13 years is so hard to let go and I don’t know what is the best thing to do now.
StrengthSerenity - You are an entrepreneur with your own business. Now imagine you've been in business for 13 years with a partner whom you trusted without question. Assume he then embezzles money from your business, then apologizes. Will you care that you spent the last 13 years with him? No. You report him, sue him, get rid of him because you will never trust him again. You will seek a new business partner. Sure you "forgive" him, but send him packing. Now your personal life, your future, your mental and physical wellbeing, is presumably atleast as important if not more than your business. So if you won't tolerate a cheating business partner, why the f*ck would you tolerate a cheating life partner? Just because you spent the last 13 years with her? Is that reason enough?
Regarding remorse, please spend time carefully reading the Wayward forum. If you spend enough time there, you will surely notice that there are 2 kinds of WS's there:
Type 1: the truly remorseful spouses. They DO exist, but are a miniscule percentage (less than 5%). Their focus is on their BH's pain, left, right and center. Hundreds of posts, all focused on their BH's pain.
Type 2: the regretful, sort of remorseful, angry ones who unfortunately, in my opinion, form the majority of WS's. Their focus is saving their marriage at any cost - their posts are centered around what all-inclusive "MC/IC/HB sex package" should I offer my BH so he gets the f*ck over my A and we move on? Other posts are focused on how shitty the AP acted, FOO, "validation" requirements, and sundry excuses, with only a smattering of posts on their BH's pain.
Based on what you have revealed, I would guess your WW right now falls in Type 2.
My tips for coping:
- separate yourself from the toxic environment
- get busy with your business (which you most likely are)
- get busy with hobbies, including those involving lots of fresh air
- strengthen ties with family and close friends (make new friends via meetups, etc. if you don't have any)
- volunteer with charities so your focus is diverted from your problems to other's problems (I did Red Cross disaster relief that helped a lot)
- double your exercise routine for a while
- healthy food (banish junk food)
- banish alcohol or keep to absolute minimum
- once annulment is in, start flirting and dating those lovely women out there. Nothing brightens your day like when a beautiful woman responds to you.
If you have the moral strength to stay true to your core values, have high self-esteem, and truly, truly know why you are taking a decision (stay or go), you will be fine either way. My best wishes to you, my friend!