Cookies are required for login or registration. Please read and agree to our cookie policy to continue.

Newest Member: johnnygr

Wayward Side :
Grief

This Topic is Archived
default

hardlessons ( member #35025) posted at 4:09 PM on Tuesday, June 25th, 2013

I can see positive changes I've made, but they don't seem like they're me, if that makes any sense.

I get this, pre dday I could be very compliant. Look how good I am behaving or look at what I did for you. But the place that compliance comes from is disconnected, not truly tapping into the us that is lying under tons of shit and crappy coping mechanisms. When I really got it, that all my issues stem from me, no blame or justification to lay around I was devastated.

The disconnect is that you are still playing a role, unfortunately for you, your not the DM which is what your writing is all about here on SI, trying to make sense of all this Affair stuff with what you know. Doesn't work that way because what you know and how you did things in the past is exactly why your here, so why use the same tool?

good luck

Me WH
Wife Tired Girl
3 adult sons
"a wayward...annnnd just a tad betrayed."

posts: 955   ·   registered: Mar. 8th, 2012   ·   location: Arizona
id 6386570
default

 KBeguile (original poster member #38348) posted at 4:25 PM on Tuesday, June 25th, 2013

hardlessons, you are awesome.

I get the idea of "playing a role" ... and I doubly get the idea of being upset that I'm not in charge. I have definitely struggled with that.

Boundaries help establish a sense of really BEING someone, and that's a great deal of what I failed at before. I didn't have boundaries to say what I would or wouldn't do given situation X, Y, or Z. In so doing, you start to establish a pattern of behavior that defines who you really are (or want to be) as a person.

Me: WS 34
Her: BS 37 (HeartInADustpan)
DS: 7yo
M: 9 years
DDays: 2012/11/14-2013/02/05, 2013/03/09, 2016/02/19

posts: 824   ·   registered: Feb. 4th, 2013   ·   location: St. Louis
id 6386597
default

DecadeCentrifuge ( new member #39406) posted at 5:08 AM on Wednesday, June 26th, 2013

BS here, also a fellow geek, so I feel obligated to share what little I know on this subject. Please do not mistake my verbosity for wisdom .

So my WW and I were also into RP, but mostly tabletop with a little online stuff. We had a steady group that was made up of my friends, and she ended up screwing two of them behind my back.

She also converted online RP partners into EA and eventual PA buddies. After meeting and speaking with them, it was amazing how similar the persona she presented to them matched her archetypical tabletop characters...

In my case, I never wanted to RP with her again, but I did so in order to keep the peace. It sucked, and it amplified my feelings of loss, self loathing, and complete humiliation. It looks like she had a good time, though. Watching her flirt with other players in-character set me spinning into trigger-land, and amplified the injustice of the whole situation, because it truly appeared as though she lost nothing while the passion I had for my hobby would be forever stained by her indiscretion. This disconnect (and others like it) and apparent imbalance made R impossible for us and further damaged my self image.

Now, some advice:

Learn from the pain, and try to understand that the grief you feel from losing something you enjoyed was caused by your own decisions, whereas hers was caused by the actions of another. RPing was something you had in common, and now associating it with pain is something you also share. You used RP to meet people, connect with "playmates", and tell your stories. Now you can use its absence to understand her story.

It was a tangible (and avoidable) loss that can hopefully lead you toward becoming a more empathetic person.

Good luck.

Me: BH - Happily Remarried, but dealing with old stuff

“I'm losing my mind in a bedroom with a ghost
and I'm losing my mind in a bottle while I choke
I stayed years with you, no one knows (but I want them to).”
– Thought Industry

posts: 44   ·   registered: May. 31st, 2013
id 6387483
default

plainsong ( member #37826) posted at 8:02 PM on Wednesday, June 26th, 2013

Dear KB,

I’d like to share some thoughts about grief, from my experience. I have only posted twice here, once about anger and once about fear. I got some good advice to look underneath at what those emotions were protecting me from, which turned out to be grief-- grief about feeling all my life that I was alone and had to come from a false self to be accepted. (This was a very early conclusion, which kept me from taking in the love I received later in life, especially from my husband.)

I could be wrong, but from the outside it looks to me like in the past you were trying to connect to others through roles, and now you realize that didn’t work. But that is the only way you know to connect, so now you are trying to connect to Heart the same way. Maybe under your grief at losing the role play connection is your grief at feeling like you have no other way to be close to anyone. Anyway, that’s what it was for me – grief, and terror that I would never figure out how to be close as “just me.”

The good news is that I have been able to face my terror and have compassion on my grief, and now sometimes , and increasingly, access the “just me” that can feel and be close. I’m not saying it is easy, and it has taken me two and a half years just to get to the beginning of his process, but I can’t express in words how wonderful it feels to live in a state of love rather than fear, and feel real rather than like a cardboard figure. Doing loving things while feeling like it was “not me” was part of the process. But continuing to look underneath to see and have compassion for my own pain were essential before I could get a real sense of my BH’s pain. And keeping in mind my goal of feeling loving and receiving my husband’s amazing love were essential to give me the courage to continue when I was feeling fake and totally unacceptable to any decent human being.

I would guess that others can’t feel your pain because you haven’t been able to feel that bottom line grief and terror yourself yet. I’ll just reiterate the advice I was given, to keep digging for the whys, let yourself feel your feelings, and PERSIST – which I see you doing. Again, that’s just what has worked for me (with the help of an amazing therapist and a husband with a true genius for loving). All my best as you continue your journey.

Me, fWW
Him, fBH (sisoon)
Dday, 12/22/2010
I use capital letters for emphasis, not yelling.
Reconciled and healing.

posts: 249   ·   registered: Dec. 17th, 2012   ·   location: Chicago area
id 6388180
default

alphakitte ( member #33438) posted at 10:37 PM on Wednesday, June 26th, 2013

RPing can be a very slippery slope and was the instrument of your undoing. Yes, sloppy boundaries were involved, but RPing itself the instrument you used.

Assume that your BW never wants that instrument in your lives, ever.

Now, where will you direct your creative talent to heal yourself and your marriage?

------ Some people are emotional tadpoles. Even if they mature they are just a warty toad. Catt

posts: 636   ·   registered: Sep. 23rd, 2011   ·   location: 3 klicks north of Ambiguous
id 6388421
default

jjct ( member #17484) posted at 2:23 AM on Thursday, June 27th, 2013

Please do not mistake my verbosity for wisdom

I actually lol'd.

On a this forum.

KB, you know, the poetry of a man divided against himself doesn't have the power of the simplest tribal song?

Wendell Berry said that.

In a poem.

The changes you've made 'don't seem like you' because you're a stranger to yourself.

Your words might sweet talk innocent other broken ones to your sheets, but as far as imagination goes? Not a high bar, bub.

Instead,

bend it to the wants of your hurting other. Your supposed "one".

Dig deep. (use your imagination maybe?)

Plumb the recess,

the blank space

in you.

Flesh out and flay the thing that arose there.

Call it out.

Name it.

For the broken hateful hurting thing,

it (hopefully) WAS.

Name the lying beast and slay it.

Feel the pain your cowering has cost.

Imagine!

Being someone else for awhile.

Someone you claimed to love.

It will break you.

Then make you.

If you've got the stones for it.

And imagination.

posts: 7269   ·   registered: Dec. 24th, 2007   ·   location: texas
id 6388624
default

stilllovinghim ( member #29971) posted at 3:42 AM on Thursday, June 27th, 2013

^^^^^^Now THAT ^^^^^^^^is writing. It's gutted emotions from experience. Not lemon scented bull shit. That's called Shitrus...

“You have a choice. Live or die.Every breath is a choice. Every minute is a choice. Every time you don't throw yourself down the stairs, that's a choice. Every time you don't crash your car, you re-enlist.”
― Chuck Palahniuk, Survivor

posts: 1944   ·   registered: Oct. 29th, 2010
id 6388746
default

 KBeguile (original poster member #38348) posted at 5:09 AM on Thursday, June 27th, 2013

Thank you for the food for thought, all. You've given me a lot to think about, especially with regards to how I conduct myself, the nature of self, and the emotion and energy I devote to things in my life, her life, and our lives.

Me: WS 34
Her: BS 37 (HeartInADustpan)
DS: 7yo
M: 9 years
DDays: 2012/11/14-2013/02/05, 2013/03/09, 2016/02/19

posts: 824   ·   registered: Feb. 4th, 2013   ·   location: St. Louis
id 6388847
This Topic is Archived
Cookies on SurvivingInfidelity.com®

SurvivingInfidelity.com® uses cookies to enhance your visit to our website. This is a requirement for participants to login, post and use other features. Visitors may opt out, but the website will be less functional for you.

v.1.001.20250404a 2002-2025 SurvivingInfidelity.com® All Rights Reserved. • Privacy Policy