Well, I'm coming up on being here for nearly 3 years, and my main milepost is April 27th.
I would have traded the last 3-1/2 years for being in a coma, if that had meant my wife wouldn't have done what she did. But that wasn't offered to me, so I'm still here trying to make the best of my life as it is now.
I've been fence sitting for some time and I'm off the fence again and back into R. Edith has worked on herself tremendously and it shows. Not that she can't work on herself more, but who doesn't need to do that.
Some thoughts from my perspective at about 3-1/2 years into the start of this hellish experience:
1) You all were so right in so many ways. SI consensus is so spot on. Not always, but I see now it is about 100x more truthful that what came out of a waywards lips.
2) Push-Pull doesn't work. You can't work on mending a relationship while fending off an affair. You can do one or the other. You can't mend anything when she is cheating on you--it just makes it worse. As you all tried to tell me.
3) Affairs are an escape from reality. My wife was trying to escape from her life and herself and me. She was addicted to the way he made her feel and was willing to divorce me to keep it coming.
4) She had been abusive for many years before the affair, but had convinced me that it was my behavior that made her so. I see now, through therapy and many books, that she was abusive and profoundly so during her in-my-face affair.
5) There were many things I did prior to the affair that hurt our marriage, but it didn't cause the affair. She chose it 100% and she wanted it. "If you won't let me have him as a friend, then we are through!" I should have said, at that time, "OK, then we are through". It would have saved me years of pain.
6) The last big lie resets the healing clock. Edith's adultery during my IC and MC, when we were supposedly reconciling, is my biggest hangup. The EA was huge, and the PA piled on the pain, but that can be put into perspective over time and with healing. But to see me in agony, encourage me to heal and get better, as she continued to cheat... I'm not sure I can ever forgive that.
7) It's OK to not forgive. I am dedicated to try and forgive, and it seems to be working some over time and with effort. But if I never forgive her 100%, that's OK. I can live with that.
8) I will never go back to where I was before. Never. She will treat me like a husband and like a friend, she will treat me with respect, or I will chose to be without her. I don't need a wife that is abusive. My children don't need a mother that is abusive. I am going to be attentive to her needs and wants, but I will be attentive to mine first and my children second. I will no longer walk on eggshells trying to anticipate or mitigate her emotions. Those are her feelings and hers alone. They are not mine and I will detach from them if they are pushed on me. I will be kind and considerate and I will listen carefully and lovingly, but she is separate from me. If her expressions of disappointment or anger become overwhelming, then she needs to see a counselor. I am a husband, not a counselor. I'm no longer here to fix her or pacify her or save her.
9) It is not my job to make her happy. That is her job. I love her and want to see her happy but not at my own expense. She must lay the responsibility of her life with her. I will no longer be a scapegoat for her unhappiness. I will no longer accept anger, or resentment, or contempt for failing to make her happy.
10) Betrayal and Adultery have consequences. I don't have to take all of them. Edith can take some and so can her OM. Sadly, my children receive some too. She chose this for us and I will not carry her water regarding consequences of the affair.
So, life continues on. Edith is once again the good wife she used to be, perhaps better than she ever was. I'm trying to be a better husband--not because she deserves a better husband, but because I chose to be a better husband.
Thank you all so much for helping me when I was so down and needed such help. It truly was a life saver / marriage saver / family saver. I don't think I could have made it without you.