at a neighborhood New Year's Eve party and engaged in dirty dancing with the coat rack, or anything about the porno stash in the footlocker under the bed.
When you cheat, it's the most secret, secret going. If anything, philandering parents will overcompensate to make sure that their kids know they are loved.
Castigate the sin, but the sinner has plenty of good qualities that remain. Chances are, his parenting is the one bright spot left in his marital home.











ReaderComments (Page 5 of 10)
4-11-2010 @ 10:39PM
grace said...Who is at fault for the cheating? Is it the person who is finding something that is missing from their lives? Or the person that is not helping provide that missing piece? When i was married i tried and tried with my marriage and soon learned that I was the only one tring and stopped..Now we are both happy with differant people and still remains friends and are closer now than when we were married..
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4-11-2010 @ 11:38PM
sbw said...Although I don't believe my wife is a cheater, she is a terrible mother and role model for our kids. She doesn't talk to me or our kids unless it is to COMPLAIN in a loud voice about something, or REPRIMAND one of us for doing something she doesn't like. I simply took this behavior for a several years before I realized it was affecting my health and making me ill. I would tell her to stop, and she would act as if I told her I enjoy being screamed at so please keep going. Our kids are seem resiliant to being on the receiving end of such horrible behavior, but I often wonder if I'm doing the right thing by staying married. I am the parent who was more involved in our kids lives. I drove them to school on my way to work, and picked them up after school to bring them home. I made their lunches to take to school. My wife was still asleep each morning when we left the house. She likes to stay up late each night watching TV or playing some stupid farmville game on the computer. I haven't had a sexlife since 1994. I consider myself a good parent, a husband without benefits, and stuck in a loveless marriage. But somehow I believe that if I went out seeking for what is missing my marriage I would be thought of as a Tiger Woods.
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4-13-2010 @ 11:22PM
Lavender said...Can a cheating spouse be a good parent? Of COURSE not. What a bunch of hypocritical BS. You tell your kids one thing, and you go out and screw someone else.
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4-11-2010 @ 10:49PM
Ron said...Jo Parente....you are really messed up! Cheating is treating....no matter how you look at it. You're thinking is part of the reason that this country is in the f_ _king shape it is in. You're either 20 years old or your parents really did a horrible job with you. I not only think that your marriage was in the toilet, but I know that you are as well!
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4-11-2010 @ 10:49PM
Stan said...Please dont get me wrong...I LOVE cheating housewives!
What I like best is that I KNOW for sure what I am dealing with and trust me when I say...I know exactly how to handle our relationship.
Dont think for a second that your "new true love" doesnt as well.
It is only slightly more annoying than dealing with hookers who at least dont expect any respect.
But,I will be happy to exchange texts and calls and a few" I wish I could be with you all the time" chats and keep the money in my pocket...thanks.
I love the way you will have your hair done,go to the gym etc for me but not for him.
Thanks for dressing sexy and your new panties are awesome.Glad you dont do that for him! He might actually pay you the attention you get from me..for a few hours a week at least.
As far as being a good parent as well as a cheater??
Sure..you are great!! Just ask yourself.Anyone can excuse their behavior.After all,EVERYONE does it...dont they?
You are a liar and a cheat...they are always the best parents.
Why not get real? You are a piece of crap.Bottom line.And thats ok,just dont lie to yourself about it.
If its worth the trade off...live with it.
Do you deserve to be happy? of course.
If you are in an unhappy relationship..get out.You are already doing damage to the children by staying in something you have no interest in.
Dont wait until your children find out (and they always do) that mommy (or daddy) is a self centered lowlife who puts themselves ahead of the rest of the family unit because they werent 'happy'
So,if you are cheating...stop.
Go to your spouse and see if there is anything left to salvage.Try doing the things you do for me..for him.I bet you will be surprised at what can happen.When was the last time you asked your husband for a sexual fantasy night? You send me 20 sex texts a day...when did you ever send HIM one?
If you cant stop cheating...give me a call because I REALLY do love you!!! No, No...I REALLY DO!!!
Maybe we can do lunch and swing by Victoria s Secret for shopping!
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4-11-2010 @ 11:31PM
Jerry said...James Fineous McBride Said " The best thing you can do for your kids is love there mother. "
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4-11-2010 @ 10:58PM
joe64 said...I had my ex tell me that he'd never lied to our son about the cheating. True, I suppose, since he never said anything to our son at all. But our son tells me that he'll never like the other woman (now fiance) because his Dad lied about her. My son gets the concept of lies by omission. And he knew what was going on all along.
I do think that, now that the affair has been exposed, my ex is as good a father as he can be from a distance. I don't think the cheating sums up his character or his judgment and parenting abilities overall. But the time that he spent cheating before he decided to leave were the very lowest point of his parenting career. He had to avoid me, so he avoided our son as well. Very, very selfish. I'd rather that he'd told the truth, which is that our marriage was unhappy for us both. Then we could have worked on it or decided to part.
The damage to our son is irreparable. Not because of the cheating, but because of my son's unavoidable realization that his father is a liar who lied to him. Not so good for building trust.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:03PM
adam said...jo is a sl-t. period
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4-11-2010 @ 11:21PM
mayerliserm said...I relate very well to the article, my husband and father of my two sons, cheated on us, and in the worst way. Not only he slept with another woman but got her pregnant too. This has been devasting to me because our relationships always been good or so I thought. He claims it was not a relationship, he has no feelings for her, didn't even like her, that it was sex and nothing more. He stopped seen her as soon as she became pregnant; meaning that's when he realized he was doing something wrong and was risking to lose his family. Now he realized that is us he wants to be with, that he loves his kids and don't want to lose us. He hide this for a year until the woman contacted me. So yes cheaters are in a way bad parents and my husband today realized all he has missed with his kids. He has a very demanding job and work long hours but managed to sneak out to have fun with this woman. The spare time he could've had enjoy with his kids he wasted it. He missed a lot, many times he would only see them on his days off or for just a little while during the week. Besides this, he has now another child and might be facing child support which indeed affects the family and the kids. While he was working long hours of "overtime", I was being supportive because it was for accomplishing our goals; I sacrificed myself and the kids and for what? for paying child support, we are paying for his mistakes too, in many ways. The depressive state in which I've been has of course an impact in the kids. When i found out and I cried and we talked (I kept it quiet because of the kids), and he cried. My older son 6 yrs old, had never seen us cry or argue; he became sick, the next day I have to pick him up from school. Cheating doesn't make one a bad parent but making choices which affect your family and kids, without thinking of them and the consequences, is bad parenting.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:08PM
DerChozenvun said...Jo was a total coward and probably shattered what was left of her husband. Chances are it was one of those situations where one party sucks the life out of the other and then complains that they're not the same person. Then it all goes downhill. That guy probably loved her too much and she was just constantly looking for the next guy to hop onto. Instead of having some audacity and getting a divorce or even just a split, Jo goes and calls someone who probably took some shit from her in the past but like most of us guys, was overforgiving and wound up just being better at getting along with her because he had a long time to think about a lot of unanswerred questions that she'd left him with. In Jo's eyes, people are disposable.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:10PM
Lori Zeno said...My husband cheated and we divorced after 18 years of marraige. We had 2 children, ages 9 and 11 at the time I discovered his affair. I see now, that at the time of his affair, our marraige was already over. We were both unhappy and dissatisfied, and for many reasons, we could not communicate effectively. I will never know if divorce was inevitable, even without my discovering his affair. But, what I do know, is that the added pain from his betrayal and lying, made an already bad situation, completely unbearable. It has been 5 years since our divorce, and I still feel the pain on so many different levels. For years, I was blinded by his lies, and even in those moments when I thought I knew, he always managed to convince me that he was faithful. I don't think I will ever trust anyone again, including myself and my own instincts.
Our children have most definitely been scarred. Our son, who is now 18 years old, has told me that he doesn't believe in marraige, and will never marry. He says that there is no such thing as "till death do us part", but rather it is "until we get sick of each other". My daughter, who is now 16, is very close to her father and loves him very much. She is and has always been much closer to him than to me. But.........she has suffered greatly. She told me recently, that if I think she will ever really forgive her father, then I am very wrong! She says she forces herself to just not think about it, and refuses to talk about it to anyone. That is how she is able to remain close to him now. And, She is angry with me as well. She blames me for her dad leaving, because "I was always angry with him and yelling at him.
As for me, the feeling of complete failure is sometimes overwhelming. But, what's worse, is knowing that for the rest of my life, I will never fully love or trust another human being again. And that makes me very sad.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:10PM
lionruby said...If you cheat, you condone lying, infidelity, disrespect, and emotional harm. If you cheat, you teach your kids that they are second best. That they aren't worth your time or the gift of the emotional and physical security you bring. If you cheat, You teach them that working on a relationship is not worth it. That disregard and running away are the way adults handle problems. If you cheat - They will know.
Whether your kids are witness to those behaviors in relation to their other parent or to themselves, it makes not a whit of difference. It doesn't matter if you tell them "I love you no matter what" if you're stepping out on your spouse. End game is that they figure out pretty quickly that people lie, that YOU lie, and that there is no one in the world to trust if you make them victims of the kind of pain and insecurity that taking your attention off of your spouse and family brings.
If you are unhappy in your marriage, GET OUT before you bring another emotional complication into your kids lives. The person you married may be a wretch, or YOU may be, but your FAMILY needs to see that you giving them respect enough to initiate a mature closure.
Have some guts - finish old business before you bring new business to the table. Your family will thank you for it in the end.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:12PM
DerChozenVun said...and jo parente is a terrible alias. seriously, think of a better pen name. That is of course when you're done gripping your ankles.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:11PM
nikki said...i have been through this......it was me who did the "cheating" i guess you could say.....i told my husband it was over...and that i wanted a divorce, but he didnt hear me. i will say that i would not call myself a bad parent at the time, but was not the best parent either. however, now that the divorce is final, and i am about to move in with my boyfriend to a house and location that i love, i am a happier, better parent. my kids have been through a divorce, and i hate knowing that. but life with my ex-husband was miserable, and i just hope that with this new chapter my kids realize that life is not perfect, but we make the best of what we have, and know they are loved.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:15PM
DerChozenVun said...Well did you "cheat", or set up a divorce. You're being vague about it. If you were divorced before you were with anyone it wasnt cheating.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:23PM
Captvonkrapp said...Man, I wish it was like it was in the good old days; when your wife cheated on you, you could shoot him and beat the living sh-t out of her and no one would raise an eyebrow!
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4-11-2010 @ 11:22PM
gaweinzlady said...I'm 15 years old, it's 11:07 pm, and my father (who is still technically married to my mother, although they're seperated he still lives here for a another few weeks) is home only a few minutes. He was undoubtedly out with his girlfriend, whom he lately gives most of his money and attention to. She has two daughters, and the 3 of them and MY dad frequently hang out. How do I know this? I discovered a secret facebook account of his with writing from her and the two daughters saying how much they loved the movie and how awesome he is. The pain is excruiating, and I still love him deep down but the betrayl and lies sting. As a result, my mom needs to get another job with benefits, one that is farther away, and worse hours. She won't be able to care for my sister (who has taxing medical issues by the way) and I when her nurses suggest she eat dinner. My dad has no idea the repercussions of his actions. I may just be complaining (I know lots of teens live with working/divorced parents and manage perfectly fine), but I still don't think we're getting the better end of the deal.
So sorry to contradict you Jo Parante, but you must be the rare gem of an exception. When you cheat on a spouse, you cheat on your family, which kids and teens need as a foundation to grow up (semi-)normal. And when those kids find out, they will be hurt, and although the parent didn't want to affect them, they're entire world is flipped upside. (Thank you for letting me vent)
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4-11-2010 @ 11:28PM
focusedone said...Glad Jo is not my parent.
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4-11-2010 @ 11:32PM
Debra said...To whom it all concerns, Why is it that so many people judge other people?
it seems that we are so quick to make judgements on people when we have never walked in their shoes.I had an affair with my present husband. We are now married over eleven years & had been dating each other for five years before that. We never meant for it to happen and we certainly did not want to hurt our families, however I would do it all over again. Our children are happy because we are very happy.
How could you possibly bring up happy well rounded children when you yourself are not happy? My daughters who are both married now( one with child) has told me that my marriage to their step-father was the best thing that has happened in our lives.
Why is tiger woods being dragged into this? Obviously his problems went a lot deeper than having an affair. I would not call what he has been involved with an affair. He seemed to need many partners, so I do not think he is relevant in this conversation.
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4-12-2010 @ 12:56AM
CommonSense said..."We never meant for it to happen and we certainly did not want to hurt our families, however I would do it all over again."
And there lies the problem. Pure selfishness. You would even hurt your family again if you had to do it all over. I don't see why you couldn't divorce your husband first then start dating.
This just shows you true colors.