Notarunnerup:
If your ring meant nothing to you before you started your affair, what made you continue to wear it? Appearances, obligation? Duty? Habit? Did you feel like you were "getting back" at your husband with your affair?
Appearances, it was a really pretty ring set too... obligation and duty were all there in wearing them through the years. Also, as a woman (and I am/was pretty attractive), we tend to get more unwanted male attention when we're not wearing a ring than when we are. Or at least, I've noticed that the "attention" tends to be more respectful and less flirty when I do wear a ring. Kinda like how Muslim women wear hijab, for the sake of modesty and hopefully protection from other males. Not a Muslim myself, just putting myself in their shoes and understanding the advantages wearing hijab would have.
Did I feel like I was getting back at my H with my A? I didn't consciously think that at the time. I was drowning in a sense of utter unworthiness, suffering from lack of love, affection and approval, feeling invisible to him and completely unwanted. I was so low that really, the first person who took notice, acted kind and seemed to care was enough to get me interested. At that point, I had told myself I would hang on simply for the sake of the kids- until they were in college- and divorce after that. The A was a life raft to get me through until then. It was an exit affair. Revenge wasn't the objective- how can you get revenge on someone by denying them something they clearly have no interest in? I felt I had so little value to H beyond the $$ I earned and the appearance of "religious married man" and the convenience of housekeeping and childrearing and occasional sexual outlet... you can't miss what you don't value (ie: my heart and affection)? And if I was able to maintain the other levels of function normally expected by him, why would he care if I had an A? There's no revenge to be had.
In terms of finances, yes, I think I am more conservatively minded. In practice, I tend to value making small gestures and doing small things (like taking kids to Culvers on a Friday night) that make family life and social life lively. Knowing that, I know I would need a more free cash flow to accommodate that. If I were doing adult life alone, or alone in charge of finances, I would prefer a smaller less expensive house so as to have room for the hobbies, social activities and general enjoyments of life. IE: structure my finances so that I would have a fixed budget for the "extras" that's quite a bit larger.
In every M, there's compromise. I've compromised on financial security and personal enjoyment over the years to have a bigger, fancier house. Those struggles have diminished as our income has grown and paid off with the real estate market doing what it's done. We take $100 "fun money" 2x a month for the very things you describe and that's opened up my personal budget to do the smaller things like coffee/wine with friends, save for presents, etc. That's helped enormously.
HO: it's so good to hear from you again- you've been a huge help on my travels here.
I think your situation is a little different. I think the reason your rage comes up is because your husband never has taken any accountability. Over his own affairs, his financial infidelity, etc.
I would say never is a very strong way of putting it. I think, "taken only a small amount of accountability" would be more accurate at this point. He has taken accountability for finances, the comparisons, the lack of listening to my fears/pains/desires in the M. He's still very much a self centered person with a very well developed sense of self. And yes, his selfishness borders on narcissism at his worst. Just as my codependency turned to covert narc when I was entering into my A.
The rage that exists in you comes from years of abuse in my eyes.
It does. Years of abuse I couldn't do anything other than survive through in my childhood. Years of abuse which I accepted and tolerated from my H in our M. The accumulated damage of that, combined with my own stubborn refusal to seek help, led me into becoming a covert narc in an EA/PA with a MCOW.
I had been abused. I also made choices as an adult that in turn abused my H- "deserved" or not. I'm not being abused anymore because I am choosing not to allow it anymore. I still have days where I feel treated poorly, still have days where I'm the one treating others poorly. I'm finding that's all becoming less and less frequent to the point where I'm feeling safe enough to perk my head up and ask, "well, what DO I really want out of this crazy life?" and, "how do I work with the people in my life to get there?" And... most of all... "So what happens when I'm REALLY myself for my H?" If I get rejected as I'm more authentic, I'm learning that there isn't a problem with me. Whatever it is that makes my H uncomfortable (outside me being snippy, irritable or passive-aggressive-etc), is for my H to manage, not me.
He wants you to look at his pain but not his behavior.
Yes, this is where my rage comes up- the feeling of being manipulated in combination the feeling that H
is going to hold this affair over your head as leverage for the rest of your life. He is going to always make it about him while never making any progress as to investigate himself and take accountability over his own transgressions. Anyone would feel enraged.
I agree that at times I feel that way. That I'll never be able to "live it down." Then there are times where I can come to H in an open, vulnerable way, and have him be genuinely empathetic to how hurt I was over the things he has caused in the M without getting defensive. He is making progress... slowly. I didn't feel like this time was him trying to shame me over the rings. He came to me in a vulnerable way and I turned it around to be about my pain for all the reasons above.
I think for him, it's like the way I grieved my dad 5 years out from his death. It wasn't every day that I would struggle, but there were times where I would acutely miss him and wish to see him again. I think H may be struggling in a similar way, mourning the loss of the good there was in our M prior to my A. I don't see it as him trying to shame me any more- and when he's shared his pain with me he's careful to tell me he's not wanting to shame me, but share his hurt. He's made some progress... more would be better though, for sure.
this is you as a bs not being able to heal from his. I don’t think he is ever going to give you the environment you need for that
I'm afraid of this too. I don't think I'll know if he's up to the challenge though unless I challenge him to it. That's going to take time and courage for me to see.