BSR is so smart and she always says things in such a succinct yet powerful way. I want to underline a couple of things she said and share my thoughts about what you see as a direction.
As much as I respect sisoon, I would have advised him against requiring access to the content of his WW's therapy. I understand the reasoning behind it, but think it carries a substantial risk of making the therapy itself a meaningless piece of performance art. A WS who is avoidant with you is going to be just as avoidant, maybe even more so, with a professional who is ostensibly there to help them but reports back to you. Who is really the client in this scenario? What accused person, especially a guilty one, doesn't design their testimony to impress the judge?
I'm not a therapist, but I can say that this feels similar to the conundrum I run across as a remorseful WW trying to reach remorseless WS when they first arrive here. If they had the empathy and skills for self-examination, they never would have gotten into an affair in the first place. Sometimes, they need to feel heard before they can open their minds to listening. I don't mean false validation of the "Of course, now I see why you felt you had to cheat" variety, but "I can hear you're in pain, let's talk about where that's coming from and how it led you to be okay with making this choice." To some readers, these two approaches are a distinction without a difference, and they find it enabling and offensive. To me, the first one ties off the discussion in a neat little rugsweeping bow, but the second starts guiding the WS along a meandering path to potential enlightenment. I can't drag them there, but hopefully, I can convince at least some of them to walk along it with me. My sympathy isn't disingenuous, either. I was them once, damaged and selfish and entitled and foggy, and I needed the help of SI to get me to see it.
Powerful stuff here. I couldn't agree more.
WS get to be WS because they stay so locked in their interior world, yet they are often so not self aware.
Personally, I never thought I would ever cheat. I had never really considered cheating, or felt tempted. I have never ogled over other men, nor have I been disrespectful of my husband with my boundaries.
What I did do was tried to be a perfect wife and mother. I didn't have an example of that growing up, so I invented the roles I made on the back of creating expectations for myself that were both unrealistic and for many unsustainable. By the time I had reached the end of active motherhood, I had not a fucking clue of who I was or what I wanted. I was depressed, overworked, and my purpose for living felt like it was entirely gone. I resented my husband for expectations I put on myself and saw myself as an indentured servant.
What really was happening is I had been living a very inauthentic life. Not only did I never speak up, I didn't even know I needed to speak up. I was severely unhappy and in my eyes this was a result of my marriage.
Like your GF, my complaints and things I could point at were so minor in nature that it was disorienting to me to begin telling the IC and my husband what they were. I felt dumbfounded by the simplicity of what I was saying. Yet, it was all a new perception and it took a long time for me to embrace it.
The affair was an escape from being dead inside from my lack of authenticity. And, that lack of authenticity was not malicious, it was with the best of intentions. None of those thing had a thing to do with my husband.
So, that was a very longwinded way to say, I thought I was unhappy in my marriage, but what was truly happening is I was just plain unhappy from neglecting my relationship with myself. I didn't ever feel like my needs were as important as everyone elses, but I sacrificed too much.
What counseling taught me was how to be responsible for my own happiness. That meant healing past trauma, understanding where these perceptions came from (FOO), learning to challenge my thoughts and feelings. You can't have a relationship with someone else if you don't know what you need from that relationship because you don't even have one with yourself.
That doesn't excuse my decision to cheat. It never will. In my mind, I will never forgive myself for making that decision. I can have compassion for how I arrived on it's doorstep, and change those things but that's the best any WS can do.
If you want to make this work, you have to give your WS a little room for self discovery. Self discovery is really stunted when you are feeling pressure that your life hangs in the balance of what your answers are going to be.
At the same time, I don't discount your deep need for these answers, for her to show herself to be safe, and for you to get out of this pain. My BS hat can understand how much the pain creates a pressure that's hard to turn the valve on.
But, it's a process, self discovery takes a lot of experimenting and self reflection and work. It's time consuming. I am not at all where I used to be, but I don't even think I am half way to where I want to be. BUT - I can tell you where I want to be and why. I can point at the things I do to get there. And, I think if your WS is in therapy for many months (for me it was about 6) she can do that part.
I was once told by someone here that they believed I was the foggiest WS that ever showed up to this site and they thought I might just walk off the cliff in the midst of that fog. Some of that was because it was hard also to wrap my mind around who I had become. I couldn't face her, I was so ashamed of her. This did not fit the narrative I clung to for decades of all the effort I put into being a perfect wife and mother. I was so stuck in my pain I had no idea how to get out.
I say all this not because I want to disregard your feelings at the BS. I am definitely not trying to make her problems more important than yours because they are definitely not. What I am trying to do is offer a perspective to you that tells you what this looks like from someone further down the line.
I came up in a trailer park with a father who was a functioning alcholic, and a severely emotionally abusive mother who has always been riddled with fear and ignorance. A sister who has severe mental health issues who was physically abusive to everyone in my family. I was sexually abused by multiple people, and my mother did nothing. My counselor at school indicated that I was enjoying the attention. I grew up avoiding, detaching, and working to be perfect to keep the focus off of me. If I can learn how to be someone who copes better, makes more emotionally intelligent decisions, and someone I am learning to love, then most any WS can do the same exact thing. The factor is do they want to? Because it's a long hard trip.
Look for the desire, does it sincerely seem to be there? The more it's there the more she will try. If you want to see this through, then give her the room to try. Without the pressure of reporting on therapy. If she likes the IC, then she should stay. IC is about fit, this person may not be a good fit for you, but it might be for her. It's hard to trust her to drive this bus, but that's what it needs to be. If she doesn't have the desire/motivation that's what you need to know.
I also want to echo, your other requirements are all perfectly reasonable, and you should have boundaries with her like you never have before. I think maybe work on detaching a bit though, that will protect you better during this time.
[This message edited by hikingout at 10:29 AM, March 10th (Wednesday)]