You saw people blow up. I get that's the worst thing that happened to YOU. Your wife did not see this, likely your infidelity and lack of valuing her was the worst thing that happened to HER. That's where your empathy sounds like it's missing. Saying there are worse things, when some people never have experienced worse things. There are people on this site who have lost children and they would say that was the worst thing, but infidelity came a close second. Let that sink in a bit. It's okay to acknowledge how earth shattering that is for most people.
It's not to say that surviving infidelity and thriving after trauma like it, is easy. But we should always strive to become better; the option is always there. For those that betrayed and those that were betrayed.
Understand, I do not disagree with this. I believe that WS are redeemable if they work towards their redemption.
None of us here could have walked a different path.
No, you are turning my words around here. We all could have walked a different path if we had made better decisions. The infidelity was not inevitable. I get you can't put the toothpaste back in the tube.
there is a deep lack of confidence and trust in myself that I am not sure ever goes away.
You mention learning to be whole. And also say this. How do you see the concept of healing towards being whole? What is "whole" then in this context? Do you believe you can be whole?
As a WS, my goal is to be whole, meaning that I didn't rely on so much external to get my worth. This quote is about what it's like as a BS. I believed in my H. I believed that he would never do that to me, just like he believed that of me. What his cheating taught me is that it makes you not have the confidence in yourself to know what is happening in your own damned life. This part was confusing because I came at you as the WS for the most part in my response. I had zero inkling he was cheating. How can I trust myself to see my own reality?
Letting go of the things I thought I had, thought I was. I don't see that as losing them; any more than I see waking up in the morning as losing the dreams of the previous night.
I understand what you are saying here, but I think it's highly unusual you would not associate the aftermath of infidelity as grief. If this is just part of a grown perspective, fine, okay. I think you might be further out and maybe I will see it that way later. The amount of grief I struggled with is so fresh, that it's hard to see any empathy/remorse in your response. I am sorry, it sounds weird from my perspective.
I'm not sure how we've tied the concept of missing illusions to the idea that I no longer struggle in life? I wake up every day, I take time to appreciate what I have. I struggle with lying still - though I'm getting better at it. My wife and I argue. We fight. Then we sit down and talk to try and figure out together what happened. Sometimes we need space. Sometimes we work on it immediately.
I don't think anyone is saying you don't. It just doesn't ring true to me that you came through this process not feeling like you lost anything, even if it's seeing it through your wife's lens. Sure, maybe she has healed a great deal from that time, but I don't see how really understanding what you did to her could ever leave you. It will never leave me fully.
Sure, it's not something that will be the main focus of our days forever. I get that. However, I don't think that I will ever forget or no longer be able to connect with this pain. You sound incredibly disassociative.
But we also spend nearly every night a few precious moments drinking tea and talking about her studies or my work. We raise three amazing kids together. We travel. We laugh. We love. And yes, again, we hurt.
There. How do you not see this as a permanent loss of some sort? I understand what you are saying about the rest, we seemed to come to that spot as well for, well, about as long as his affair went on. I get that there is healing. But, there is no healing without a loss. Grief.
For example, just tonight we had an emotional struggle where at some point I asked her for space so I could better understand my reactions (she was obviously triggered by an earlier discussion which brought back memories). We sat down 20 minutes later and worked on our relationship. It is daily work. Reconciliation isn't a magical state of affairs (excuse the absolutely horrible choice of words). We've decided, together, that we're reconciled.
I don't think anyone is saying that you don't work on your relationship either.
I'm not changing myself for her - it's a pretense that does not work for me. I'm changing myself because I want to be the way that I believe I should be. Honest. Caring. Strong. Supportive. A good father. A good husband. A good friend. And everything else in between.
This is something I also believe strongly in. All real change is selfish. I feel the same.
I'm going to succeed in some things and fail in others. In that regard, I'm neither better nor worse than anyone here, "wayward" or "betrayed". We are all, in the end, human.
Same, I fight off the perfectionism and see the beauty of imperfect.
It just seems to me like you sound like a person who did not struggle in that dark place yet, and that's why your words are ringing hollow to others.
Why do I need to sound like any particular person? What dark place do you think I've missed along my way?
Grief. Without loss there is no grief. You talking around the loss is weird, it's not something I could ever imagine after having grieved for so long. After all the work, the reparations, the recompense, the remorse. After cycling through the different stages of grief. And, experiencing them now from the other side of this, how can you dismiss your wife's losses with "she is strong"? It's the lackluster way this whole thread started that makes you sound like you never got it. I have read many things from you that make me think you did in fact get it, but this one is hard to relate to.
And, maybe that's all it is. I don't relate.
[This message edited by hikingout at 8:38 AM, November 23rd (Monday)]