Within an hour of my W's revealing her A, we both said we wanted to stay together, if possible. My W's desire was unconditional; I was the one who added 'if possible'. We talked about requirements for R very soon after d-day, long before I committed to R. I observed my W for 60-70 days to see if she was meeting my requirements. She met them and looked like she would continue to meet them, so I committed to R 90 days out - a longer delay might have been better, I think.
R really is a question about the future - what you both will do - much more than about the past - what you've done. You have to heal, and your H has to heal to be able to create a new M that serves you both, but you can't create that M unless you both know what you want and agree on what it will be.
R is a process of resolving issues when they're small and presumably easier to resolve. That may sound conflictual, but if you address issues when they're small, the conflicts are small. During 'R', those issues are likely about the A. As you resolve the A issues, you'll find, IMO, lots of day-to-day issues raising their heads. They need to get resolved, too. That's why I think that R morphs into M. That's my experience anyway. At some point I declared myself to have R'ed and healed, but R is a continuum, not a project with a defined start and end.
JMO, of course.
If you've got a question, ask it.
But, you know, there are a lot of readers of SI. If you have a question, another reader probably has the same question, so I encourage you to take the risk of asking. If it's a dumb question, people here will be gentle.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 10:55 PM, Wednesday, March 1st]
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
DDay - 12/22/2010
Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.