I think a ws can get it, but we do not experience it the way you do. We see it filtered through our own shame and guilt, and ironically it takes being able to manage those two things to see it more clearly. Think about something maybe you did wrong as a child, you may have been focused more on how you feel about what you did than how it made them feel. That’s sort of what being a new ws is like- and it’s often confirmation for us we are not worthy of love because we are "bad people".
It takes a lot of work to get from someone who sees life through that lens to being someone who understands what led to what they did, and can hold some self compassion at the same time as remorse. I know that sounds backwards but our relationship with ourselves will mirror back in our relationships with others. If someone can hold accountability while still having self compassion, they will be able to have compassion and softness for what others go through. It’s just the nature of humans.
The best case scenario of that work is it’s fueled not just by seeing the damage they have caused but being so disgusted and disappointed in themselves that they know they need to change. Commitment to growth always has to have a selfish element of not wanting to be that person that you have been. Of course seeing the damage of what you did is important, especially in moving towards making the most proper amends they can. So both things need to be present.
I think most ws who do the work of that journey - figuring out the hows and whys, changing their patterns, and being dedicated to that growth face a lot of hard things and have their own type of pain. The process of reconciliation is both the bs and the ws overcoming their own unique things they need to heal is what allows for that space to open for a new marriage to form. That’s why I think of year one like a recovery period, and not really reconciling.
Reconciling is a process that after some healing has been had by both they have enough room to develop that understanding of each other’s inner world. I think in our journey, that meant that I needed to understand his pain and he needed to understand mine. That doesn’t mean either of us excuse the affair, but it becomes an exchange of understanding and that’s the foundation in which you can build from.
At 3 years out of your ws has not gained enough understanding of the damage and is not demonstrating that knowledge through changed behavior, that should be a concern for you.
Even if they are, at 3 years out it’s natural to still feel resentment and have more healing to do. What happened to you is unfair, and it will never be a scale that gets balanced. Eventually, what happens and I don’t think it’s usually something Insee happening around here in year three- is the rest is balanced by grace. I think it takes a long time to get there and a long period of consistency in that rebuilt dynamic.
And if the ws doesn’t do that work, there will never be even a chance that rebalancing and things will erode until one of you is ready to pull the trigger on divorce. I would reflect on if you feel like you are in this more alone than not? And if so is it because you hold back telling her this is where your inner world is or is it because she is never going to see the changes she needs to make to be a safe and loving partner? It’s heavy shit to contemplate.
Best wishes to you.
[This message edited by hikingout at 2:47 PM, Tuesday, July 8th]