You have had several good and eloquent contributions about your situation. I’m going to try using a rather more blunt and outspoken description:
I have often switched infidelity out in place with some trauma or event that we might better understand. Mainly because I think we are never prepared or never expect to discover infidelity and therefore don’t have a clue on what to do. So I replace discovering infidelity to waking up with your house on fire.
OK – You have already established there is a fire. It does sound like there is no outright burning and raging flame right now, but In some rooms there are embers still glowing and still causing damage and the whole house reeks of smoke. In some rooms you see evidence of former fires that might be out now, but the damage is still there.
How would you react in that situation?
There are some things I would guess you would NOT do:
You wouldn’t simply lock the rooms with the old damage and no longer use them. The damage to the roof in the spare-bedroom will eventually wreck the whole house. The smell of charred flooring in the kitchen will eventually spread all over the home.
You wouldn’t adapt your life around some key-rooms not being usable. I guess you could do your business in a porta potty in the kids room for a few days, but eventually you need that bathroom.
You wouldn’t call in a contractor before the last embers are out. You wouldn’t spend cash replacing the carpets before you are feeling assured they won’t burn again.
You wouldn’t hesitate to call the fire department because you sort-of expect them to cause some further damage with their hoses and boots and jimmy’s and hooks.
I’m guessing you would make sure the fire is out before establishing if the house is salvageable. I’m also guessing you would accept the temporary damage from the hoses and boots knowing it was necessary to kill the flames. I’m guessing that if the flames can’t be extinguished you would get out. Maybe even move to another, different house.
Well… IMHO that’s where you have been all these 18 pages. Dealing with a burning house. You might kill one flame only to find a new ember. Might close one room only to still find the stink from behind the closed door. You have been negotiating with a fire, one that neither feels a need to comply or has any interest in being extinguished.
Your wife has told you what she wanted. She might not have used the words “divorce” but she has used more-or-less every word and all actions around that subject. One of the reasons the attack on Pearl Harbor is notorious is that the attack took place BEFORE Japan declared war. Yet there was no denying the message. This is comparable: Your wife has attacked and sent the message repeatedly without the declaration.
Does this mean this “most perfect of marriages” is over?
No!
Not necessarily.
But it does mean you have to take her message seriously and stop all hope of some semi-divorced-semi-married stance.
She has told you:
WW said today she saw an attorney. WW said she wishes sje had a BF to move in with. WW said she didn’t want me at her families Christmas party.
Take her arms in yours and look her straight in the eyes. Tell her:
THANK YOU for the honesty.
You are totally free to go find a boyfriend to move in with. Nothing is forcing you to be or remain my wife.
And
I’m OK with not being at your families Christmas party.
Once she sees you have accepted the inevitability of that a marriage in infidelity can’t be then and only then is there a slight chance she might change. But if that does happen then the possible reconciliation might be based on some true grounds, rather than what has been taking place for frigging 18 pages!