I'm not saying it is easy, Mys because it is not. It is a double betrayal BUT it is doable both with and without contact.
I have
absolutley no doubt that it's doable. None, whatsoever.
I just don't know how
likely it is as a societal trend or when applied to a general trend. For example, a certain number of people upon "just" finding out their spouse cheated will, in fact, walk out the door rather than work on the marriage. It doesn't mean working on/saving the marriage isn't doable -- it's just a reflection on the devastation that affairs cause. For some people, it's just a deal breaker and that's it.
By the same token, some people would walk out the door upon discovering that, not only did their spouse have an affair, but ALSO a child resulted and all the complications that brings into the picture.
I just think that the number who automatically walk after finding about about the two is larger than the number of those who automatically walk after finding out about an affair without an OC. I don't have any sociological evidence or anything to back up my claim so I'm not asserting it as a fact or evidence, I'm just explaining what I think and why. It makes "common sense" to me that the OC situation would be less likely to succeed because of all the legal, financial, and ethical/moral issues involved in what to do about the innocent child that has been introduced into the picture.
It has to be devastating.
I also happen to think that when it's the woman who's unfaithful and bears the OC it's a little less likely for the BH to be able to accept it -- not that it hurts any more or any less -- but, again, just in a experiential "how I see the world" kind of way. I don't think men have a harder time with the situation than women do -- I just think they have a harder time (ie. less likely) choosing to stay.
None of
that has anything to do with the "rightness/wrongness" of telling men about paternity, though. If men have a harder time staying, I don't believe that's a good reason to withhold the information from them. They should have the information they need to make their decisions -- just like their wives should, as well, if the men are the ones who stray.
Nonetheless, I still worry about the continued splintering of the family. I think we're reaching (or have reached) a point where even well adjusted families with two involved parents are going to have a hard time raising their children because of all the rampant dysfunction out there. At some point, it doesn't matter how good "you" are, the well has become so polluted that all the fish will die. I know that will likely result in big changes (as Gimble alluded to) and, just like eveyrone else, big changes make me nervous/scared -- especially when I see them as big, bad changes.
Mys