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Newest Member: Outoftheblue79

Just Found Out :
Affair after 14 years

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 Outoftheblue79 (original poster new member #87242) posted at 9:38 AM on Monday, April 13th, 2026

Hi, I'm not sure exactly why I'm posting, but maybe because I want to get this off my chest.

I found out my partner of 14 years had a short affair with someone he worked with in the past. I don't know her at all, she found me on Instagram and told me. They slept together after bumping into each other on a work Xmas night out last year when he was staying in a hotel (party wasn't local to us) and then they texted for about 3 months. She said she was developing feelings for him so she ended it. He told her he thought that was best and he was sorry if she'd misunderstood what was happening. I imagine she messaged me out of spite/rejection.

Receiving the message was absolutely earth shattering. I hadn't the slightest clue, no signs, our relationship felt as perfect as ever. We've had 14 years of pure love and happiness, we're incredibly close, txt each other all day long, do 95% of things together, best friends and so affectionate. Admittedly our sex like had declined, not to zero but probably less than it should have been. But I was incredibly happy and I believed he was too.

He is devastated by remorse and says that the affair was utterly unemotional. He can't figure out why he did it but maybe it was the thrill and flattery. At my request he's told me what happened in forensic detail - the hotel incident was awkward and not 'successful' for want of a better word. He has not offered excuses but I know he's had a hard few years with the loss of his father and taking retirement from a fulfilling job. I wonder if this was the result of some kind of midlife crisis - wanting some excitement.

We were in therapy within days - separately for now but we will start couples therapy when we're ready. We're committed to staying together, we still have so much love for each other - 'in love' not just caring/supporting. The few weeks since D day we have had lots of intimacy, crying together, talking about the past, present and future.

I believe we can get trust back to a large extent, he is a good person and I don't doubt his love for me. But I'm scared of a future of triggers, the lingering feeling that we have been damaged, that loss of something very special.

There's so much more I could say but this is getting long. I guess I'd love to hear from people who have gone through a similar situation - being so close and in love and this still happening. And also people who have gone on to have not just successful reconciliations but ones filled with love and happiness. Thank you for reading

posts: 1   ·   registered: Apr. 13th, 2026
id 8893202
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Bigger ( Attaché #8354) posted at 12:13 PM on Monday, April 13th, 2026

What I’m going to suggest is going to initially sound counterproductive to reconciliation, but bear with me.

If you view something as inevitable or unbreakable then that can lead to a certain carelessness in how you treat it. Like… if you were asked to carry a Faberge egg across town you would take a lot more care than if you were asked to deliver a bag of golf-balls. IMHO you need to take a comparable stance towards your relationship. It’s delicate and needs to be handled that way or else it will break.
To me the KEY to reconciliation is the realization that it’s a choice. It’s one option of several. I think that realizing and accepting that your partners infidelity has caused a strain that MIGHT lead to you two separating is the very key to successful reconciliation. It requires that you both sit down – individually and together – and remove all the excuses for remaining together (family, kids, the dog and two cats, the cosigned lease on the car…) because all these reasons can be managed IF you were to separate, and be left with only one remaining statement: You are together because you WANT to be together.

Once you accept that you realize that your relationship is in it’s core based on choice.

So my first piece of advice would be to be open to the FACT that separation isn’t your worst option. That he realizes that you are open to true reconciliation or separation, and that anything less than true reconciliation is a dealbreaker – something that is not clear if you are both committed to being together no matter what.

Then there is the "no emotions" factor…
That is minimizing on his behalf. It’s a way to hurt you less, and it’s common in the early days post d-day. Think of it this way: If it was "only" physical and no emotions… why is he risking it all for so little? Why was he going to this extreme purely on a physical urge?
There were emotions. Guaranteed. Maybe not romantic emotions like love and care and all that. But there were emotions of power, ability, validation…
You can easily find threads here where the WS claims "no emotions" only for the BS to lament that their spouse did this purely for sex, only to discover later that there were emotions, and then the BS lamenting that their WS did it for emotional reasons… It’s a no-win situation. Your partner had sex with that woman for a mix of emotional reasons and physical satisfaction.

It’s the same with the awkward and "not successful" comment. There are suprisningly few WS that admit that the sex was great. Usually the OM had erectile issues, or neither orgasmed or whatever. It’s a way to minimize the events.
Fact is they had sex. The level of infidelity is not impacted by the level of enjoyment or the pages of the Kama Sutra covered.

So far I have pointed out two factors where the affair is being minimized.

Experience shows that it’s at a unicorn-level of rarity that the whole story is shared early d-day. They met at that party and according to what he says had sex once at the hotel that night. Since then only e-mails and chats.
Verify that.
Verify that there has 100% not been any further contact other than the contact admitted.
Go through his agenda for the last three months, his financials… confirm that there hasn’t been a meetup or whatever.

To reconcile you need to begin from a base or foundation of TRUTH. You need to know what you are working from, and he can’t have a single factor where he believes he got away with something. IF they met for lunch in January you need to know. If they interact at work you need to know. You can work from facts and that’s what creates the building blocks for your future – with or without him.

"If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone." Epictetus

posts: 13762   ·   registered: Sep. 29th, 2005
id 8893205
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