Sisoon, some responses below. Thank you for asking. I jotted my thoughts quickly. This helped me think about the impetus behind my vows. As I mentioned, they are refining over time/application.
I have read all the responses in this thread. I respect everyone’s thoughts and experiences. It was not my intent to offend. I am glad you told me. I plan to think on this for as long as it takes to understand the impact of my words, as I do think about the impact of my actions daily.
These vows are for me, no one else, but they may be of use. I remember in the months following Dday, my wife said a friend gave some really good advice. Her friend said, now more than ever, you need to be selfish. I was confused. I considered myself to be one of the most selfish people I knew. (I am still working on that.) But what she really meant was that I needed to go back to the root of my issues and once and for all tackle those things, selfishly. There was no way I could help my wife in the state I was in. I was dangerous, to her and to me. I needed to be selfish, to look within, from an emotional wholeness perspective. Not the corrupting bad selfishness. I was not whole. I had remained incomplete since childhood, since that day that I committed to one day end my life, a commitment I made when I was 9 years old. I needed my ‘ego’ to go to the little boy and hold him and tell him it’s time to love yourself. My vows have helped….
• Be true to yourself; really understand what you want, and advocate for yourself.
This is about aligning myself with who I am, who I need to be, so I can find harmony in the world. We married young. I was an unformed person, who needed to iron out important post-adolescent and young adult issues, and to do so I needed to experience life fully and without judgment. Getting married locked me into a belief system that I resented for many years. I ignored it, and it festered. At a certain point, I didn’t know who I was. It seemed I never knew. The unfinished task of ‘finding myself’ was so long dead, I was a vacuous vessel living only to earn money and to ‘achieve’ instead of ‘experiencing’ (one of my other goals). I lived this way in relationship (essentially as a fake vessel) with my wife with her for years. I couldn’t open up to her about who I wanted to be, how I wanted to live, because by then we had kids, and I was stuck in the mode of bread winner. I actually didn’t even know that I was not being true to myself. If I had been true to myself, I would have advocated for what I needed in life: less work, more family, and a full and transparent relationship with her. In short, ignoring my true self meant that I couldn’t be in full relationship with my wife, and it’s highly likely this happened because: a) we married too young, or b) we jumped into having kids and American dream too fast. By living true to myself, I wouldn’t need to look outside my marriage or seek happiness in substance abuse or even Type A experiences. I would find happiness within myself, and bring that full self to those around me (my kids, my wife, friends….). Once I am true to myself, I need to advocate this, make it known, so that we (the couple) can address these circumstances together.
• Never do something that doesn’t feel right (period).
I have spent most of my life not living in harmony with self, not doing what was healthy for me, and not allowing emotion to guide me. I have also lived my life with this nagging feeling that something was off. That doesn’t feel right, in my gut. My emotions ranged from anger/rage to being completely shut off, and nothing between. Once I started feeling and exploring real emotion (probably for the first time since childhood, possibly ever, due to the trauma experienced), I realized these emotions were complex and hard to understand, and that was ok. What remains is an intuition of right vs wrong, healthy vs unhealthy, for me. If something doesn’t feel right, I need to get away from that situation. I wouldn’t have been in situation where infidelity was possible if I had simply trusted my intuition from the beginning. I’m struggling with this now, actually. It’s really hard to think you want something but know in your gut that it’s not right for you, if that makes sense. And for what it’s worth, cheating never felt right, but it was perfectly self-destructive, which was what I intended to do to myself.
• Love yourself; appreciate yourself; don’t believe the negative thoughts, because they are false. You are an amazing person. Remember the inner child you learned to love.
This is an area where I have struggled the most. And it was demonstrated through my self-destructive tendencies. Because I wasn’t true to myself, because I didn’t follow my intuition to be the person I needed to be (moral, transparent, vulnerable, etc.), I could not love myself. Also, due to childhood trauma, I believed (subconsciously/unconsciously) the only way to ‘do right’ was to through a process of pain (aka punishment). So I hated myself, since I was 9 years old. Yes, this inner child absolutely needs guidance, but he needs love first.
• Live with integrity; this means valuing your needs equally to those you love.
Integrity is a moral high road that I want to strive for. I find myself thinking about this concept a lot. If a person drops a $20 bill on the sidewalk, do you chase them down? If someone gives me credit for someone else’s work, do I correct them? If my growing boys try to short-cut their homework and bypass small steps in life or misperceive the value of hard work, how do I teach them that ever little decision adds up into either a big problem or an amazing reward? It does add up. I aspire toward integrity now. And…it feels good sometimes. It’s a chance to be better daily. Why value my needs equally to others? I think when we are in relationship to others, if we value those relationships, we have to navigate balance. No one should have to sacrifice their own self to be with the other or support a lifestyle.
• Stop hiding stuff; just stop. Openly be you, no matter what: atheist, romantic, creative, sensitive, optimist, deep thinker.
For years I was not honest about my beliefs in a highly religious family. Both my in-laws and my side of the family are fundamental Christians. When we married, I had been struggling with this but never reconciled it. But I knew deep down that I did not believe. I never confronted it directly with my wife. I also never owned other aspects of who I am (for the aforementioned reasons: be true to yourself…). There were so many ideas I ignored that were just gutting me. Even my own sexuality, something that I ignored because of religious repression, now became madly apparent. I wanted a healthy sexual life but failed to connect with my wife, and therefore failed to establish the trust that two people need to have it. I failed her by failing myself. I betrayed self, then I betrayed her. This is a very personal goal because it has become habitual for me to not be vocal about my ideas, desires, and beliefs when they might be perceived as the minority. I was trained in childhood that dissent against the religion was bad (whether implicit or explicit). I’m an atheist. I believe it takes more faith to believe that there may be nothing for us in the end, than it does to believe in a god. Those types of statements were so hard, still are. And, I respect people who disagree. There is a beauty in religion.
• Choose experience over accomplishment, say it again until you believe it, choose experience over accomplishment.
I became so focused on accomplishing goals for myself and for my family (buying/fixing houses, 401k, making more money, getting ahead, over and over and over). God it makes me sick now. I am NOT that person. If I had chosen ‘experience’ with my wife, well…. Here I am. And that’s ok. It’s a lesson. This goal is more about guidance. Of course I have to earn money and get ahead, but it’s going to be deprioritized going forward. Money can’t buy a lifetime of relationships and experience.
• Be authentic with people, with self, even if authenticity is not the ideal person.
I’m working on this. But you gotta know yourself first, truly deep down, before you can be authentic. I ask myself now: who am I? Not philosophically. But who am I in simple, elegant terms? It’s ok to be me. That’s hard to say sometimes. It’s ok to be me. In doing so, I can finally be authentic with others. Even as I write this, it is so liberating. Because 5 years ago, the idea of authenticity felt impossible. I was barricaded by falsehood.
• Be careful with all people’s feelings, no matter what
This is about empathy. I believe I failed in this post. I failed to see that many betrayed spouses who are in so much pain would see my need to focus on self as a slap in the face to the one I betrayed. I see how it looks like that. I want to reconcile those two things, but I NEED to become a better person, first for myself, then for my kids, and hopefully someday to prove to my wife (nearly ex) that SHE was the authentic one. She was the hero. She was the strength. In that regard, I want to be more like her.
• Face the deep-down dark truth with courage, always; never rugsweep, never rewrite the narrative of past; use this to change the future
Never, ever re-write the narrative. I’ve seen it too many times with others and in my own life. I committed an egregious act of betrayal that brought my dear wife to her knees. It gutted her. It was selfish, hurtful, punishing, brutal, and impossible to undo. It was an act of emotional violence. I never want to mince words on that fact. Initially, when I realized the full impact of what I had done, I wanted to erase myself. But that was weak and did not reconcile what was necessary. When I view this truth, I look in the mirror, and I see my true self: who I was, but also who I was before I betrayed, and then the possibility of who I could become if I take the next step…..
• NEVER STOP DOING THE HARD WORK
Yes. Forever.