I think this reads as accurate to me, Morbs. I think you've offered here an expansion on my point rather than contradicting it; Perhaps a deeper clarification of what I was trying to say. You are providing the exact psychological framework that explains why the "validation only" script is such a dishonest rewrite of history in many cases. (I'll take your advice and keep adding in these sorts of clarifiers)
Your point about reactive libido is particularly deep. If a person needs to feel intensely desired in order to experience sexual desire, then the validation and the sex are completely inseparable. The validation is the friction required to spark the fire. But here is the crucial distinction: once that fire is lit, they are still actively participating in, pursuing, and enjoying the heat.
I also want to touch on your observation that "the AP could have been anyone." While it's true that in a fantasy-driven affair, the specific partner is often interchangeable—an objectified canvas for the wayward partner's ego—that interchangeability doesn't minimize the physical enjoyment. Just because the sex could have been with anyone clearly doesn't mean they aren't loving the sex they are having with this person. The fact that the partner is an idealized prop doesn't magically make the orgasms or the physical pleasure fake. Again I presume many of us when single have had this experience. We've ended up back at someone's place and had a great night of sex, it didn't really matter who with.
To me it's clear that too often When a caught wayward partner uses the post-D-Day script—"It wasn't about the sex, it was just validation"—they are attempting to retroactively extinguish the fire. They want their betrayed spouse to believe they were just standing in the room passively while the match was struck. They try to isolate the validation as a bloodless, emotional transaction so they don't have to look in the mirror and face the hedonistic selfishness of the physical reality.
As you noted, there is a massive difference between passive compliance where they "think of England" just to keep the validation coming, and an active, immersive fantasy where validation unlocks a reactive libido, resulting in intense physical pleasure, sexting, and orgasms.
The forum scripts almost always claim the former, while the evidence—the graphic texts, the atypical acts, the sheer frequency—almost always points to the latter.
You’re completely right that it comes down to nuance. Sex can be a vehicle for validation, and validation can be a trigger for sex. But we can be serious adults and admit that once the bedroom door closes, the physical pleasure is a massive part of the equation. To claim otherwise isn't historical accuracy; it's just a psychological shield against shame.
All of this said and I want to reiterate, I'm certain their will be individual cases where a wayward truly did hate or put up with the sex for compliments alone. But we see this used as an excuse all to often when the evidence points directly in the opposite direction.
On @Unhinged / Wider reference to threadjacking
If you cannot see how analyzing the validity of a wayward partner's psychological defense mechanism is pertinent to a thread explicitly written about that defense mechanism, then maybe this forum is not for you (to borrow your phrasing). Discussing the exact core topic raised by a member is the entire purpose of a support forum, not threadjacking.
Gemmy opened this thread by detailing a direct conversation with his wife. She explicitly claimed: "It wasn't about the sex, I just needed to give them that to keep them making me feel validated." He then logically deconstructed that claim, concluding that this defense transforms sex into a degrading, marketplace transaction.
My posts directly addressed that exact premise. I am analyzing whether the "validation only / sex as a transactional payment" script is a historically accurate reflection of human behavior, or if it is a psychological shield designed to mask hedonistic selfishness and avoid intense shame.
We see this type of analytical dissection on this forum every single day. For example, when a wayward partner claims they were "deeply in love with the AP," the community regularly debates the validity of that claim versus the reality of the "affair fog." Challenging a wayward partner's post-D-Day narrative isn't a distraction; it is a vital step in helping a betrayed spouse process what actually happened.
If I were to raise a topic, I would actively want poster to debate the topic I raised. Seeing both sides of an argument is precisely how one clarifies their thoughts. What would you rather. Just a ton of people responding: 'I'm sorry to hear that, stay strong' - whilst that sort of response has it's merit, it's certainly not going to help anyone in the long term.
You are entirely free to dislike my opinions or disagree with my analysis. I can accept that. If you think my reasoning is pointing Gemmy in the wrong direction, I urge you to state that emphatically. But I'd rather not have people hide behind the false accusation that my posts are irrelevant or "threadjacking" when they are explicitly tied to the exact words the original poster's wife used to justify her actions.
[This message edited by DRSOOLERS at 8:41 AM, Thursday, July 2nd]