I am a few hours shy of 2 months since DDay, so there may be more changes to come.
What has the affair done to you as a person?
On the negative side:
1) Made me jealous. I was never the jealous type and I now find myself triggering at certain things. As an example, my wife and I were at a wedding a few weeks back and I was being especially glum. When she and I danced she was somewhat closed off and self-conscious, to the point of not even really trying to dance with me -- I was also not at my best and was just going through the motions, which sucks because I usually have a lot of fun dancing at weddings. That put me off for the rest of the night. Later, my wife danced with an older guy at our table whose wife didn't want to dance and she looked like she was having at lot more fun dancing with him. I was also probably a bit more affected by this due to the fact that OM was a good deal older than my wife.
2) I have been policing her activity incessantly -- checking emails, call records, browser history -- which is exhausting. I had never second-guessed her before. I need to start cutting back on this. On the bright side, I have found nothing inappropriate and she has told me about attempted contact from OM I wouldn't have discovered on my own. I guess I'm not looking to find anything, just reassure myself there is nothing to worry about.
3) Hit my self-esteem pretty hard. I'm not one to engage in self-pity or obsess over faults and I'm doing that now. Probably won't last but who knows.
4) Made me terribly boring and overly serious. I was already a laconic and subtle personality but I have trouble finding humor in things, joking with friends, being silly with my boy. I have lost interest in hobbies (video games in particular). This seems like a phase and I feel it's getting better.
On the positive side:
1) I am more assertive towards my wife and in general. Never an asshole, just firm in setting expectations, chiming in with my opinion where needed. I used to be afraid to say something that might offend someone because I'm a people pleaser. Now, if something rubs me the wrong way I will speak up. I like this.
2) I have found a strength of will I haven't known. This is so hard to deal with but I am growing because of it. I have become an expert at keeping my emotions in check around others. I have become more empathetic to other people in this situation as well.
3) I now have a keen olfactory sense for bullshit. I was able to elicit a lot from my wife just from her reaction to questions, or at least know to investigate further without shrugging it off. I think past me would have willfully tried to forget half-truths or would think a half-assed explanation was good enough.
How did you cope/not cope?
Better than most, I think. I never became violent or abusive. I cried every day for the first week. I still cry once in a while, maybe once a week. I spend a lot of time reading stories here which puts my situation in perspective and lets me know I'm not alone. I told one person, my wife's best friend, because she was cheated on by her husband before they were married, so she was able to empathize and it felt good to tell someone in real life (wife was very unhappy with me when I told her I did this -- smacked me, said she hated me, tried to push me down the stairs and then attempted to jump the bannister herself -- but I showed her the text messages because I had nothing to hide. She scoffed at a part where BFF said we should get coffee to talk, "oh maybe you and her can fuck"...it was bad and she acted ridiculous, but she eventually realized that what I was doing was in service of trying to mend the damage she had done.). I don't plan on telling anyone else really, friends or family anyway -- I don't want them to think less of her or perceive me as a pushover. We will be doing counseling as soon as we are able.
Have you been able to heal?
Work in progress. I hope we can put it behind us once we have addressed her issues in counseling and MC if needed.
[This message edited by mouthkeptshut at 7:22 PM, September 2nd (Friday)]