... if we can be happy again and love each other again and if I'm able to forgive and move on and if she can be the honest caring wife she once was, I would rather be with her. because we share so many things. maybe I'm just not ready to start all over again.
the question is, Can I forgive and move on from the betrayal? can she be the honest caring wife she once was? and is 6 months really enough to have an answer?
I do think your marriage is recoverable, and I've thought so for some time now. But it really is all about what you choose for yourself, and the good news about that is that your choices don't necessarily have to represent permanence.
In a general sense, trauma fucks up our perception of TIME. When we experience triggers, for example, the pain of the past is as fresh and raw as if the experience were happening right now. The amygdala of the brain can't tell the difference between an emotional crisis and a clear and present danger. A strong trigger can have the same physiological impact as a near miss at a stop light. The results of either flood the body with adrenaline and cortisol. (You can get a whole lot of information on all this in The Body Keeps Score by Bessel van der Kolk. It helped me so much to realize what a profound effect trauma had had on my body and mind.)
I had already noticed that my perception of time had changed. A mere remembrance of trauma could put me right back in that space. The whole of my past seemed poisoned, and the future had fallen away like a path you just can't quite make out in the gloom ahead, almost as if it had disappeared. I was stuck in the aftershock of discovery. Time seemed to have stopped, and yet life carried on around me. And I wasn't really a part of that life anymore. Sure, I went to work, did the shopping, interacted with people, but I wasn't involved. I was stuck, emotionally trapped in the space of my trauma, right in that spot where you've got your breath back but don't know what to do next. I was a ghost in my own life, observing, but at a distance.
Decisions seem impossible when you're living in your own head. And that's really what this is... TIME is still moving, just like always, but we're not engaging with it. I think that's a natural reaction to trauma, but it's also something we need to defeat. We know it logically, but the amygdala don't respond to logic. The connection between the higher function of the brain is kind of loose and flimsy, so we can't really talk our way out of trauma. But we can plan around this reaction by making choices in the full knowledge that we can rely upon ourselves and that we are free to change our minds.
One of my favorite meditations involves imagining a leaf floating down a stream. This helps me get time moving again. As the leaf floats down the stream, perspective naturally changes. Surroundings change in an obvious way, but people have the capacity for change too. What was true of my WS at the height of his cheating binge was no longer true a month past discovery and even more changed six months past discovery. When we're trapped in that stuck space, we're looking for absolutes, but there are none when it comes to people. Even our own bodies are changed. In 7 to 10 years, every cell of my WH's body will be replaced with another. Even in the first year after his adultery, no hair existed anywhere on him that had existed then, so it only stands to reason that his mind is ever changing as well.
In R, the thing I've found most helpful is to take full ownership of the space I'm standing in now. I may have been victimized by loss of agency during my WH's cheating binge, but I am fully aware and fully in charge of my choices today. Time is NOT static. It moves and I move with it.
That's not to say that I don't make any sort of commitment or that I don't stand my the commitments I make. But taking ownership of the space you're in kind of demands that you define it. I didn't commit to R right away. I committed to "trying" for R. I took ownership of "trying", full in the knowledge that just as the leaf floats down the stream, time could change my perspective again. Taking full ownership of your choice gives you FREEDOM. You're no longer a victim, you're a decision-maker. You decide where you'll stand and for how long. You trust yourself to know what's best for you, and also to know that YOU ARE ENOUGH if it all goes to shit and you need to make another choice.
Anyway, you don't have to eat the bear in one bite. You've got time to think about who your are and what you want. Just remember though that time is still fluid, not static... and so are the people. There are no absolutes. There's only the ground you choose to stand on today and your freedom to make a different choice tomorrow.