Ladybugmaam—
I’m only 2.5 years farther into my healing than you and I can only add that I’m stronger than ever, happier than I’ve been in a long time, but I can’t say the A doesn’t ever haunt me. Intrusive thoughts that still matter do happen, I’m just better at processing them faster and focusing back on better things.
Ultimately, I think all trauma hangs with us at some level forever. I guess some call those emotional scars and infidelity sure seems to cut deeper than about any other loss or trauma I’ve experienced.
I also think you’ve had more real world obstacles having to deal with AP in a small community. My wife’s A happened in a small town, and part of the reason she kept it secret after the A was over. AP was a family friend, who I never got to confront about it to this point, but I KNOW it would be worse if we hadn’t moved away.
The biggest trigger for me has been my wife. You have multiple real world triggers, your husband, the AP and the town/families/friends. I can’t even imagine having to deal with people who would take the same side as the AP.
It doesn’t mean I think the recovery you’re aiming for will take longer, you just have more grief to conquer.
Every change, every trauma in my life is still with me. I allow that the pain of the A has also changed me, some for the better (as in, finding levels of strength I didn’t know I had).
I also allow that I get a choice when a bad memory interrupts an otherwise decent day. I get to feel what I feel in the moment, process it and then know more good things are happening today. I always have a vote on what my focus will be in the moment. If I need to roll with some anger or sadness, then I do it, and move back to where I want, which is gratitude for how far I have come.
I don’t even think we are required to completely "let go" to heal properly. I see all my life as a series of dominoes that fell in the order they did to get to me to this moment. Knowing I can’t change a single thing about the past, but that I can do a whole lot about today really creates that focus that I may or may not be explaining well.
When my mind wanders back to the pain, I understand it is still on guard. I like that my mind doesn’t want to feel that kind of pain again, so it constantly posts thoughts and reminders like some people use sticky notes in a kitchen. I appreciate my brain for the safety check and then return to what I am doing today.
We can’t control the past or if our spouses will break bad again, we can only control our response to the next time intrusive thoughts happen.
The focus is on the life I want. I want my relationship with my wife to enhance my life, not be an anchor. I want an M worthy of my time. I can’t control what happens next, and I’m fine with that — because if a worst case scenario ever happens again, I know I am strong enough to rebuild my life back into what I want — solo or otherwise.
I guess that ‘knowing’ my value and my strength is the path that will get me to where I want in dealing with those haunting moments (those haunts are more rare than before too).