I want to help you get on track. Like I stated in my fist post on this thread I really don’t think you are in true reconciliation…
Your updates make the situation slightly easier. Knowing that the OM is no longer working at the same place as you two is a plus. Just keep in mind that R is like a marathon only you BOTH have to cross the finish-line and you are learning and training while you are running. Having OM at your work would be like both of you doing the marathon while dressed as Big Bird. It makes an already hard thing even harder.
I want to challenge you to really think about a key sentence you made:
I spent the next year desperate not to lose my marriage and my family (we have two kids, 3 and 5 at the time). Honestly, with no kids I would have gone nuclear. I didn't.
I want you to really evaluate that sentence and really think long and hard WHY you want to reconcile…
Your kids are what… 7 and 9 now? Grow every year and hopefully eventually leave the home to start their own individual lives. Hopefully always returning to visit and hopefully always a part of your lives. But still – as “kids” they are only in your life for a relatively short period. Basing a MARRIAGE on your temporary role as parents… no… not a great idea. You will spend more years, more time with your wife and without your kids and/or your role as those that raise them.
Basing a marriage on “the kids” is never a good idea. It’s like deciding NOW that you need to drive a station-wagon for the rest of your lives because that’s the only type of vehicle that fits your family at the moment.
There are DOZENS of posters here on SI that will tell you they are only in their marriage for the kids. Many will add that the moment the kids leave for college they are filing. Over the years I have seen posters stating that drop off this forum when their kids reach that age… I have also seen many extend the period to “when they graduate”. I have seen very few – like 0 – that come here and share that at d-day they consciously decided to remain married until Joe jr. left for college and now that they have dropped him off at the dorm they are filing.
“The kids” is generally a bad excuse to possibly cling on to infidelity IMHO… It allows us – the BS – to accept not dealing with infidelity and the marital issues because the M is only a temporary situation. Sort of like we might patch a roof rather than replace it and be OK with strategically placed buckets in a downpour despite the damage caused.
Don’t get me wrong! Having kids is a great reason to attempt reconciliation, but only if one key element is present in both you and your wife.
Do you want to be married to each other?
The key factor IMHO is that BOTH partners are clear on this issue: Do you want to be married to your spouse?
Not can you be married or should you be married, but do you WANT to be married.
I challenge you to this mental exercise:
Sit down and think why you are married. What would divorce look like?
List down the reasons to remain married:
The kids? Well… keeping in mind that a) the main blueprint for your kids future relationships is how their family’s dynamics are so you are modeling a cold, disconnected and (slightly/possibly) dysfunctional pattern for them to learn b) they are only there temporarily c) although generally research indicates that the IDEAL pattern for a kid is two or more loving parents the second best is AT LEAST one loving parent and/or two loving coparents.
If your main concern is the effects of divorce on the kids… then do a divorce that does the least damage. Can be done if both parents set aside their interests and focus on the kids interest.
At the very least I encourage you to not simply ASSUME that divorce would irrevocably damage your kids, and to research what family-pattern is likely to be disruptive for them. I guarantee that non-married but good and loving coparents beat cold, dysfunctional and depressed married couple that see their kids as a project.
I really get that the above is a heavy task and I’m not suggesting it so you reach the conclusion to divorce. If you do… well… great… your marriage wasn’t built on a solid foundation. What I am hoping for though is that you can remove your kids as a reason to remain married and put them in the correct place: a good reason to work on the marriage.
Do the same with all other hindrances that “force” you to be married:
Finances? There are formulas in place to ensure a fair deal in D.
Custody? Same as finances.
Less time with kids? Many argue that with custody you get MORE time with kids because you can work your ass off, clean the house and do the chores the week you don’t have them and then spend your time with them with them…
Basically what I’m encouraging you to do is remove all the reasons to remain married until you only have one:
You WANT this woman to be your wife.
When you get to that point you realize that its only your WILL and your DECISSION that’s keeping you there.
To me that is such a liberating thought. You have both options open for you – the one you want and the one you might have to go if your WILL and DECISSION isn’t enough.
If you are brave (and sensible) you get your wife to do the same exercise.
Hopefully that leaves you two looking at each other and realizing that the ONLY thing keeping your together is your will to remain married.
It’s like the difference between being forced to run laps in PE, or willingly strap on your shoes and going for a run at your own time and pace. All of a sudden you are working on your marriage from LOVE and not FEAR.
Once you both decide you want to be married because of each other rather than some external factor you can start asking the difficult task-oriented questions:
What are your expectations in marriage?
How do we meet these expectations?
What can we do to reach our goals with the marriage?
Going back to the marathon comparison. What you have done with this is dispose of any Big Bird costumes and/or most encumbrances. You have increased the chances of you two both understanding what you are doing and where you are headed. You have created a tool to ensure one waits while the other catches up, and that both encourage each other onwards. Still a long way to the goal and no guarantee of reaching it, but it definitely is better than the present where the goal is at best the watering-station of needing-to-stay-married-for-the-kids-that-will-eventually-grow-up-and-leave-home-leaving-us-two-alon e-with-no-foudation-for-our-marriage.