You can't control your another person. If your W wants to embrace and kiss another person for minutes on end, she is free to do it. If she wants to consider her A to be over and then have goodbye sex and poor-boy-is-so-down sex, she can do it.
You CAN control your response. You can dump her now; you can tell her if she does something again, you'll dump her; you can wait and see. But no matter what you do, I urge you to make a mindful decision and to look at your motives. Know why you chose what you chose. And if you don't like your reasons, change yourself ... a good IC can help.
Your W chose to cheat. She chose to move far from her ap in the mistaken belief her ap was the cause of her A. She's choosing to see you as controlling.
To become a good candidate for R, she needs to take responsibility for her actions, and she needs to commit to changing herself from betrayer to good partner. ICs help a person treat themself. Your M didn't fail. Your W did. She most probably will need the help of a good IC - not an MC - to make that change. MCs treat the M.
Forgiveness needs a definition. What does it mean for you?
For me, one day 3.5-4 years after d-day, I realized I no longer had any desire for my W to be punished for her A. I took that as forgiveness. I also realized I trusted her as much as any of us should trust someone else. Both trust and forgiveness came to me because my W did 1000s of trust-building actions.
Forgiveness comes after a lot of work, IMO. You and your W want it now? That is another thing that I recommend you consider - it's another indication she doesn't want to do the necessary work, and it may be an indication that you may want to sweep this under a rug.
Trust me on this: you can R without forgiving.
Life can get better for you, but it takes work. It takes work to face and process the fear, grief, anger, and shame that come with being betrayed. The thing is, the work pays off. It allows you to open yourself up to joy again. As I say, a good IC can help.
Life can get better for your W, too, if she changes from cheater to good partner. She's still fighting that.
You can't rebuild your M unless both of you heal yourselves. The thing is, though, that you're both human beings, and we can figure out how to heal.
*****
** Posting as a member **
The stats on R are not promising.
Cite your sources, please.
Here are some stats with citations:
1) A majority of men and women reported that they stayed married after infidelity in Peggy Vaughan's surveys - page 140, Help for Therapists (and Their Clients), PDF version which is apparently available from Amazon and perhaps other sites.
2) Shirley Glass reports, in NOT "Just Friends", that only 20% of the couples she treated split after starting out with both members stating the wanted R. I conclude from that number that 80% stayed together.
Neither author makes any claims about the quality of the Ms, and both authors know enough statistics to know that their numbers cannot be expected to reflect what happens in the whole population of people who experienced infidelity in their Ms.
Further, stats are about probabilities, at best. I looked hard for probabilities 11 years ago, without success. In the end, I had to go with my gut -
I wanted R;
My W wanted R;
My W was doing the right things;
I knew some people succeeded at R;
I thought we'd succeed.
Besides, probabilities simply do not apply to individual cases.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 7:23 PM, Monday, November 7th]