My heart aches for you. I'm so sorry. I know the pain is overwhelming. This is TT (trickle truth) and yet another DDay for you. It shatters your trust all over again and puts you back at square 1.
She swears on the life of our son that this is the truth.
If there was a Cheating 101 handbook, this would be on page 43, paragraph 3. Swearing on the life of a child, mom, dad, etc. is an all too common way to manipulate and lie. Seriously, this type of stuff comes up here on SI frequently enough and I have yet to hear of a time when it wasn't later discovered that it wasn't really everything. Given how she is a professional liar, you can't believe a word she says. This is why the advice you get here indicates to watch her attitudes and actions. If she wants to prove to you that there is any reason to believe what she is telling you, she will agree to take a polygraph test.
Was this inevitable?
I think inevitable is a strong word, but I do think that the odds were stacked against you and you didn't know it. This was also the case with many of us as well. Hindsight is 20/20.
Let me give you a hindsight example. My own FOO (family of origin) issues involved parents that were on the brink of divorce/separation and I became the "fixer", "peacemaker" and emotional surrogate for my mom. In short, my codependency formed well before I grew up. My wife's FOO taught her that her father was unavailable and that she wasn't every good enough (courtesy of her mom), so she ended up craving attention/approval from men. I was a magnet for self-centered people and my wife found me to be the perfect, stable environment she desired all while enabling her to go pursue extra attention/approval from other men. Let me be clear -- each of our own issues contributed to our initial attraction, marriage and dynamic, but that is not saying that I was at fault for my wife's infidelity. That is all on her. However, we were an ill fated match.
You've quickly begun to uncover your own FOO and how that contributed to your NMMNG personality. With your latest discovery, you now also know that your wife's behavior is a long running pattern. You don't know what underlies those issues, but that really isn't your job to figure out or to fix -- that is hers to own.
Poor patterns within a marriage are all too common, so you aren't unique or alone. If you want to understand things at a deeper level, "Getting the Love You Want" and "Hold Me Tight" are a couple of books that really shed some light on the relationship dynamic. While I think that you can learn from these books and they would be good in your healing, it really isn't your highest priority right now.
Then she begged me to give her one more chance. To go to counseling with her and give her one more chance to “prove that she can be a better person.”
Going to counseling with her isn't the answer. If she is the one that is broken and she is going to be a better person, that work is on her. She needs to go to counseling on her own because she wants to fix herself and not because she is trying to hold onto you.
How does a woman who does this view her husband when this is ongoing?
The biggest point you need to remember is that it wasn't about you. It was ALL about her. She took and arranged opportunities to cheat because SHE wanted to. She left your son with a babysitter only to go be with an ex because SHE was seeking out something -- attention, approval, validation or whatever it is that her character gap drives her to pursue.
I've asked my wife what she thought about me. "I loved you" and "I looked forward to growing old together" were the answers I received. Even when, like your wife, she massaged the other man. Or lied to my face. Or had multiple affairs. Its a messed up thought process of having me for stability/provision/family and other men for "fun". You can only accept it as dysfunctional because having affairs isn't love. Trash talking you to others isn't love. It's all an attempt to justify or minimize the actions that occurred.
You made a commitment, you need to learn to forgive etc.
Please take it slowly here. After the first affairs, I went down the path of choosing to forgive. However, I totally misunderstood "forgiveness". I thought it was to forgive/forget/trust. I now see those as separate things.
Forgive is to let go of a debt. You accept that it can never be repaid, that things can't be fixed/replaced, you accept that (even though you don't like it or approve of it) it happened, but that you aren't going to dwell on it. It sets you free from bitterness and allows you to live in the present and look to the future. It is largely a gift to yourself.
Forgetting isn't possible. Yes, things will fade over time and the triggers/mind movies will become less frequent. But it is too emotionally charged of a life moment to every fully go away.
Trust is earned. This is the biggest key to moving forward. You don't have to trust. In fact, right now, you shouldn't. You don't even have to offer an opportunity. If you do, you need to focus on attitudes and actions to measure whether trust is being earned back or not.
How am I supposed to function again just as I was being able to start?
It is a new start. With new revelations and a new DDay, you are starting all over again. The problem is that each new TT or DDay inflicts more damage and makes rebuilding trust even more difficult.
You're going to have to find a way to function like you did before -- through venting, finding ways to express your emotions through healthy outlets and in stepping back from the situation to gain some clarity around what you need to do for yourself and for your son.
If you are going to give her the opportunity to try to earn your trust, you need to lay out the requirements for her. The basics that come up over and over here on SI are:
NC (no contact) - She writes an email/letter to the OM indicating that what she did was a huge mistake, that she is committing to her marriage and that there will be NC going forward. Then she blocks him (phone, social media, etc.). If there is ever any contact (e.g. he tries to reach out, she sees him in public, etc.), she lets you know immediately.
Honesty - She tells you the whole truth. Continued TT will kill any chance your marriage has. If she has more to admit to, this is her only chance. Having her write out a timeline of all affairs can be a helpful way for you to wrap your mind around things and for you to cross check what she says. Having her take a polygraph is another way of trying to get some ground on which to establish some level of trust.
Transparency - You get full access to everything. Hidden accounts and deleting arent' allowed.
IC (individual counseling) - She needs to see herself as broken and needing help. She is the only person who can do the work to fix herself, so her commitment to pressing forward through a ton of work is key.
In addition to those starting points, she needs to demonstrate that she is capable of loving and respecting you. She should be able to sort out on her own what that means. It she isn't, then she isn't a safe partner for you. As a starting point, some practical examples that she should understand and embrace include:
- Dumping anyone who encouraged the affair. Even friends who knew about it, didn't discourage it and withheld it from you aren't friends of the marriage and need to go.
- Admitting to her family what she did. Also owning up to the fact that she has been badmouthing you to them as a way to self-justify herself and excuse her behavior.
- Helping you out with responsibility for income by getting a job.
You have every right to call it quits at this point should you decide that all of this is too much. If you aren't ready for that, then this is her only opportunity to come clean so that you know exactly where you stand and to show, through her attitude and actions, that she is willing to do everything necessary to rebuild herself and the marriage.
[This message edited by Crushed7 at 11:20 AM, November 12th (Saturday)]