Hey, JM. I want you to know that I have not been following your story. I've only read your last few posts.
I know that the members here on SI can be very blunt and direct. Many won't "pull any punches," and that can be very hard to take. At five months past D-day, it was often extremely hard for me to read some the of the things members here were trying to tell me. It's taken me nearly a year, end countless hours of writing and posting on SI to start to understand a few things.
I have tried to envision two futures for myself.
The first was reconciled. Mostly, because I love my wife and still have a very hard time believing that she wasn't just capable of doing what she did, but that she actually did it. This was not the woman I knew. She couldn't be. But! The truth is, I didn't know my wife half as well as I thought I did--and I still don't know her as much as I would like to, especially if reconciliation is going to be possible. Also, being hit rather hard by hysterical bonding influenced my decision to "jump blindly into R." The vast majority of my posts are in the R forum. Today, I would say that we are reconciling, but we still have a very, very long way to go.
The second was a divorce. What would that look like? What would it entail? How the hell could I ever explain this to my son? Could I withstand and endure the utter heart-break he would surely feel? I didn't much like that option and, to some degree, I still fear that it's inevitable.
I am detached from my wife, JM. I am sitting on the fence, watching, observing, listening and learning...
Either outcome is perfectly okay with me now.
Whether or not we can R our marriage or we end up divorced, I will have the life that I want. It's my choice.
If my fWW choses to accept that, then she's more than welcome to join me in this new future of mine.
First and foremost, I will not be married to a cheater. That's a pretty firm boundary. Rather iron-clad, actually. It always has been. When my wife cheated, she ended our marriage. This is the only way I can see it. However, because she is, for the most part, a good woman, who is trying very hard to explain all of this to me, to make amends, show remorse and love and empathy... I am perfectly willing to make a one-time only exception to the simple fact of life that infidelity is a deal-breaker.
She broke the deal. Not me.
I think what most veterans around here want to you to understand and truly embrace, is that it's your life, brother. If you choose not to be married to an unrepentant, unremorseful woman, then so be it. I see nothing wrong with that at all. In fact, I would encourage you to tell this to your WW, very calmly, very matter-of-factly.
When someone shows you their true character, believe them.
Show her your true character.
Tell her what you expect from her in no uncertain terms. Write it all out, very specifically.
If she choose to accept it, well, great.
If not, well, it sucks, and it's going to hurt and cause all sorts of misery, but...
...her choice.
She's already shown you the choices she is willing to make in her life...
She already made her choices.
Make yours.
It's hard to give up that much "control," but when you start to realize that you never had any control over her what-so-ever, it's incredibly liberating. It's perfectly okay to be okay with your decisions regarding what you want for your life.
That's it, brother. That's the "magic bullet."
My wife cheated.
She lied about it.
She blame-shifted for months.
She unleashed all of her anger at me for months.
So, I called a lawyer, starting the process, came within a phone call of filing. Then balked (for very personal reasons).
Yeah... brother... your wife may have lost her marbles, but it's not your responsibility to find them for her, particularly when she refuses to even recognize that they're missing.
The only thing you can do is make your life better.
Detach from your wife. Separate your issues from hers, your emotional and mental state from hers. Your wife is not the woman you thought she was when you married here decades ago. She's gone, man. Changed! And there's very little you can do about it at all.
We are all responsibility for our own happiness in this life-time. We cannot allow ourselves to put that responsibility into anyone else's hands, nor we can do the same for them.
Surviving infidelity is about you, JM.
It's not about your marriage and it's certainly not about your WW.
Be strong, man.
This is your life.
[This message edited by Unhinged at 2:20 AM, April 11th (Monday)]