This is what my wife wrote about this 5 years ago on another forum; She doesn't post much anymore, but said it was OK to quote her....
Forgiveness is an act or attitude, IMHO, that I CHOOSE. I chose to forgive my husband, I think, immediately. Or, at least, after the initial shock wore off. Why did I forgive? Because I knew I could never restore my marriage without forgiveness. I could never have what I was working so hard to fight for, if I did not forgive. Without my forgiveness, our marriage was doomed...no matter what my FWS was willing to do for me.
So, what is forgiveness and how do I know I have done it? I believe forgiveness means removing the PUNISHMENT for the offense (not to be confused with consequences). What is the punishment for infidelity? Well, my religion must come in here. The punishment for sin is death? Should my FWS receive death? Should he receive the same betrayal and abandonment I suffered? Should he be so beaten down that he no longer feels worthy of love and forgiveness?
All those things would be punishment. How do I know I have forgiven my FWS? Because I do not want him to receive the appropriate punishment for his betrayal and abandonment. Because I do not feel pleasure or justification when he is agonizing over the damage he caused to me and our children. In fact, I hurt FOR him when he is overwhelmed with his grief, guilt and shame. That is how I know I have forgiven him.
But the truth is I forgave him before he wanted it. I did not ever desire him to receive the appropriate punishment for his betrayal.
I DID want him to suffer the natural consequences, however. But not to hurt him; but because I knew that those consequences would help to restore him to God and to his family, where he belonged and needed to be.
I find it incredibly difficult to write this without it centering around my spiritual faith, although I AM trying.
You see, I KNOW that I could NOT forgive this offense without God's supernatural happening inside of me. This is all way too big for me.
I NEED God to;
help me forgive
heal my wounds
restore my marriage
unite us again in body and spirit
So we all know that forgiveness can be challenging. We may have to CHOOSE to forgive every single day. We may have days where we do not FEEL like forgiving. I think early on, some BS's have to make a daily choice to have an attitude of forgiveness, but must be patient with themselves when the triggers bring on the immense hurt or anger. Over time, forgiveness will get easier and eventually be a non-issue...as long as we are seeking to be forgiving.
But we complicate forgiveness, thinking it is more than it is. In my book, it is removing the appropriate punishment...or the desire for the appropriate punishment to be divvied out.
It is NOT:
removal of natural consequences
forgetting the offense
pretending everything is restored
refusing to process the emotions that resulted from the infidelity (hurt, anger, sorrow, grief)
trusting without reason
I know that our counselor, Dr. H., talks about just compensation. I think this is a great concept, which I understand better now that I have witnessed it from my FWS. He has offered a great deal of just compensation, ranging from steps to protect our marriage, a polygraph, to a post nup agreement that gives me the cash value of his business.
But my forgiveness is NOT dependent on his just compensation. There is nothing he can do to DESERVE my forgiveness. It is there only because I CHOOSE it to be.
BUT his just compensation DOES help restore my trust in him. It does make me feel safe in our marriage again. It does rebuild the relationship that was devastated. It does demonstrate to me his commitment to be my husband forever. It does allow me to extend mercy.
My personal belief is that forgiveness is GIVEN, not earned. It is a choice the BS makes for no reason other than it is right. Without it, marriages cannot be restored. With it, all things are possible. No matter what our FWS do, without our forgiveness, our marriages are doomed.
I know I have forgiven because I do not want my FWS to receive his "just reward" for this betrayal and abandonment. To me, that's the only thing forgiveness is about.
But forgiveness opens to door to a lot of other wonderful things...restored relationships, peace and joy.
_________________________
As a FWS, I really struggled with this topic early on. Today, I know that recovery could not have moved forward at the pace it did with out her intentional efforts to forgive me.
Extending mercy to me and allowing our marriage to continue only occurred after I did some major work and demonstrated some remorse through actions.
This thread has been good for me today.... It reminded me of how deeply I wounded my beloved wife.....
I actually cried.... Some tears of sorrow, remembering, mixed with some tears of joy for the refreshing that exists today....