I think you made a good decision, and I'm sorry it was so painful for you. I still remember how awkward and counter-intuitive it felt to take actions that were right for me shortly after DDay. It's because we're still scared... and we're still scared because we're worried that the relationship will end. Of course, in the face of adultery, that's just our codependence revealing itself. I hadn't realized. I had always thought of myself as the independent, self-reliant, lone wolf, sort I had been as a teen. This took me be surprise, and I ended up wrecked by my WH's betrayal.
I don't know the cause of your codependency, but I can share the cause of mine. It came from a rough childhood and disinterested, divorced/adversarial parents. It came from boyfriends who used me and dumped me. It came from abandonment. What people don't realize about infidelity is that, at its core, it IS an abandonment wound. Whether your spouse "leaves" you for a day, a month, or four years, you've been abandoned. This is one of those things we view emotionally as an existential threat. It's leftover from infancy, when we cried by instinct for our mothers because separation meant death. This fear of abandonment is built in.
So, if you're like me and you have a bunch of previous abandonments, then you finally meet your Safe Person and make them your haven, it's codependent as fuck and you just don't realize it until the bottom falls out, you've been betrayed, and you fall to pieces. All those old abandonment scars emotionally fuel the infidelity story, but you don't know it, because the hurt is subconscious. Stuff you can't even remember can be amplifying the pain.
Anyway, that's one example of how a person becomes codependent and how it can add to our inner turmoil. Your mileage may vary, but that codependency is coming from somewhere. Once you've broken through to the source, it's a matter of self-trust that you CAN handle your life and that you CAN be satisfied and happy with who you are.
She asked me if she could get a hug, and i just said no. She then seemed rejected, and sort of stormed out. I know it was her way of protecting herself - its what she does.
This is unacceptable. YOU are the victim of her prolonged and sustained perfidy. If she was truly feeling sorry for the things she's done to you, or had any inclination of the pain you're feeling, she'd be thinking of YOU, not of herself. And yeah, I know that makes it sound like I expect Jesus from her, but if you are a person of empathy and you take a walk in the other guy's shoes... you just don't feel angry and affronted because your victim doesn't want to hug you. You feel sad. You feel sorry for what you did.
I heard her say a lot of different things she is going through. I heard her talk in ways i have never heard. She sounds like she has been reflecting, and truly digging deep. On the flip side, i still don't think she realizes the depth of the hurt she has caused.
I don't either. There's no comparison of what she's going through to what you're going through. Betrayal strikes right to the core. It questions our true beliefs, our life choices, our competence. We wonder what love means, if it means anything at all. Some of us question our faith. How could a loving God allow someone to use us this way, allow us to be hurt so much? This is the kind of hurt which causes existential crisis and asks us if we still want to live in such a world. Your WW can't compare her abusive betrayal of your trust and how that makes her feel to anything you're going through right now. So, what I'm hearing is "what about me, me, me??"
Lastly, i feel guilty. She told me some more of what i said that drunken angry night - and i was terrible. I told her she had no soul......i fell down the stairs drunk (which i don't remember at all). She said there are some things i said that hurt to her core and she will never unhear.....i told her that wasn't my intention, and wasn't me talking but the alcohol, which then made me feel like a hipocrite.
I'm glad you got off the sauce and that you plan to stay away from it. Over the course of the next year, you're going to be in an uphill battle to stave off depression, and alcohohol is... a depressant. What's worse, and what some people don't realize until it's too late, is that it causes something of an anxiety rebound. IOW, you drink because you're feeling anxious, but next day, the anxiety comes back double strength. When you're already anxious and suffering, that's worse than any hangover you could experience.
In terms of the things you said that your WW claims she "can't unhear". Good. There are some things she needed to hear. Do you think that any BS here hasn't wondered if their cheater lacked a soul? The verbiage is serious because the injury is serious and so are the hundreds of daily choices which caused the pain. And yeah, I'm sure you probably said some things that were particularly hurtful to hear but that doesn't mean she didn't need to hear them. If you used pejorative terms to describe her behavior, so what? It's not worse than the actual behavior. In terms of any actual verbal abuse, yeah... we don't do that. But you've taken steps to manage your emotions and elected to give yourself some time to work through them. You haven't made a habit out of verbally horse-whipping your WW. Good enough. Forgive yourself. It's not like you fucked someone else behind her back for half your marriage.
It might not feel like it, but you are handling your situation like a rock star right now. Yeah, it feels messy in places, but you've got the right attitude toward healing and toward holding on to your humanity. So, forgive yourself for not being perfect after you've been stabbed in the back. You're doing a helluva lot better than most of us at this stage.
Strength and healing to you.