20yrsin,
Firstly, and most importantly, I want to say how well you have got through this so far. We all know first-hand how horrible the period after discovery is, and you have gone through some very tough times with a positive attitude and true resilience. I had days where I didn’t even want to get out of bed, let alone face trying to solve the problems I was going through. You are doing that, and that alone takes a lot of energy and resolve, more than we realise, until we suddenly feel exhausted by it. You did a 10K run the other day, so you must be pretty healthy, but please do be good to yourself.
There is a lot of different advice coming your way, in different tones, and from different angles, but all of it has a single aim, which is to try and help you. I went through the ‘aftermath’ period by myself, in the pre-internet days, and I made a ton of mistakes that I would never have made if I could have posted in a forum like this and had feedback from lots of different people who had walked the same path as I was reluctantly treading. However, it is never easy or obvious for anyone who goes through it in their own life, and a lot of the collected wisdom in this forum was gained the hard way; learning by trial and error. It is a tough process for everyone to go through, no matter whether they are extrovert or introvert, rich or poor, city slicker or country bumpkin, hard as nails or vulnerable and sensitive. It is an emotional assault course that is tough on everyone, and everyone struggles with it. None of us were ready for it when our waywards dropped the bomb on us.
“I am starting to get it, the issue with passivity and half measures, it is definitely out of my comfort zone but I am going to stretch myself and be more clear on what the requirements are for recovery and reconciliation.”
I think the betrayed spouse’s bill of rights is a superb summary to use as a basis for what to ask for. I could go further and use the word ‘demand’ rather than ‘ask’, because ‘ask’ has connotations of a refusal being acceptable. ‘Demand’ does not. Many people are not comfortable with the concept of demanding things. It seems rude, strident, or arrogant. In many situations, it would be, but in the aftermath of infidelity, it really does need to be done, because a betrayed spouse can feel trampled on once because of the infidelity, and then trampled on again when what they ask for is denied, refused, or promised but never enacted.
“I want to believe my wife is trying her best and focus on the good things she is doing. However I know there are issues and rugsweeping and it needs to be dealt with.”
By all means be positive about the good things that she does. It encourages her to keep trying, and it will make you feel better that she is making the effort. However, as it should never be an ‘either or’ situation, where just because she does a few good things, you stop checking for red flags, or just because she does bad things, you do not recognise when she does any good stuff. I think I said in an earlier post that the approach has to be, “Hope for the best, prepare for the worst”. Notice and applaud the good things, but doggedly pursue and clobber the big issues that may not be being addressed.
“I tell myself I am ready to go my own way but I suppose to date my actions speak louder and I have not demonstrated this consistently. It is starting to come, in each of the 'confrontations' we have had so far. I have outlined consequences but the red flag everyone is calling out is still in play.”
Good for you, you are getting there. Changing to become more assertive is not easy, there are whole books on the subject and self-improvement classes, but becoming more assertive in a positive way is a good thing to do, in and of itself. In the aftermath of infidelity, as others here will attest, it is essential. In the process you are going through, you have decided to become more assertive, which is good, and your wife needs to stop focusing on her own wants and needs so much (career, affair) and pay more attention to the wants and needs of those around her (you and the kids), and take full responsibility for the impact that her negative actions have upon others (she is still in full-on denial/avoidance mode on that score).
“The workplace issue came up today. The third job application which was due today will not be submitted. It is a sr. management job and this particular position didn't seem like a good career move to her…there are two applications in the hopper which are lateral moves while this third is a promotion and not a good fit apparently.”
Now, that is a perfect illustration of what your wife needs to change. You are having a horrible time trying to cope with her being so close physically to the man who would have been happy to destroy your marriage for his own selfish ends, but your wife’s focus is not on the husband she has hurt so badly, but on her career. I know you could say, “But we live in the real world, and she has a career, she can’t choose any job at random just because it means getting away from the OM”, but here’s the thing: your wife, the dedicated and committed career woman, deliberately and in full awareness of the policy that companies and big corporations have about inappropriate relationships in the workplace, embarked on a year-and-a-half long emotional and sexual affair with a colleague she worked closely with, during work time, and on the company pay check. She knew that discovery would lead to instant dismissal for her and the OM, disgrace in the office, a permanent black mark on her resume, loss of professional reputation…And she didn’t give a damn about it. She was willing to take that risk with her precious, valued-above-all-else career. And yet now, in the aftermath of her year-and-a-half long career-threatening affair, her career is suddenly a big factor in preventing her from moving away from the OM, and more importantly, from giving the husband she hurt and betrayed some semblance of peace of mind that she is not spending every lunch-hour in a coffee-house or hotel with him.
Essentially, what her actions are proving – and what you should ask her about – is that her totally messed up priorities mean that she was willing to risk destroying her career in disgrace to be with the OM, like it had no value at all, but her career is more important than doing what her husband needs her to do and get herself physically away from the immoral low-life she conspired with to damage her own marriage.
Beyond that, this is not a ‘career’ matter. It is a ‘life’ matter. It is a ‘marriage and family’ matter. Can she not see that? She has almost destroyed her marriage and family because of her own selfish actions, and even in the aftermath, her attitude is not, “I’ll do whatever it takes to save my family because that is the biggest priority in my life”, but, “I’ll do whatever it takes to save my family as long as it does not have an adverse impact on the career I was willing to risk completely destroying by having an affair”.
So going by her actions, the ranking of her priorities would be:
1) Affair and the OM
2) Career
3) Family and husband
This is why so many people here have been getting so exercised about your situation. And that is what your wife has to work on. Why on Earth are her priorities so messed up? She made the affair more important than her career, but saving her marriage has to fit in with what’s good for that career? Is she for real?
“She said she is looking everyday for the right opportunity. She has already passed on another one that wasn't the right fit.”
Reinforces what I said above.
“I will note that most of the other opportunities, this one included, would still have her traveling to same area but would be in a different building.”
In which case they are not a ‘right fit’ either, are they? Given her poor boundaries and lack of commitment to protecting the marriage from her own selfish whims, you are not going to get a lot of security from her changing jobs and still working two blocks away from the OM.
“Obviously much better then current situation but not as significant as actually being in different city.”
20yrsin, how about replacing the word ‘significant’ in the above sentence with ‘absolutely essential’? Your wife should not be physically anywhere near that scumbag. She is a married mother of two children, with a career, and none of that stuff mattered to her when they were drawn into close proximity to work on a project together. She has proven beyond any shadow of doubt that she cannot be trusted to be anywhere near that turd, because she was willing to risk destroying her family and career for the privilege of screwing him. Apologies for the brutally blunt and coarse way I have put that, but it has to be spoken of in that way to get the message across.
“I suggested maybe she should talk to her boss or HR about a change. I am not sure she fully got what I meant with that comment but I do think she was finding this suggestion upsetting.”
Of course she was; she must be petrified of HR getting a whiff of what she did, and she is probably scared that HR is even on your radar!
“She said she will avoid OM like the plague. She will report to me weekly, daily whatever it takes.”
Sorry 20yrs, but her track record on avoiding that man is not good, and her track record on honesty vs. concealment is not good either. Thanks to that, her words have no credibility. Yes, by all means encourage her to do those things, but do not put any faith in them. You are dealing with someone who lied to her own husband, the father of her children, for a year and a half, and while you want to believe her, you must never forget what she has proven she is capable of.
“She said if the location change we both want doesn't pan out in the next couple months she will take a lateral that will get her out of the division and the building/ floor she is on.
I said that is too long and that we needed to talk further about this.”
You are right that it is too long, but there are some more issues here that need to be discussed, like:
1) Why is she not applying for jobs with other companies? If she limits herself to the company she and the OM currently work for, she limits the number of opportunities she has to move. Why is she doing that?
2) Why is she even applying for jobs that will put her just a couple of blocks away from the OM? Physical separation is the key thing here, and if they are still close, they can still meet up.
3) Why is she not prioritising saving the family she claims to love above her precious career? She put the affair above her career, doesn’t the family also deserve to be more important, or doesn’t it rank as highly in her mind as the OM did?
4) By staying in the same company as the OM, in the same city as the OM, what will she do if she moves office, and the OM moves to the same building as her two months later? Their paths crossed once, it makes sense that they will cross again in a big company like that. That is another reason why working for a different company would be better. She has already said that she cannot control what that turd does, so if they remain within the same company, with the same limited number of offices, and the same limited number of locations, he is free to move to any of the same places she may move to. Has she even considered that?
Sorry to labour those points repeatedly, but your wife clearly cannot see why they are so troubling for you.
“I will emphasize that I can't take much more of her being in the same office and therefore quick action will be needed. We both have weeks off during July so that will be a week out of the office for each of us. I think I will give her to the end of July.”
Okay, if that works for you, go for it. It is great that you have set a deadline, because otherwise this could drag on endlessly, with, “But for the good of my career…” being used to justify staying put, or staying close to the OM.
“I will book a mediator appointment for August 1st to draw up a separation agreement. If she hasn't got herself out of that office by then, somehow, that will be the consequence. She will have made her choice.”
Fair enough. The point with separation and divorce is that just because the processes are started, it does not mean they have to run to their conclusions. If the initiation of separation shakes your wife out of her comfort zone and she takes positive action that gives you peace of mind that she is ‘safe’ again as a life-partner, and well away from the OM mentally (very important!) as well as physically, you can re-think your position.
I apologise if anything here is upsetting. It is honestly written with the best intent for you, and to help get infidelity out of your life, which is something of a mantra in this forum.
Take care, 20yrs, and sending you strength and best wishes.