emergent8, BluerThanBlue thank you for your comments. About "friendzone", it was confusing for me too. I never expressed any romantic interest. Whereas before R meeting with kids, other friendly activities, or requests for small help were never a problem, right after R my suggestions were met with "You are still married" or "I value you as a friend too much".
My friend tends to rugsweep and go on without discussing things. Even after I confronted her about this, she said "it was a misunderstanding", and then continued more. Since I don't have a clear answer to this day, here's my guess:
I did a lot for her family and her personally. When our spouses did their thing and she experienced loss of close family members, I was the chief supporter. When she started R, she couldn't just say "thanks for your help, my husband will take it from here", so she needed a justified reason to distance. Maybe since I was distressed and needed more support myself last year, it could be interpreted as romantic attachment. This way, it's a much easier justification to distance oneself, and not have to deal with problems that her spouse created for other people. I am not sure I am right, but that is the best I could come up with.
BluerThanBlue Contrary to what you were saying, I did not and do not disrespect her decision to be married, I think it's an honourable thing to do. I did allow myself a couple of hurtful comments early on, but we talked, I apologised and never did that again, I don't feel she held it against me. What I disrespect is the compartmentalisation - I'm your loyal friend, and your things with my husband is none of my business. When your friend is suffering at your spouse's hand, you confront your spouse. At least I did. Otherwise, it is indeed an impossible situation as emergent8 says.
I don't come from a Christian background, maybe for this reason "forsake all others" seems like an oversimplification that can do as much harm as good. "Us four and no more" is how it often ends resulting in.
Hippo16 I understand your wish to cut out everyone related to cheating. However, as you go to church, maybe worth thinking that this was not how Christ did? Even though most people might not change drastically over a course of their lifetime, perhaps still worth to keep your heart open a little bit for your own sake?
If I understood your question, if I cut my friend off as soon as she chose R - I would perhaps be further along in my recovery. At the same time, I would likely be tormented by the fact that I cut people off during their hard times because their actions did not fit my agenda. I had another year to try, and I don't regret it.
Overall, as this chapter of my life is coming to an end, I keep wondering what the lesson was. If it would be just a cheating spouse as in most cases, it would be easier to say that's on them. When 3 people distance themselves or march out of your life, it's much harder to not look inside and wonder whether it had something to do with your character. I hope life will show.
[This message edited by ZDZD at 11:22 AM, Thursday, March 2nd]