I disagree with some here in that I think you should confront her know.
How much pain do you need?
In a M either party should be able to confront their S with their concerns.
I often wonder what proof proves, if that makes any sense.
The time to confront is when you feel something is wrong.
Before it has a chance to become a major issue.
There may be some truly great liars out there but I don't think there are that many that can sell it to a suspicious spouse.
I appreciate your sentiments, and I do understand your point. I've asked this myself repeatedly. My biggest error in all this was not being more aggressive in pursuing their communication early on. I trusted her implicitly. But now it has become a major issue, and it's too late to go back.
After reading dozens and dozens of posts and profiles here of others' experiences, from what I can gather the biggest regret has been confronting too soon without full information, and the biggest frustration has been the denial after denial of the WS, followed by the painful trickling of A details.
I basically have two choices. The first is to confront her now. I spill (or feign) what I know to her, and she either comes clean or, more likely, minimizes it, denies that there's anything to it, says they're just working friends, says there's no PA, tells me that I'm blowing things out of proportion. And then I lose any opportunity for ever finding out anything else, unless she decides to grant that to me. And most likely, it will come out in little bits to make me stop asking questions.
The second choice is to be patient and continue to gather evidence. If there's been a PA, it certainly already occurred, or it never will, given the climate. The damage is already done, be it EA or EA/PA. Remember, I wasn't really seriously digging for information until after my first post 24 days ago. I've been following Bigger's great advice -- be tactical. I have a number of things that I still need to look into. If tomorrow I pick up a message saying, "Well, you do kiss better than my husband," or something to that effect, you can be sure that I'll be all over it with a confrontation sooner rather than later.
So the second option comes from a position of strength and keeps my options open. I am still looking at this from a R perspective, although that doesn't rule out D by any means. It will largely depend on how she handles the after-effects of confrontation.
I don't like being in this situation any more than the others on here who have felt the anguish of infidelity, but I can deal with it for now. Even without a D-Day, I am much better taking care of myself and D as well.
I'm not super-human. I hate the secrecy (not just hers). I miss the intimacy, the feeling of trust and the closeness of family. I'd like to salvage what I can, and I guess this is my way of handling it, at least for now.
I just spent the whole past hour reading this from start to finish. WOW is all I have to say. I am so sorry you've been going through this but please don't let anyone push you into acting sooner than you're ready to. I know many people who have given you advice as a result of what they've learned but sometimes you need to learn it for yourself AND I think you have to be comfortable as this isn't just a little lie, this is infidelity.
Sorry you had to endure 19 pages of my woes. Thank you for your insightful words, poopylala (My 4 y/o would love your nick!).
I would be searching high and low for ways to get past the security on the cell phone.
There are companies on the net that for about 10 bucks a month will put an app on the cell phone and forward a copy of all messages to YOUR email account - 'as a backup' in case you accidentally delete a message!!!!
Sadly, not on a corporate phone. EVERYTHING runs through their servers, and they control what runs on it. A company Blackberry is a cheater's best friend. Appreciated your other comments, thanks.