I relate deeply here to what you are saying. It took a long time for me to move the needle on that.
This is something for me that didn’t happen all at once, it was incremental and gradual. Generally it takes turning gratitude towards self as one aspect. I literally had to make a note every day of something I liked about myself and reflect on evidence of the good things that are part of me. I had focused on the negative, the lack of worthiness of others, my flaws and mistakes, I would always ruminate for hours about things I said and did and how it might have hurt someone else. The more you focus on it the heavier that comes.
But truthfully, outside of the affair, there were lots of great qualities about me. Things that I did that made a huge difference to my husband, friends, family. It takes a consistent habit of making myself see some of the good for the scales to balance. I tried to combine that with daily wins. "Today I didn’t avoid this, I faced it head on. That took a lot of courage, but it wasnt that bad to face it and look at the connection it brought."
By practicing doing the right thing, acknowledging it, and combining that with reflection on good things and traits we have you slowly gain a balance of perspective. You have ruminated for so long on your flaws, bad decisions, and holding it all in while you hid from it that you have skewed your sense of worth.
Yet, you have done nothing but present to us and I believe it’s sincere that you love your wife deeply, want to commit to being the man she deserves. Yet, in many different ways you had many qualities of who it is she wanted. You provided for her, considered her in your choices, and even started to work on yourself and come clean to her despite being terrified almost to a life or death sort of sense. (I know how hard it is to confess after a short build up of a few months so I can’t imagine a span of decades). Don’t lay a wet blanket on that with what you woulda coulda shoulda. You have shown a huge growth in character, deep empathy in trying to time it right and do everything you can to face the consequences and be there for her through it. You have been a husband to her she sees very much right now as worth keeping, that came from the other things about you that she loves and sees value in.
It’s a very hard to battle shame. I still find pockets of it that I have to trace, modify how I think and behave because of it, and move forward with new ways to perceive myself. This commitment you have to growth is so huge because there are lots of people out there who won’t try and be introspective or right their path. I have a lot of respect for you in this process. But the important part is for you to stop minimizing your good and maximizing your bad.
That may not start for several months to kick in because all of this is so fresh and you are just now digging into why you are the way you are by looking at how you were formed. As you begin to understand yourself, and work on the type of thinking I am describing you will begin to modify your behaviors and thoughts to where you are able to feel proud of yourself for these little things in our day that we struggle mightily to overcome.
It’s a process and I have no doubt you are going to go towards it and keep moving through it. Right now it may just be helpful to say to yourself the feelings are normal. They will flow and they will go eventually. A lot of our suffering is in the non acceptance of where we are or how we are feeling. It’s completely normal that you are grieving with your wife and it’s creating a lot of pain. It will be through that pain and the overcoming of it that more light will come in and the ability to gain little pieces of self compassion until it’s mass is big enough for you to stay in that place for longer periods of time and then those periods will get longer and things will start feeling more manageable. These early days are horrific, hell on earth. I can only assure you it will slowly get better over time. Where I was at six months out, a year out, was nothing like being weeks or a month out. This too shall pass and you will slowly get stronger.
I identify with you a lot. I have always been hardest on myself. I carried so much shame that crawling out felt wrong. It felt like I just deserved it forever. But I didn’t and neither do you. Just try and take things day by day and stay in the present as much as you can. You have much work to do in rumination. I still work on changing the channel on mine, all this time later but the peace is deeper, wider and around a lot longer.
For some of us, the damage we do to ourselves through the course of our decisions is deep. Bit in the other side of that it’s because we have a conscience and a vision for who we should be or want to be. Hang in there, the hardest of it is actually over. It just will take some time for you to feel that.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:43 PM, Wednesday, September 17th]