Until recently, I hadn't considered that I might be choosing suffering over healing. Before I explain my emerging thoughts, for your collective insights, I feel it important that I clarify something that could easily be misunderstood. I did not choose the pain my wife brought into our marriage. I am not responsible for her choice to cheat and the pain that her poor decision caused both of us. My pain was real, and it was 100% caused by my wife. Her pain was real, and she brought it 100% upon herself.
But what about long-term suffering? Short-term suffering, sure, that is to be expected. But in my case, I’m talking about 3 decades of suffering. I just shake my head in bewilderment that I’ve spent the last 32 years reminiscing, dragging into the current moment, bedroom images and non-understood reasons for the affair.
I agree with what many of you might say: that in the early stages, nearly every betrayed spouse deals with these traumatic events. I’d even go so far as to say, if a betrayed does not go through this stage, they are probably trying to hide a dead, stinking fish. However, at what point should I have taken responsibility for what I was allowing? Was my suffering due to my clinging which was bringing new, unnecessary pain into our lives?
My gurgling thoughts around suffering verses pain is a direct result from some helpful advice I have received from several individuals here. Thoughtful women and men who found their path to healing faster and healthier than I did. I’m not diminishing their pain or struggles just acknowledging they figured a few things out that I failed to recognize.
The advice? Be mindful, accept what was, and focus on living-in-the-now.
"OVERSIMPLIFICATION!" I thought to myself when I read the numerous versions of the same idea that was being graciously offered for my consideration. I’d push back, not because I did not value new thoughts but, I am suspicious, rather because I’d be force to let go of the pain that I saw as keeping me alert and safe. GOD DAMNIT! I WASN’T GOING TO BE BLINDSIGHTED AND MADE A FOOL AGAIN! (That is my stinking, dead fish that needs burying.)
Because of you guys, I have found myself, more than usual, sitting alone in the dark quizzing within the blackness I seek at times like these.
Are the memories that I am shadow boxing today, things of yesterday? Am I being perfectly accurate about those "burned-in-the-mind memories" or has my imagination over the years of replay expanded and enhanced those memories into something far worse? Am I remembering a lie? Is the woman in front of me the same woman that betrayed me? Am I the same man I was before the infidelity? Do I like who my wife is better today than she was then? Do I like myself better post D-day? Is my marriage today more honest, heathier and mutually of greater satisfaction than yesteryear? And the big one. Do I really want the woman and marriage I thought I had, or would I rather have the woman and marriage I have today?
These questions are important for me to weigh against each other because shouldn't how I conduct myself going forward be based on what is real now not what was real then?
Thank you, my new friends, for opening my thoughts to new ways of thinking and processing. It is extraordinarily important for my healing. Yes, how I was going about it did bring about reconciliation, (I see reconciliation as an on going process.) it was falling far short of something even more important – healing. Healing for myself and my wife.
Which brings me to a new, connected thought that is banging around in my elderly brain. Did I confuse reconciliation with healing seeing them as one-in-the-same?
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