20yrs,
I am glad that my words helped in relation to the ‘no contact’ letter.
“The setup for this is too good or awful, depending on your point view, to be true. Our 11th anniversary is this weekend. The 10th barely passed with notice and actually was highlighted with a crying session (me having no clue why) and accusations of excluding her when talking to my friends. This was followed by an apologetic text the next morning saying 'you used to be my best friend. I really miss that.'
Anywho, fast forward a year and a lot has happened and been uncovered. We have a lovely celebration planned and as I mentioned we currently do all sorts of nice things together - yoga, running, eating healthy, reading. While I know these are positive things, it is rugsweeping things that need to be dealt with.
Unfortunately this anniversary date night we have planned might be the only time I have to bring this up. It’s on Saturday.
I am going to try and fit it in tomorrow evening as laying a big bomb on anniversary night is probably not something I want to look back on over the years. Tomorrow night, if I can get this in, may put a damper on things this weekend or it may help create an opportunity to reconcile properly. We will see.”
A few thoughts re. the above:
1.) I confess to feeling confused here. Your posts say you are not ready to move on, you have had no closure on the affair, the marriage is not really fixed, you aren't sure she is not still in contact with OM, she still works with him, she won't do the things you need (just what she wants to do) and then suddenly here you are at a wedding anniversary celebration! Is this something you are doing because you feel like celebrating, or because she wants to put a show on to the rest of the world? You should not have to play act that you are fine when you are actually feeling the way your posts say you feel. It verges on mental cruelty for her to expect you to smile happily about the wonderful marriage after what she did for a year and a half of it. The problem with playing nice for the anniversary is that it endorses the whole ‘let’s pretend nothing happened and just move on’ mentality that your wife has. Do you not think that you are sending very mixed messages to her here?
You currently need your wife’s help on several big issues that are upsetting you, and if that affects the 'celebration', then so be it. Without wishing to spark conflict, but given everything you have written in your posts, wouldn't you be within your rights to ask, “What exactly are we celebrating here? You acting as if we have an open marriage, where you are free to have sex with whoever you want, whenever you want, for as long as you want? And I should just accept that, and shut up and smile because that is what you want?” I don’t expect you to say that, but in a way, isn’t that what you are being asked to do by ‘celebrating’ something your wife has come close to destroying? I am sorry if this causes offence, but it seems amazingly hypocritical for your wife to be celebrating something that she herself betrayed totally and utterly for a year and a half. She says she doesn't want to dwell in the past, but isn't she trying to re-write history here by putting on a show that contradicts the total disregard she had for the marriage so recently? She really is going all out to airbrush her infidelity out of history and pretend it never happened.
2.) Depending on how you want to play it, you can tell your wife that while you don’t want to spoil a party, there is a lot that must be discussed, and that it can be done before or after the celebration. Let her decide, but make it clear that there is no walking away from it, because you need it, and if she really loves you, she will be willing to do what you need.
3.) If she questions your timing, you can say, as non-argumentatively as possible (though it’s a hard message): Last year, on our tenth anniversary, you cried a lot and sent me a text that said that you missed me as your best friend. I didn’t know it then, but at the time you sent me that message, you were in love with another man and you were lying to me so that you could sneak away and have sex with him. Now that I know what you were doing on our tenth anniversary, on our eleventh anniversary, I find myself missing you as a friend, as a wife, and as someone I can trust. I am really struggling with that, and I need your help if I am ever going to feel like you love me or that you have any true commitment to our marriage and family. So I am asking you, now, on our eleventh anniversary, if you are prepared to help me, and help save this marriage, or if you just want to walk away and pretend nothing happened. I have to ask that question, because I am not prepared to ignore what I need you to do for me to feel like we should continue the marriage. I am not a nobody. I am not nothing. I am a human being, and I am hurt. I need your help, I need your engagement, and I need some proof that you do not think that what you did was perfectly alright and that you truly understand there are things that need to be fixed.
Unfortunately this anniversary date night we have planned might be the only time I have to bring this up.
4.) I don't understand why there is an issue of timing in relation to you being able to talk about the issues that are bothering you. As if you have to find an 'ideal opportunity' rather than having the freedom to raise them whenever you need to. The only time you can bring something up?
5.) I get the sense that in your heart, you have mixed feelings about the anniversary celebration. You do not actually say that, but right on the verge of it you are planning how to raise your issues, even though you don't want to make waves and spoil the event. That indicates that you are not going into it with a settled mind, and it makes me wonder whether it is your wife who has pushed for this celebration far more than you did.
6.) Doesn't the 'celebration' aspect of this strike you as a pretty big and blatant act of rug-sweeping? It seems like you are being steam-rollered into this, almost against your will.
“She has always maintained it was compartmentalization and living a seperate life. One she hated herself for but couldn’t unwind herself from. The addiction issue that you have mentioned seems to fit here.”
Well there you are; she has admitted to the mental process that enabled the affair, and that she got involved in something that became like an addiction, and yet she doesn’t want the counselling that could help her with those things. Is she saying she is happy being able to compartmentalize you out of her consciousness so she can sleep with another man for a year and a half? Does she think you should just accept that without demanding that she does something about it?
“She is very motivated to be a better person and wife. That is work she is doing. However she only wants to look forward and not dwell in the past. This approach has avoided the need for empathy and she has not gained an understanding of her capacity to abuse and the impacts of that abuse.”
Yes, this is a ‘nail on the head’ moment. It is great that she wants to be ‘better’, but she has to understand what it is that she wants to be better than. And that will only come from accepting and understanding what made the affair possible, and finding ways to avoid exactly the same mechanism firing up again in future. Basically, she is doing what she wants, regardless of what you need, which is the same thing she did during the affair.
Also, "being a better person and wife" ought to include her listening to the husband she cheated on for a year and a half and asking him what he needs her to do, not ignoring his wishes and telling him what she feels like doing. How is not listening to you, in the aftermath of what she did, being "better"? Again, that feels like she is steam-rollering right over you and the things that you need, because she doesn't want to 'own' what she did, particularly in regard to the pain and emotional turmoil she has caused you.
Taking responsibility for the pain we cause others is a key element in being a responsible human being. It's why we say sorry. It's why we are careful not to hurt others. Your wife seems to be working very hard to avoid doing that, with a load of glossy 'self-improvement' talk that is not addressing any of the real issues at all. It's like she wants to give the appearance of doing something meaningful, while actually avoiding or failing to understand what the real meaningful work is that she ought to be doing. You have had to push her into doing what little she has agreed to do, which is basic, obvious stuff like, "Hey, how about not talking to the guy you cheated on me with for a year and a half", and, "Hey, how about not working with that guy every day and saying a cheery 'hi' to him when you take the elevator together". Without you catching her and pushing her, she would be happy to still be messaging that crumb, still be working with him, maybe having lunch with him every day. That's her level of commitment to making things right.
“Recognizing the toxicity of the OM and his presence is a key point.”
You need to tell her that, and tell her what that man represents to you and the kids. And tell her that her failure to see him for what he represented to you and the family makes you wonder if she has any real understanding of what she did by bringing another man into the marriage.
“I am leveraging many of your points and stevesn and others here for a second confrontation. One that will address that continuing the relationship is continuing the affair.”
That is exactly the point, and you found the perfect phrase for it: “Continuing the relationship is continuing the affair.” Put it to her that way, and even if she wants to argue the point, you can tell that regardless of what she says, that phrase sums up the way you feel, and why it hurts so much that she still wants to be in touch with him.
“And most significantly lying about it is a harmful setback. It’s persisting the cheating behaviour. I will outline that counselling is mandatory for us to continue moving forward. Without it we are not giving ourselves any chance for success.”
Yes, more good stuff. In fact, to borrow from your other excellent phrase, “Lying about it is continuing the affair”.
“Additionally we will need to talk about what happens if the jobs don't pan out. I may save that for a follow up as things are still in flight there. She is doing the work on that end at the moment. When I get to that discussion which will be the next in the series, assuming we are still working through this. I will outline my boundaries and consequences if things don't work out there.”
Fair enough, you have outlined the time that the process of getting another job takes, but I think you need to agree some kind of deadline with your wife for her to be out of there. If she’s as bright as you say, and always makes a good showing in the interview process, it should not take her long to be able to move. I do think that failure to get out of there should not be an option. At the moment, she has had no consequences at all for her actions, and just seems to be doing whatever she wants, so you need to be careful that she doesn't try and drag the process out for so long that you get weary and say it's fine for her to stay where she is.
Also, if she is so keen to use "I don't want to dwell in the past" as an excuse to get her out of doing any examining of her actions before, during, and after the affair, isn't staying in the same job, at the same company, as when she had the affair, a prime example of dwelling in the past every day? She thought it was fine to be in touch with the OM (even lied to you about it), it's fine to still be working with him, so she's perfectly comfortable with those elements of the past (until caught and confronted), it just seems to be shining a spotlight on her actions and doing any soul-searching and apologising that she has a problem with. Instead of that, let's have an anniversary celebration...Yes, a pattern of repeated avoidance, the ignoring of the betrayed spouse's needs, and a party will make everything right again.
Sorry 20yrs, I am not rubbing it in by saying that, I just feel incredibly frustrated reading about your wife's whole approach to this. She ought to be all over you, asking you what you need, and doing everything she can to make you feel better. Instead, she's ignoring what you need, running away from doing any of the self-examination that needs to be done after infidelity, and on top of that she wants to celebrate the marriage she didn't give a damn about for a year and a half.
My heart goes out to you, I can see that you are not happy with things, but you are being swept along by her as she dictates what will, and will not, happen. I know I'm probably being stupid, or childish, to say this, but it just isn't fair to you as a person for her to do what she is doing. First she lies and cheats on you for a year and a half, and then, after she is caught, she ignores your pain and your needs, says she's moving on - how big of her - and is corralling you into an anniversary celebration that you really don't seem emotionally ready for. I know you do neat things together, and that's great, but if her life with you is so sweet, what on Earth was she doing cheating for all that time?
Here are some good links about the importance of talking, and the need to know:
http://www.dearpeggy.com/2-affairs/com023.html
The above link contains ‘Joseph’s letter’, a letter that is often quoted, in full, in this forum, as it expresses the reasons a betrayed spouse needs to talk, and needs to know.
The link below discusses the importance of talking:
http://www.dearpeggy.com/2-affairs/com038.html
And this link contains some very enlightening statistics from a survey about the impact that talking – and not talking – has on the prospects for lasting reconciliation:
http://www.dearpeggy.com/results.html
For you, and others reading this, I will post them here:
1. Hypothesis: A couple is more likely to stay married when they thoroughly discuss the whole situation.
55% of those who discussed the situation very little were still married (and together)
78% of those who discussed the situation a good bit were still married (and together)
86% of those who discussed the situation a lot were still married (and together)
20 yrs, I don’t know how you are planning to stage the discussion, but as you have mentioned letters in the past, maybe you could copy those statistics into a letter for her to keep and read, but I would also read them out to her and explain that her desire to move on and discuss nothing puts the likelihood of successful reconciliation in the 55% bracket.
Here is some more that can be copied and pasted straight into a letter. Your wife works in business, she runs projects, so she must be able to interpret figures:
2. Hypothesis: A couple is more likely to stay married when the spouse answers their questions.
59% of those who refused to answer questions were still married (and together)
81% of those whose partner answered some of their questions were still married (and together)
86% of those whose partner answered all their questions were still married (and together)
The findings clearly show that getting answers to questions and thoroughly discussing the details of the affair increase the likelihood of maintaining and rebuilding the marriage. (Other results clearly show the same kind of increase in the likelihood of recovering from a spouse's affair.)
These survey results are consistent with what I have been told repeatedly through the years: "nothing is worse than not knowing."
From the same link - http://www.dearpeggy.com/results.html
- comes this:
Unfortunately, a large segment of the therapeutic community has reinforced the idea that it's not wise to ask too many questions or do too much talking about the affair. The rationale is that the more a spouse knows, the greater the pain. However, this thinking is contradicted by the results of this Survey.
I hope the results of this survey—demonstrating the connection between honest communication and both staying married and recovering—will help the professional community (and all those struggling to deal with this issue) better understand the importance of answering questions and thoroughly discussing the entire situation.
Your wife wants the easy option of walking away and not facing up to what she did, which just won’t work in the aftermath of infidelity.
These are a bunch of thoughts that occurred to me in relation to your situation, which may or may not be useful to you in your discussions. As always, please use what feels ‘right’ for you, and ignore the rest!:
1.) You could begin by asking a simple question: do you want to help me, or do you just want to walk away? That puts the onus on her to participate, and tells her straight away that things are not fine and dandy, and you are not ready to move on.
2.) If your wife walks away from the issue, how do you have any hope of getting closure on something that she will not even begin to address? Avoidance fixes nothing. As someone who works on projects, she should know that better than most people.
3.) You can say: It feels to me like you want to be part of a couple, but act as an individual when it suits you. That just won’t work. You seem to think our marriage is something you can step in and out of when it suits you. That just won’t work. I want us to be a couple, and be committed to being a couple. If you want to be an individual, please be honest, and we can be individuals again. I am starting to wonder if you understand what being part of a couple really means. It is not about two individuals doing whatever they want, regardless of the effect their actions have on the other. It is about two people being good to one another, caring about one another, and doing what is best for both of them, not two people doing whatever they want, no matter how selfish their actions are, and not giving a damn about the impact those actions have on the other person.
4.) By walking away from what she did, and doing nothing to examine and ‘fix’ the mental mechanism she established (and she recognises the compartmentalisation!), your wife is doing nothing at all to reassure you or herself that she will not be doing exactly the same thing six months down the line when some hot new guy transfers into her team.
5.) You can explain that her desire to just walk away from the affair and its consequences feels like an emotional hit-and-run to you. She has driven her car into you at sixty miles an hour, and now she doesn’t want to stop and see if you are okay or call an ambulance, she wants to drive away just as fast and leave the whole thing getting smaller in her rear view mirror. That is monumentally selfish and uncaring, and it should be put to her in exactly those terms.
If you really want to play hardball, you could put it this way:
You drove your car over me, the marriage, and the family, for a year and a half. Are you going to stop and see if we are alright, or are you going drive away and pretend in your head that it never happened, leaving us lying in the road behind you? Because that’s exactly what you’re trying to do now by refusing to work on this and do the things I need to try and recover from what you have done to me.
6.) You can say (if minded to play hardball): For a year and a half, you ignored me, lied to me, and had an affair with another man. You actively lied to me so you could go and spend five days screwing him while I looked after the kids. It feels like you made that man number one in your life, and me number two, for an entire year and half of our marriage. Do you have any idea how that makes me feel? And after making me a minor, secondary person in your life for a year and half, while you worshipped another man, you now want to ignore what I need and move on because it suits you, as if me and my needs do not even exist. I want to know why it is so easy for you to ‘compartmentalise’ me into a box where me and my needs do not exist. I am a human being, I am your husband, I am the father of your children, I am in pain, and I need your help. Are you going to help me, or are you just going to walk away like I don’t matter?
7.) You can ask her to make a list of the effects she thinks you feel about her affair. You can then compare notes. I know she wrote a generalised letter, and maybe some of that touched on the same subject, but you are in no way wrong or selfish to make her focus on you and what she did to you. My thinking on this is that it will help show her why she cannot just walk away and pretend this never happened. She is an intelligent woman, she has an imagination, so make her use those qualities to ‘think’ herself into your position and activate some empathy for how you must be feeling.
8.) Ask her if she thinks YOU are ready emotionally to just move on, or if she has not even considered that. Just because she wants to move on does not mean she can. Both of you, as a couple, have to be ready to move on.
You could hit her with a zinger: you may be able to ignore my pain and my needs, but I can’t. I am not moving on until you listen to me and do the things that I need you to do if I am going to consider reconciliation. If all you want to do is gloss over this and run away from it, I may not be running with you. You need to think about that. Running away fixes nothing, and it does not give me what I need.
9.) Ask her if her desire to move on without taking responsibility, discussing what she did or doing anything to examine and fix her mental attitude to cheating means that she wants to set up a dynamic in your marriage where it is perfectly fine for her to compartmentalise as many other relationships as she wants and come home to you and the kids and play house after a hard day having sex with a series of other ‘compartmentalised’ men. If she says of course not, the follow-up question is: So what efforts are you making to prove that that is not the case? You will not talk about it, you will not go to counselling, you seem to think your affair partner is a great guy, when he wanted to destroy this marriage and destroy the home our kids are growing up in. Frankly, I see very little from you that indicates you see anything wrong in what you did, or that you want to fix it.
10.) Ask your wife if she can build a new compartment in her mind that contains her, you, and the children, and which does not have room for any other men. You could try and think of a snappy title for it…Something like…Oh, I don’t know…”A family”. Yes, how about she builds herself a new mental compartment called “A family”, and she keeps the most important people in her life in it, and keeps out any bad guys, burglars, intruders, or other scumbags?
11.) How about she builds another compartment called “A marriage”, which just has room for the two of you, and not the two of you and whichever guys from her office feel like joining the party?
I’ll shut up now, I have written way too much! I really wish you well with your efforts to get your wife to see what she needs to be doing to save the marriage. Given the way she wants to dictate everything, I think you may have a hard time making headway, but for your sake, and for the sake of the kids, you need to stick to it and demand that she does the things that you need her to do. So far, she has had absolutely no negative consequences for cheating for a year and a half, so the absolute least she can do is listen to you and accommodate the perfectly reasonable things you want her to do. She caused this train wreck, she cannot just tell you she's 'moving forwards' and leave you floundering with a ton of unresolved issues.
I really wish we could go for a beer together. You sound like a nice, decent guy, and your wife is not treating you the way she should.
[This message edited by M1965 at 7:45 AM, June 16th (Friday)]