I suspect it was the same for her. She says she never wanted to leave, or to destroy our relationship, but it's so hard to know what the real truth is in these situations. It's possible that when the reality of the situation dawned on her, that she was not willing to pull the trigger. I just don't know. It eats at me.
So I don’t feel I intentionally set out to do that, nor had I made up my mind to leave.
In my case, I didn’t want to leave for the AP. My fantasy was to live alone. I think I was more using the AP as escapism, and also to make myself feel like I still had it.
So, I do believe she may not of had a plan past the nose on her face at any given minute. I don’t think we choose their ap or their spouse, they choose themselves. Affairs are most often acts of self-adulation. It’s easy to make yourself feel how you want to with someone you don’t share real responsibilities with, and also they are usually transactional in nature which means it’s easy to get what you want when you are doing a much more simplistic version of trading that can’t exist within a real long term relationship.
It sounds like she does blame you for her seeking someone else emotionally. But that’s just surface digging. Did she actually state her unhappiness? Ask you to change? Even if she did there were other solutions other than to cheat.
I also understand she thinks your unhappiness with each other is equal. It’s not though. An affair is a trauma that wrecks the foundation of a relationship- respect, trust, loyalty, and fidelity.
I get that sometimes the ws may think "I didn’t feel respected" that’s different than knocking down all the major pillars of the relationship.
I also think everyone has times of feeling lonely in a relationship or that their expectations are not being met. That can affect connection, but generally on those cases connection can be restored. In our marriage I definitely felt lonely, I felt like the domestic duty engineer, I felt like I was needed, not desired or loved.
But an affair create an indescribable paradigm in which simple restoration of connection can not occur. It’s like if there had no affair you could build from the ground up. The affair causes like this massive hole that has to be fixed before you can go ground up.
It took some time to realize that I never made him aware of this crisis I was in. If we’d both had awareness we would have worked through it. I subscribed to the "if he wanted to he would" -And that’s such a fallacy—-it speaks to believing your husband can read your mind. I stopped sharing my internal world because I felt like the times I tried I would get defensive answers. But when I started to take accountability I realized that my communication style was antagonistic rather than asking for things.
I would say stuff like "You aren’t romantic enough" (that’s a generic example but basically every reiteration I can think of amounts to that) or starting things with "you never…"
Now I say specific things like "I would like it if you rubbed my back tonight." Or "I feel so loved that you thought to…" Every day I find things to thank him for or appreciate. "You work so hard out in the heat for us" "thanks for grabbing those dishes it made my evening easier" whatever.
Long winded way of saying I had to learn to ask for what I want and use positive reinforcement. Thank you goes such a long way. And I could have had everything I wanted within reason had I done that instead of disregarding him for someone else.
And my point in that is…we were both responsible for the state of our marriage. And I realized that all those grievances just added up because I let them. It wasn’t his fault he didn’t know what I wanted. When I was able to see that, and let it go I realized the past didn’t matter as much as the present and future. But for that to happen I first needed to address the giant gaping hole I put in the foundation of our marriage. I abandoned and disregarded him so badly that I needed to see the work might not be equal for some time to come. Equality in a relationship means shared resources, it doesn’t speak to emotional damage. And in the end it should not be a tit for tat anyway.
Detachment just means that you conduct yourself in a way that you realize you can only control your side of the fence. Marital counseling is not usually a good thing to be doing while detaching. It’s a fix ourselves and then fix the relationship. It’s not her telling you what to fix or you telling her.
You can have boundaries and state them, but you need to be prepared to also enforce them.
It’s two people who I individually know they need to heal and work on themselves and not to save the relationship.
I didn’t work so hard on myself just to stay in the marriage. The marriage was a wreck from both our perspectives, people don’t tend to work for something that has already been decimated.
I worked on myself because this is not who I wanted to be. And I needed to learn to be responsible for my own happiness and well being regardless of what happened with the marriage.
For us we did that, and still managed to take trips together, have date nights. We had sex, we did all the things. We just let the relationship idle for a while. I don’t think that works for everyone but like you describe we still got along despite all the darkness beneath.
It took the pressure cooker off both of us. We set a time limit for when we would reevaluate. But I didn’t go in checking boxes to get an A. I started to unearth a lot of shit and as I did I began to share it.
I think your wife right now is in a position that "I will change if you will". That’s not going to work post infidelity. I think she is pointing at you because she is afraid you all will go back to the marriage she was unhappy in. And you of course do not feel safe in investing because she did all these horrific things behind your back. It’s a delicate balance to manage the space but you both need it.
She needs to reevaluate everything without trying it back to what you need to be doing. And You should lean into your hobbies, and doing the things that make you happy. Work on your relationship with yourself.
It’s so much easier to repair a marriage when you stop trying to do it in the confines of being two parts of a whole instead of working to be two whole people who then can look at each other and both say "I think I am ready to try and move forward into our present and future together as work to build something we really both happy in" it’s unrealistic to be working on something you can both be happy in when there is so much individual damage that needs worked on.
This does not excuse her from needing to rebuild trust through transparency and in showing you she does want this relationship even though she appears to have thrown it away. And I know you will treat her with respect and dignity as well. You might have not been the husband she wanted all the time but and whether those expectations were even realistic remains to be seen.
However, you didn’t throw in the towel and start seeing other people without telling her, for her to think that you are on even ground means she does bother understand how that was worse than whatever her complaints were.
[This message edited by hikingout at 6:33 PM, Friday, June 5th]