Mrmbc0382 —
I hope you get a chance to also post in the Wayward Side section, there are a lot of people with some good advice.
I also don’t know if my experience will be helpful to your BS, I have found that while infidelity behavior is extremely similar, recovery behaviors are very unique and individual.
I’ve been through a lot of trauma in life, and I am still surprised how devastating infidelity was and is. I suppose it wouldn’t have bothered me if I didn’t love my wife so much. It still feels like such an unnecessary detour for any of us trying to heal and find a path forward.
As many members informed me when I got here, it takes at least 2-5 years to heal, and much longer for some.
As to your specific questions:
If you reconciled with your WS what did that person do that worked best for you?
It wasn’t one thing, it was a lot of things. My wife needed to understand why she required attention outside of our marriage. She had to work on her boundaries, she also had to help me rebuild the relationship from the ground up. To my wife’s credit she was relentless in her efforts across the board, and yet it still took more than TWO YEARS of consistent effort for me to BELIEVE in her actions, that this wasn’t some temporary fix or band-aid.
Do you still have to battle the memories or movies that were placed into your thoughts by your WS?
Almost seven years later — yes — on occasion I have to fight through visions of what my wife chose to do. It is far more rare these days, and I realize it is still my brain trying to keep me on my toes and protect me from some of the worst emotional trauma ever. I tend to tackle those nightmares better and if they start looping on me again, it is usually because some aspect of the infidelity needs to be asked about or resolved. It ain’t easy putting the REALITY of your life back together versus the one you thought you had.
What did you do for yourself that helped you get to a decision to reconcile?
It was really those first two years again before I really knew if I COULD reconcile even if I wanted to. Love wasn’t enough to stop infidelity, and love is usually not enough to stay together. It took more patience than I thought I had. It took more understanding than I thought I had. I learned there is no way for me to understand a choice I haven’t made. So we kind of went with love AND kindness, love AND better communication. I decided if we could both build something back as better people, we could get a better relationship out of the new deal.
Has trust returned between the two of you?
Yes, but I’ve learned to trust ME more first. I know what infidelity looks like. I know what the signs I previously ignored look and sound like. I don’t think it will happen again, but I trust that I will be fine on my own if it does. As I often advise my fellow betrayed — 100 percent blind trust never served us well in the first place, why would we want to ever do that again? But trust is important and we have built it back slowly.
Do you regret reconciling?
Not for one second. It is brutally difficult, and I will always hate what my wife did — yet I am still able to see her as a whole human. She’s done far greater good than ill in this world and I will not define her or me by her lowest, worst moments. Hell, I don’t define me by my worst moments either. I appreciate now, today, that we never gave up on us. It sure seems like it would have been easier to walk away, but then I would miss out on this best version of me and the best version of my wife working so hard to build something worthy of both our time and effort.
Does your BS still bring up the affair to you?
There may be a typo here — me as the BS, I still ask questions whenever I need to. Doesn’t happen often, but it is important to me when I do and my wife answers anything I ask. Does my WS bring it up? No, but she will ask if I’m okay, she will check on me, she is vigilant about my well being (now).
[This message edited by Oldwounds at 5:05 PM, Wednesday, March 22nd]