OBO, I came back here specifically because I realized today that I 'got lost' in my own response and missed my own point.
Darn if you didn't beat me to it. :) <3
Here's what:
Hubs and I are pretty much reconciled and recovered.
As others have pointed out on this site, and have posted about their own experiences, we have *a totally different marriage* now.
Did the infidelity 'improve' our marriage? Hell no!
We had to *both* choose to build a new relationship built of different values and different points of reference, out of the ashes of the relationship that the belated discovery of infidelity burned to the ground.
Yes, it is a better relationship because it is a fundamentally more honest relationship- and not just in terms of honesty about the act of infidelity itself.
I have found that as reconciliation progressed, I became much, much less focused on the act of infidelity. Honestly, the actual physical infidelity doesn't really bother me all that much anymore. So Hubs got aroused and let his dick do the thinking on a one off. That says nothing at all about *me* and I finally stopped taking it personally.
I don't like the actual infidelity and if I make myself think about it, I wish it hadn't happened, but honestly it's not my problem anymore.
(That being said, context is everything: as I pointed out, Husband's 'one off' didn't have nearly the consequences nor the sequellae that many others, including you, have experienced.)
In our case, what needed to be deconstructed and examined were the attitudes, the mindset, the experiences and learned behaviors that went into crossing that line in the first place.
When we began tearing that 'house' down brick by brick we truly began deconstructing our marriage so it was possible to build something better.
I slowly began to realize that the depth of my anger (rage) and hurt and frustration and humiliation wasn't some random rando one off decades ago, but the very attitudes and behaviors and absence of boundaries and respect and regard that had permeated our marriage from the very beginning.
I'm not going to say that Hubs was blameless, he certainly was not, but I do not believe it was a fundamental essence of his character. Rather, it was an entire suite of learned behaviors and blindly accepted premises straight out of his dysfunctional FOO.
Their deeply narcissistic family system facilitated a Holier Than Thou appearance and lifestyle while also being fundamentally selfish, self absorbed, and dishonest.
They were just as cruel and damaging and disrespectful and disregarding of boundaries with Husband as they were with me and with us as a couple. Trouble was, that's all Hubs knew. In his mind, this was normal and he, we, 'owed' them fealty and their control freakiness no matter how they acted out or treated us.
It caused us and me *decades* of frustration. I could not understand why or how Hubs had this frame of reference. All I knew was that in order to keep peace in the house and in the marriage, I had to let Hubs have his way. Often that meant letting his parents and his family have *their* way, no matter how inappropriate, selfish, disrespectful or even outlandish, so that his parents wouldn't be unhappy with him and he wouldn't 'get in trouble.'
Yes, we are talking about a grown assed man here.
And believe me, if his parents didn't/don't get their way, they will find some way to punish.
Hand in hand with this background, Hubs had a largely unconscious, sub conscious belief system that said that achieving 'adulthood' meant that he was doing the telling and he was getting his own way, with me primarily, because that's what being an adult looked like.
He never even looked at that fundamental premise.
It was as inherent as gravity to him.
Anyway, these things were the true issues and the underpinnings of the attitudes and belief systems that informed much of the dysfunction in our marriage, including the one time that Husband gave himself permission to cheat.
He hated how he felt in the immediate aftermath of the cheating, and never did it again, which I suppose is the best outcome of a shitty choice.
The belated full discovery decades later pulled out that early placed Jenga block that brought the whole system down.
When Husband *finally* actually 'saw' his family and his parents and their behaviors and beliefs for the first time, it was stunning, almost blinding. When he saw himself through that lens, he was deeply ashamed and embarrassed.
I also had to realize that I was fundamentally, deeply angry with myself and ashamed of myself for facilitating and absorbing and allowing this treatment and this unhealthy pattern in my own life and in my marriage for so long.
I had to own my own shit, my own codependency, my own avoidance and dishonesty with myself and disrespect of myself.
Hard truth: nobody on this earth is going to respect me one iota more than I respect and value myself.
I started discarding people and their bullshit like shedding a skin.
It was hugely cathartic.
Hubs hung in there (even though I was a hot mess for a solid three years) owned his own shit and began a process of radical self honesty.
We did a LOT of research into narcissism.
Both of Hubs' parents are textbook narcissists, IMHO.
For a while, Hubs was afraid that he too was a narcissist. I had to convince him that the very process of self examination and insistence on accountability more or less proved that he wasn't, LOL. We'd *never* get that kind of introspection, honesty or accountability out of his parents and his FOO.
I sincerely do not believe that Husband is a narcissist, nor that he has serious character flaws. I think he had an entire system of deeply ingrained, learned from an early age poor behaviors and coping tendencies that he'd never examined. It didn't serve him well either.
He's had to learn about boundaries and learn how to have them and how to enforce them and how to respect them: his own, mine, and the basic healthy boundaries around our marriage.
It was foreign and unnatural and frightening at first; Hubs was fundamentally sure that no one would 'like' him anymore if he started having boundaries.
As we all know, he found the opposite to be true. People like him just fine; healthy boundaries are socially necessary, people respect him.
Moreover, he now likes and respects himself, something that was missing in his life in service to his narcissistic parents for decades.
TL;DR:
In our case, the actual infidelity became far less important and needful of correction than the dysfunction that informed it and facilitated it.
[This message edited by marriageredux959 at 10:51 PM, Saturday, December 24th]