There won’t ever be a guarantee that your WS won’t cheat again, there won’t ever be a guarantee that you won’t be cheated on again by any other partner for that matter.
So my answer is two fold: what work are you doing on yourself to ensure you safeguard yourself should this happen again? By this I mean on all levels, financially and emotionally. Love is about risking your heart to be broken over and over again. You cannot protect it unless you don’t take the risk of loving anymore. Saying that, there is work you can do to ensure that, should this happen again, you have a better emotional bandwidth to process it in a healthier way.
Back to your cheating spouse:
They thought their reconciliation was going well, WH had changed, marriage was strong, etc.
I’m yet to find a situation, in the almost 6 years I’ve been on this forum, where the part quoted is actually the case. Most returns, if you follow the threads after the initial post, show that unfortunately the change observed was minor and it was pretty much based on words rather than actions. Either the WS refused to do any IC because they can do it on their own, either the WS upped their game helping around the house and that appeared as change to the Bs, either the WS said "I won’t cheat again" but refused to ever discuss why they did it or discuss it at all with their spouse. Most cases there’s a combination of all and it is confusing to the BS who believes that if the WS gave them access to devices (for a while), promised not to cheat again, helped with the kids and washed some dishes, love bombed for a while, it is proof of true change and it won’t happen again.
Now I can’t say my WH won’t cheat again but I am hoping that the work I have done in IC on myself would be a solid base for additional trauma should he choose to take that path.
What I can say is that during the last almost 6 years since dday, I have looked for true change within my WS. I expected him to do IC (whilst I did IC myself) and later on MC, I expected him to be open to discussing the A any time needed without a time limit to it and without defensiveness (he now sees it, like me, as an event that impacted our marriage and we do mention it if needed, we don’t tip toe around the subject, nor do we pretend it didn’t happen). He does mention it himself, rarely as we did move on from it, but he will say "old me pre affair would do X but I’ve learnt doing Y is better" if needed.
To identify what you need to see, in terms of change, you need to find out why your WS did it. What made him drop his values, assuming he’s not a serial cheater, and hurt you so badly.
For example (and this is just one example) my WH was conflict avoidant, he would pretend everything is fine day in, day out, but build resentment rather than state something isn’t right. He then used said resentment as a justification to cheat. Therefore I needed to see changes in the way he manages conflict, I needed to see that he isn’t ignoring conflict and he is taking the initiative of opening difficult conversations.
My WH also had a high feeling of entitlement, the more he had, the more he felt entitled to have. So I needed to see proof that he is appreciative and grateful for what he has rather than focusing on what he doesn’t have. Ie. he had a great family, a supportive wife, two healthy clever kids pre affair but he chose to focus on the 20% missing (look into the 80/20 rule if you haven’t heard of it before) and cheat. He also had a fear of commitment. This was pointed out in MC to us. He appeared committed but our marriage was quite imbalanced. So a more balanced marriage is something I needed to see.
Above all, I needed to see consistency. I still look for signs of conflict avoidance in all his interactions. I still look for signs of lack of gratitude. I still look for ego stroking, KISA syndrome in his interactions. True change takes time.
[This message edited by Luna10 at 5:42 PM, Monday, June 26th]