Thanks again for the supportive words and insights. It's good to hear from those who understand and empathize.
The WS wants to avoid this, because it will show them up as 'bad' people. So, like typical wayward actions, they minimise their (pivotal) role in the change of the BS.
You're absolutely right. They want to downplay the severity of what they've done. Assuming they have a conscience, they find it easier to convince themselves that there were mitigating circumstances making it not all their fault, rather than to wake up every day overcome with the guilt of having done permanent damage to their BS/family, who in no way deserved it.
In her screwed up WS mind, you morphed into her nurse, and no longer her spouse. The Nurse looks after her medically, her boyfriends look after her 'other' needs/wants.
Yes exactly. This was a painful realization to come to. I basically became her nurse, and pharmacist, and financial support. When I discovered her explicit texts which included a plan to meet up with a stranger in person the next day, I finally handed her the medicine cabinet with her meds, told her she would be responsible for them now, and told her she had to leave. I'm naturally very slow to anger, but I really reached my breaking point when this happened.
Perhaps I missed it, but did you say that you are in IC? If not, please do. It can be a great help.
Yes, I've been in IC for about 5-6 years now, starting soon after the first D-Day.
She blamed her infidelities on BPD, etc., but didn't really pursue help for it or make an attempt to stop.
I actually wouldn't have minded it as much if she had blamed everything on her BPD. What really bothered me was that she deflecting blame for the breakdown of the marriage onto me. You're right that she used this as an excuse, or "reason" for her infidelity. Her bipolar disorder was medically diagnosed, so I know it was real. However, there's a stigma towards mental illnesses that I think she held on to. I think she found it easier to deflect blame onto me, than to think of herself as a "crazy" or "insane" person. But either way, it boils down to decisions that she made. And you're right. She was thinking only of herself.
Perhaps it is helpful to consider that you are seeking logic and rational understanding for what is largely just plain bad luck. Bad things happen to good people, and often there is no rational nor logical explanation.
This is a very insightful observation. For a long time there's a negative message that's been circling in my head, which is that I was so inadequate that any woman would have been miserable after being married to me after a while. My WW has said things like:
"I looked at other women around me and their husbands were showering them with affection, such as by sending them flowers at the workplace, and holding their hands whenever they were together, and then I looked at my marriage and noticed that you were ignoring me. I assumed you weren't attracted to me, and weren't into me anymore. I was unhappy in the marriage, but I put up with it until I no longer could."
This narrative of events has contributed to the erosion of my self-esteem, and has made me feel the need to continually justify the kind of person, and husband I was. I know the narrative is full of holes and rationalizations. I know that I'm not obligated to take my "share of the blame" simply because she admits to her own wrongdoing. And I know that the only reason she admits to it is because I discovered it and confronted her. At no point did she feel so overcome with guilt that she voluntarily confessed to anything she had done. And I also know that even if there was any truth to it, it still wouldn't justify the infidelity.
So rather than letting this narrative bother me, I agree that it makes more sense to accept that I simply had the misfortune of marrying someone who changed so drastically that she became a person I no longer knew. And that's something I could not have foreseen.