This is the attitude:NOW IS NOT THE TIME FOR YOU TO SAY THESE WORDS
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This (maintaining "best-friend"-ship with their betrayed spouse) is part of the normalization script, and very common. I was advised to address it early, and HEAD ON, and I did, and to great effect. "I need to be clear on something," I told my wife about 3 weeks into our ordeal. "I have absolutely no intention of being your friend, much less your BEST friend, if you choose to end our marriage this way, by having an affair and lying to everyone about it. I will of course be civil, and work with you to co-parent our children, but that is all. If you END this affair, and come back and really work on our marriage for a period of time -- say, one year -- including coming to marriage counseling with me and being honest with me and the counselor about the affair, and then it just doesn't work out between us . . . then that's different. But as long as you cut and run like this, not gonna happen." When we reconciled, my wife told me that this (losing my friendship during her affair, and the potential of losing it FOREVER) was THE single-biggest reason she decided to end it, and come back to me. Food for thought.
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Strong, leading, upbeat with your 180s and GALs, but NOT condoning their behavior. You want to take a stance, where -- if they ASK you (and don't offer this proactively, or it will come across as pursuing), you can say "Oh, don't get me wrong, this is NOT what I wanted, and NOT what I would have chosen. But I realize that I'll be OK either way. I very much WANT to be married to you, but I realize now that I don't NEED to be, and I certainly respect myself too much to be willing to put up with your crap behavior just to stay married. I'm in a positive mood I guess because I'm working hard to improve myself, whether it turns out to be for THIS relationship, or for another one down the road."
"What is best for my kids is best for me" Amor Fati Link to quotes: https://www.divorcebusting.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=2879712