Now that things are calming down I want to use the opportunity to explain a couple of tools we BS can use after d-day.
They are both used to reach what I believe is necessary to reach the point where it becomes clear to you whether reconciliation or divorce is your path. By default – if you were already committed to D - then neither tool is really necessary for you.
They are both based on a couple of thing most of us think need to be in place before reconciliation is possible: The affair is over (and you the BS are assured it’s over) and the truth is known.
The first tool is exposure:
Exposure is possibly the very best tool you have to kill the affair. It’s also possibly the most misunderstood tool. Exposure is never vindictive, angry or mean. It’s not done for revenge. It’s done to create conditions that are conductive to your WS realizing what they are doing, the consequences and the extent of the pain and damage they are causing. These conditions usually lead to one of two conclusions: The affair ends and the WS commits to the marriage (about 8/10 cases) OR the affair stops being an affair and tries to live in the daylight (2/10).
The former is the key to reconciliation. The latter at least gives you a clear picture of where YOU are and allows you to move on. Both options are immensely better than remaining in infidelity.
How to expose is key. Like I have said it’s not revenge nor vindictive. IMHO you need to expose in a relatively honest and humble way. For example; If you were to decide to expose to your friends you might say something like:
“Friends. WW is having an affair with [Name of OM], her boss at work. As you can imagine this is devastating our marriage. I refuse to remain in a marriage that’s in infidelity but if my WW would commit to saving our marriage it’s my belief that we should try. I think you guys deserve to know as our friends and people that I believe care about our well-being. I would really appreciate any help you could give our marriage to survive. Honestly I would also be OK with advice that made my wife commit to either the OM or me, as long as it gets us out of infidelity either as a couple or as individuals. I ask that you remember she is my wife and I expect you to show me and her the respect and dignity our friendship demands.”
Exposing to the HR department:
“It has been brought to my attention that my wife, [name of wife] is in a personal and sexual relationship with [Name of OM]. This relationship was initiated and maintained at work. OM is WW direct superior and I have reason to believe he has used his position to initiate and continue this relationship. I have been advised that this might even constitute sexual harassment. I doubt this is in accordance with accepted business practices and HR policy of [name of company]. I believe this needs to be brought to your attention so the company can react to this situation and ensure my wife is no longer subjected to OM leadership in any way or form and can continue her work without interaction with him. I expect to hear of your response and reserve the right to further purchase this issue through legal means.”
Basically exposure should be based up on what the issue is, why you are asking for help and how you want the person to react. Never in an angry, vindictive way.
Then you let the cards fall. If your friends tell you that you were a crappy husband and encourage WW to go with OM… So be it.
If HR fires wife and tells you to sue away… So be it.
But chances are the vast majority will kindly guide your WW to the correct path. Chances are she no longer will think she’s fooling anyone when she and OM have a “Sales-forecasting meeting” for 2 hours off-site. She will feel the social pressure of the affair and – if she’s really committed to the marriage – she will start doing things to ensure the outside pressure is assured the affair is over.
Will exposure make reconciliation harder? Will it make it harder for you two to interact with those that know of the affair?
Well… No to the former and yes to the latter.
Exposure is like applying a heart-fibulator. You might have to tear the buttons off a shirt to apply the fibulator and it might even leave slight burn-marks. But it gets the heart to pump again. Applying it might be the reason the person survives. The person is left with a wrecked shirt and burn-marks but that’s small change compared to the other option.
Exposure makes reconciliation possible. It makes it possible to determine the future of the affair and therefore the future of reconciliation. R is possible without it – but will take immensely longer and AT LEAST diminishes the chances of success by 2/3.
Then the polygraph…
Right now IMHO a poly wouldn’t do much good. It would only confirm what we know already and that is that you don’t have the truth.
IMHO it’s imperative that she commits to the truth. IMHO it’s also more-or-less inevitable that she will miss something out that when divulged in the future might be a major issue for you. It’s important that you realize right now that the truth will hurt and try to “quantify” what’s really important and what not.
For example: If she were to tell you the affair started 9 months ago then MAYBE realizing some months from now that it’s really 9 months and 1 week wouldn’t be major. But realizing it’s been going on for 12 months would be major.
I suggest you make it clear to her that you can’t reconcile until you have a sense of knowing what you are dealing with. Suggest an amnesty: NOTHING she can tell you now will make you file. You will accept the truth and work with it and commit to at least 4 weeks of working on the marriage. But you need the truth. Either she can write it down, you can do a list of questions, or you can commit to sitting in the room while she tells you everything (with no interruptions).
Where the poly comes in good is when she assures you she’s told the truth. That’s where you get a polygrapher to ask some questions based on the TRUTH she told. If she passes… then YOU have to accept the truth as it is. If she fails…