LBM,
My heart goes out to you. It is clear that you love your WH, and that his hamfisted attempts to control the situation are actually making things worse.
One of the things that is often said to betrayed spouses is, "Stop trying to control the outcome", but that advice is equally relevant to wayward spouses, particularly if they use deceit and lying as tools of control. And that is what deceit and lies really are: tools of control.
So I think you should ask your husband a blunt question:
"What matters more to you? Honesty, or control?"
What he needs to understand - and truly absorb - is that lies and control are wayward behaviour. To continue them into the aftermath of infidelity, when the foundations of reconciliation may (or may not) be being laid is to bring another, interpersonal form of infidelity into the mix. It just won't work.
Further stinks that I've been asking every couple of days if there has been any contact, as I keep reading that it happens.....and he lied over and over again about that. He said he was trying to protect my feelings while he got ride of his.
I also asked him if he jumps to lies when other people confront him. (25 years together and this is a new one on me for him). He said that yes, he thinks he does. He said he paniced.
Another blunt question for him:
"You used lies to control me during the affair, and you are still using lies to try and control me now. How do you think that makes me feel, and what does it say about you?"
And follow with:
"I do not want you trying to control me. I want you to be honest with me. Control and lying is about disrespect; honesty is about respect. Can you understand the messages that your lies and controlling behaviour are sending me?"
What he has to do is stop trying to control you and the situation by using lying and concealment. He has to understand that a big part of his 'work', if reconciliation is to happen, is to rid himself of those coping mechanisms, because they are not healthy for him, you, or the relationship.
You are currently in MC, and I think these traits in his character need to be hauled front and center as soon as possible. If control is important to him, and he thought he lost it via the situation with your family, then regained it via an affair with a start-struck disciple, then his need for control is a character flaw that needs to be addressed. No ifs, no buts.
Make MC focus on this, because it is turning what could be the start of reconciliation into a series of discoveries of yet more wayward thinking and personal behaviour, regardless of whether the OW is involved or not.
There are a couple of things that occurred to me as I read your latest post:
He says he bought the phone 2 days after DD to say goodbye...He then had 3 conversations over the course of the first week of proper NC to say goodbye - he says.
H says he was trying to let go of feelings he had and needed it for closure.
He's said that if he wanted to continue the A, he could...
Can you see how the third statement totally contradicts the first two?
Your WH said it to try and prove that he obviously wanted to be with you rather than the OW, but he missed the significance of what he was really admitting: if he says the affair is still good to go, and easy to resuscitate, what kind of closure did his three phone conversations with OW achieve?
If what he accidentally admitted is true, then the OW is clearly amenable to a continuation. So where is her closure? I wonder if the OBS knows that she has expressed that to your WH. She clearly did not tell him that she was done with the A if he thinks he could re-start it whenever he wants.
He needs to explain this. Closure is closure; it is not an affair lying dormant, with the potential to be restarted.
I shared something with H about something OBS posted in his thread - couching it as though it was something OBS told me. I don't think OW has breached SI.....certainly not from me.
Speaking hypothetically: if the thing that you told your WH was something that the OBS had only revealed in his thread, not to you directly, or to his WW, and his WW suddenly told him about it, would it be reasonable for the OBS to assume his wife had discovered his SI thread, rather than hearing about it from your WH?
If she has not discovered his SI thread, it begs the question of how his WW came by the information, and who might have passed it on to her.
Further, he has since signed over everything financially to me...I took that as part of committing to fixing this...I have decided to committ to working on the marriage. D will have to come when we work and decide not to continue.
The financial sign-over was a gesture, and I think we all hope that it came from the right place. However, the true commitment from him will be when he commits to fixing himself. That will require him to exchange lies for honesty, and controlling people for respecting them.
I see potential in the fact the his biggest issues are fairly obvious:
1) A sense of emasculation and impotence in relation to your family, culminating in your brother kicking his behind.
2) A possible need to define himself by his successes, whether on the track, in business, or in life, and an inability to handle failure/not succeeding in a healthy way.
3) An attempt to rediscover his control and manhood via an affair with a praise-giving star-struck pupil/disciple, who was manipulative, and had her own agenda.
4) A failure/inability to communicate honestly with you, or possibly with himself. Lies may be a tool of control, but they stem from inadequacy.
His self-perception is probably at an all-time low. If he felt emasculated and impotent before, he may feel like the affair has now compounded that by adding 'lying scumbag' to his rap sheet.
There may be those who feel he deserves that, but that state of mind is no good to him, and no good to you. So, as counter-intuitive as this may sound, I think that another major area to work on is his perception of himself, and his perception of himself 'as a man' and as a person in your eyes. And that needs encouragement and some positive feedback from you (which is the last thing you must feel like giving him).
The point is, if he feels 'branded' forever, where is his road to redemption? Right now, you have every reason to feel angry/hurt by the way his inadequate coping mechanisms and attempts to control the situation are making him act. You could offer him the beginning of redemption by saying something like:
"I believe you can do better than this. The question is, do you?"
His subsequent actions will provide his answer. And yours.
[This message edited by M1965 at 7:28 PM, March 20th (Wednesday)]