My husband and I have been together for a while, and like many couples, I never thought to question his loyalty. Recently, while casually going through his ChatGPT history, I came across a conversation between himself and ChatGPT. He was talking about being obsessed with a woman and thinking about her all day. He was asking how to stop thinking about her.

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At first, I smiled to myself. I assumed it was me he was talking about. I even asked him about it, hoping to hear something that would reassure me and make me feel loved. Instead, his hesitation spoke louder than his words. With more probing, the truth came out. The woman was not me. She was a friend I had taken as a sister. Worse still, she was married.

It shocked me because I had seen their interactions many times. They were playful, light, and seemingly innocent. I had even read their chats. There was nothing sexual, nothing explicit. My husband has always been a playful person, so I never suspected anything deeper. I now realize I should have set boundaries earlier, but honestly, it never crossed my mind that something like this could happen.

He insists nothing physical ever happened. What hurt the most was learning that it had grown into obsession and lust in his heart. Knowing he allowed himself to emotionally fixate on another man’s wife broke something inside me. I keep asking myself what would have happened if I had not stumbled upon that chat. How far would it have gone?

What complicates my pain is that he was actively asking ChatGPT how to overcome those lustful thoughts. That showed me he knew it was wrong and wanted to stop. Because of that, I chose to forgive him. On the surface, I have forgiven him. But the pain lingers. Forgiveness does not erase the images in my mind or the betrayal I feel.

Now I sit with questions I never thought I would ask: how do wives forgive cheating husbands and still live with them? How do you heal when the betrayal did not happen in the body but lived vividly in the heart? I say I have forgiven him, but it hurts so bad. I am trying to be strong, but some days the pain feels heavier than forgiveness itself.

—Jane

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