I really hesitate to post on this thread because you seem to take real good points and issues as a threat and insist you only want advice from others in the same situation. Well… I’m not a woman with a 6–7-year relationship, an OC on the way and all that. But I do know a thing or two about infidelity AND I like to think what being a man is about.
I want to stress that the below is all based on creating the conditions that can save your marriage. They aren’t easy – but from the bottom of my heart – if you take note of them and act you and your husband are increasing your chances of reconciling. Or if one or the other doesn’t take heed – at least getting to the point of understanding the marriage can’t be saved.
This is NOT saying you should divorce. It’s rather that you should realize what’s ahead, what needs to be done. In a way it can be compared to waking up in a burning house. You can take all sorts of actions to extinguish the fire and save the house, but if none works you eventually focus on getting out.
The divorce factors? Well… once again the burning house comparison. What drives your efforts at saving the house and extinguishing the flames is that you realize the permanent damage not doing so can cause. It should be the same with your marriage – realizing what NOT dealing with the issues can leave you in a burnt out, irreparable marriage. It’s better to do the hard work NOW and extinguishing the flames rather than live with embers and smoke. YOUR BEST BET AT SAVING THE MARRIAGE IS DEALING WITH THE INFIDELITY NOW!
First of all: We have advised repeatedly that your husband refuse paternity until the OW sues for paternity. You say he is doing that… yet he meets with her to talk about abortion, adoption and all that… Even those talks are participation in paternity. Can you imagine that conversation: "I think you should abort the baby that I am not the father of" … It doesn’t make sense. He refuses to acknowledge her and the paternity issue until its run the legal course.
The same with suggestions of a pre-birth paternity test. Right now, there is no legal claim that your H is the dad, and the process is such that there won’t be until the child is born. Like it or not you two need to shut the OW out for the time being and she has to eventually initiate the process of suing your husband for paternity.
Second: You do what a lot of betrayed spouses do. You blame the OP (OW) for the affair and for the pregnancy. A 0.5% chance of pregnancy does not mean they have to have unprotected sex 200 times to conceive. A 0.5% chance simply means the odds of conception are low. People still buy lottery tickets with even lower odds.
It doesn’t matter who initiated the affair, who pursued whom and all that. A married man can walk into a brothel offering free BJ’s along with free lobster and steak and still walk out having refused all temptation. The problem is that your husband decided to taste the forbidden fruits. He got himself into the situation and partook in it.
The problem isn’t the OC per se. You have options to deal with that issue either alone or as a couple. The problem isn’t the OW. The problem is that your husband decided to have an affair. THAT is what you need to deal with and repeated experience here on SI has very clearly shown us some things:
1)The wayward spouse (your husband) has to accept and acknowledge 100% accountability and responsibility for the decision to have an affair. This is not "I lost a job and therefore I cheated" or "you were not around and therefore I cheated" but rather a very honest and heartfelt "I cheated and the excuses I found to justify this are not valid. I cheated due to insecurities, lack of judgment (or whatever) and THIS is what I am doing to change myself to make me less susceptible to these actions".
2)You -the BS – need to accept your husband had these limitations and he and only he decided to cheat. You need to be aware of his limitations and see that there is progress being made on them. The OW… doesn’t need to be your friend, but due to the OC she will be a part of your life for a very very long time…
3)A basic in SI philosophy (if there is any joint mutual philosophy) is that the affair is NEVER NEVER NEVER due to the marriage or the BS. You can have the worst marriage ever, yet it never justifies having an affair. It could justify a demand for change or even a divorce, but never an affair. He didn’t cheat because you weren’t there or because of distance. He cheated because he decided to.
4)Notice how I have several times said he decided to cheat? This is a key issue. If he didn’t decide to cheat and it only "happened" as if by accident… well… there is no way to prevent a repeat. This goes back to my point on accountability. The minute he raises his hand and says "Yes. I cheated. There is no excuse and no justification. The blame is totally 100% mine and it’s up to me to make myself a safe husband" is the moment your marriage can start reconciling.
I fear your repeated blaming of the OW. We can have our opinions on someone wanting to bring a child into such uncertainties, but that is a completely different issue to the infidelity. Please – don’t make HER the enemy. She’s simply a woman your husband had an affair with that led to conception. Did she use a contraceptive? Not really an issue. More of an issue is that your husband had sex with her, and he didn’t use protection. It’s not that she conceived that’s the issue regarding your marriage – but that HE conceived with her.
You don’t need to be friends. You don’t even have to like her. But 5 years from birth you might have to sit in the same auditorium she might be watching the child play one of the three wise men, or when the child graduates, or marries or whatever. With time – if OC is in your life – you need to find a way to coparent.
Not once in the posts above do I suggest you divorce. But I do strongly suggest you deal with the issues. Those issues are NOT dealt with by your husband saying sorry and promising never to cheat again. It’s a lot more work, and it’s work that will go on way past the birth (and probably the confirmation of paternity) of this child. This whole site is based on couples dealing with infidelity, and it seldom – like pink unicorn seldom – ends once the WS says sorry, won’t do it again.
---
Regarding the OC. I’m a man, and on SI we sometimes have this bunch of posters talking about masculinity, manhood and all that stuff. The way I was raised then being a man is being accountable. It’s not being perfect – it’s not being strong and dominant or about earning and sexual powers. It’s being accountable. That is where you find the character and integrity of a man.
I can share from personal experience: In the period between my d-day and when I started dating my present wife (of over 30 years) I fathered a child. It was a mutually agreed upon ONS with no intention of any relationship. I was informed of this child by an official letter 3-4 months after it’s birth, and about 3-4 months after my wife (GF at the time) decided to be together. I went through the legal process of proving paternity and accepted the outcome. The first person I talked to about the official letter was my then GF/future wife. She was shocked but this wasn’t infidelity. This was before we met. I gave her the option of leaving, but informed her that if this was my child, I would be in its life to the extend the mother allowed (different times – women more-or-less dictated absentee dad participation) and to the financial accountability law required. She accepted this and we worked on adapting our life to this added person. In fact, she has told me that if I had shied away from my responsibility, she would have doubted my eligibility as her future husband.
I am accountable for that life. I have responsibilities as a father. Had the mom wanted those responsibilities to be minimal then so be it. Had she wanted more… then so be it. I was accountable for doing my best. I paid CS based on my income, and that impacted the income of my family, but it was still my responsibility. My accountability.
Maybe the biggest risk in my marriage was when I fell behind on child-support payments. My wife made it very clear that a MAN pays his child support and that we could budget to manage it.
We managed. The "child" is married and has given us grandkids. Her mom and her husband sometimes visit. It’s an amicable enough relationship, but we were both very clear that we had no intention of any future romantic entwinement. The "child" has talked about how she grew up with 2 dads and 2 moms and all her (half)siblings. My mistake of not using a condom has not had any major negative effect on her life.
I think financial manipulation and minimization won’t work. Finances are a major impact in marriage, and having to use some spreadsheet to decide who earns what and why and how and when to minimize CS payments… It’s like spending 100 to save 10. If your husband is the father, then he takes the responsibility and accountability square on and pays the CS that he is obligated to pay. You can minimize it by sharing custody, but it’s not as if that saves money per se. The child will still need clothes, food, dentures, medical, books, a bike… It’s more an issue of how that cost is shared.
I wish you well, but I truly think you need to be better aware of the main issue.