Hi Trix
Welcome to Si. I’m sorry you find reason to be here, but I’m glad you found us. I encourage you to check out the learning library for a bunch of articles that you will likely find useful. There are also pinned posts at the top of each forum that are worth reading.
Im so confused and angry as to WHY these two people could do this to me.
The way you’re feeling is normal. I think we’ve all been there. One thing you will come to realize with time howeve,r is that as personal as this feels (truly, if there was ever a pain that FELT more acutely personal, I haven’t experienced it) – this affair was NOT about you. You were absolutely the victim in it, but it wasn’t about you. It was about him – it’s all about him. And despite the justifications for the A that he told himself at the time or is telling you now, nothing you did or didn’t do caused him to cheat. It was entirely selfish and you were likely a non-issue in any of it. I know that that hurts. We want to feel centered and important in our spouse’s actions. Sometimes figuring out that we didn't matter is even harder to hear than it did.
If you’re like most BSs (betrayed spouses) sure you’re going through your life during this period and wondering what you could have done differently to stop it from happening. You’re probably beating yourself up for all sorts of things you did or didn’t do. Stop. None of us are perfect people and none of us are perfect spouses – but that doesn’t give them license to cheat. I understand the temptation - it gives you a sense of control or power at a time when your life is spinning around you chaotically, but don’t do it. Do not take one iota of ownership over his shitty actions. If there is stuff that you should own in the relationship and that is fine, but focusing on what you could/should have differently is like asking the ER doctor to check out a suspicious mole you found last week when you’re in the ER bleeding out from a limb being amputated. Lets focus on the obvious stuff first.
and I started peri menopause causing some strain and this started the depression
See this? You’re taking ownership for his feelings and experiences. Stop!!! Your perimenopause didn’t cause his depression – that’s like not a medical possibility. I’m not saying it didn’t impact him, but it didn’t CAUSE anything (for him). If he felt you were not coping with those changes perfectly, it was incumbent on him to discuss it with you like a grownup, not to go outside of the marriage.
Often depression causes people to stray.
I’m not sure if this is what you meant to say Fantastic. If so, I (respectfully) disagree. I think it’s probably true that people who cheat often do so from a place of depression or self-loathing, as a way to self-soothe or distract themselves from their own negative feelings. In my own case, my husband was going through a stressful time period where he had a lot of stressors that were making him feel shame that he didn’t know how to cope with. This is not uncommon amongst waywards. I think that it is therefore appropriate to say that the depression is a relevant or even a contributing risk factor in some cases, but to suggest that depression is the cause of the cheating, is to remove the wayward’s personal responsibility for their own actions (and trust me, taking personal responsibility for your own actions rather than externalizing them, is absolutely part of the work that many waywards must do). There are PLENTY of depressed people out there whose personal makeup would NEVER allow them to cheat. If depression was the cause of affairs, this community likely would not need to exist as all that would be necessary to ‘solve’ the problem would be to issue antidepressants.
If he wasnt depressed Id leave in a heartbeat, I know he was chasing the dopamine…
Careful OP, although I think you’re right about the dopamine, but saying/believing this gives him good reason to double down and blame the depression further rather than digging a bit deeper. This avoids him having to take any accountability. Also, if you intend to attempt to R (reconcile) – and it is absolutely okay not to know what you want to do right now – you will also need to take ownership of your decision.
he was unhappy with me, he admits doing this was trying to start a wake up call in ME as he tried over and over again to tell me he wasn’t happy (he didn’t explain very well, as I said he never deals with anything emotional or talks about problems, he holds it all in) so I didn’t know that some of my behaviour was toxic.
Ah yes, right out of the cheaters handbook (many cheaters follow common patterns that are so similar and obvious we joke that they must have a handbook). He could never be the problem right? No one wants to be the bad guy in the internal narrative they have of their own life. Instead of focusing on himself and taking responsibility for his own issues and his own happiness, he externalizes his problems onto you. If it is your job to ensure he is happy, he cannot be expected to do anything to fix it himself, can he? This helps him avoid accountability of course because acknowledging his own role in his unhappiness is uncomfortable and likely would mean he would need to do something about it. So in his mind YOU were the issue. :eyeroll: This also (conveniently) gives him the permission structure in his brain to cross lines and boundaries with the OW. His claim that his affair (which I will assume he hid from you and lied about) was an attempt to wake YOU up to his issues…. Well, that is….. um…. creative. Like COME ON, that obviously doesn’t pass the sniff test.
Look, you’re early days, but your husband sounds deeply emotionally avoidant and I have no doubt this played a significant role in his affair – it seems like you know this and that he is working on it in therapy. That’s a start, I suppose, but he's going to have to figure out his own role in all of this and address his ability to cope with negative feelings. My guess is that this is going to be a bit of a long road if he’s been this way his whole life. Is he otherwise treating the depression (ie. meds etc)?
still doesn't see massively what she did wrong as she was only trying to help him
This is a problem. He is still clearly very foggy. FYI the "affair fog" is what we call the "magical" (aka unrealistic/distorted) way of thinking waywards have that enables them to carry out an affair. When a wayward is "in the fog" they do all sorts of illogical justifications of their behaviour in order to carry out their limerant actions. If it doesn't make a lot of sense to you, you're not alone. If he wants to save your marriage, he needs to snap out it. When he is able to return to reality, he will come to see the OW for as someone who is an enemy to the marriage, because that is who she is. He cannot reconcile with you if he still holds a place in his heart for her. Very much second the recommendation that you both read Not Just Friends.
Should I stay and work on it or go and start new. So confused as I love him but not this changed person.
None of us can answer this question for you. This is going to be something you need to answer for yourself. If you don’t know the answer right now, that is okay. You don’t have to have all the answers now. I will tell you that love is not enough. For R to work (and I mean REAL R, not simply staying together for kids, finances, logistics, etc) you BOTH need to be all in and you both have to be willing to dig deep into yourselves and with one another to achieve vulnerability, honesty, and trust - perhaps at a level you've never previously experienced. That is not easy work and not everyone has it in them. Again, it’s okay not to be there right now – given that he's still very foggy, I wouldn't advise that you jump in with both feet right now. There is no turning back the clock and going back to the way it was before. Even if you're both totally committed to one another and rebuilding your marriage from the ground up (the old marriage is dead), this will always be part of your story. You may find that the person you think you fell in love with many years ago does not exist anymore, and maybe never did. You are likely a different person than you were years ago too. Its worth asking yourself whether you're truly compatible anymore, and the last time the marriage was truly good. How long has he been the changed person you have described? If you were starting a new relationship with him now (and in many ways you are), is this a person you'd want to be with? You are not obligated to stay just because of the depression.
I wish you all the best and encourage you to keep reading and posting.