May I suggest an alternate scenario - one which requires you to look at your situation from a different perspective? I find it to be useful at times
The betrayed spouse looks at the affair and thinks, "Look what you've done to our marriage!" "Look at what you've done to me!" "Why aren't you doing [x, y, z] to help me recover?" The assumption is, of course, that this person who loves you MUST be seeing the situation the same way that you are.
Unfortunately, it's the rare WS who is having an affair and, at the same time, reading self-help books about how to manage their spouse's recovery. They justify the affair by conjuring up memories of the times their spouse forgot to buy milk at the store. They are not in IC discovering their "why's" in preparation for the affair to be discovered. And they seldom stop on a dime after discovery, make a total 180, and dive into rehabilitating their marriage. We'd like to think this happens but it just doesn't.
My point is that, very frequently, wayward spouses are not prepared, emotionally or intellectually, to handle the trauma they've caused. It's easy for us to throw stones at them (and, let's face it, they deserve it!) but if we step back and look at the situation objectively, their responses are not unexpected.
So... what to do? How do you get the message across? To me it's simple. You sit them down and explain, in very simple and straightforward terms, that no matter what you were doing as a husband, it does not make the marriage better to bring a third party into it. Period. Then, briefly explain how it has made you feel and what you are going to need for her to do to help you recover.
Lastly, explain to her that if she doesn't like it, doesn't want to do it, can't do it, etc., then you are going to start the process of moving yourself out of the marriage.
Handling it this way makes your position crystal clear and puts the onus 100% on her (where it belongs) in a way that she can clearly understand. She may not see it that way - but you have explained YOUR position - and, to YOU, that is what matters.
Remember, she may not spin around on a dime. Things may not get better immediately because she may not know HOW to make it better. That's okay. At least she'd be trying. Which is WAY more than what she's doing right now.
The roller coaster stops when you want to get off. However, I'm not one to complain about a short ride if I didn't tell the roller coaster operator that the ride was supposed to last for 3 minutes. If he doesn't know, he can't let me enjoy the ups and downs.
Be clear with how you feel, set your boundaries, and then follow through. You are moving yourself out of infidelity. If she wants to come along - great! If not, you are in a much better position.
[This message edited by LifeisCrazy at 10:08 AM, November 19th (Tuesday)]