I tend to agree we hit what we aim for, if both spouses are aiming at the same thing.
This raised an interesting question, it made me think about why we have been successful.
I first thought stubbornness. Wanting to give up is a normal reaction to infidelity. For some, divorce really is the answer, but I am trying to frame this around personal experience and reconciliation.
But for a long time after dday the stubbornness was important because I think in those earlier days you are tasked with the grieving process on top of the shit show. I am going to say stubbornness is what gets people through recovery, or roughly the first year after infidelity. And for many this can go on for much longer. It’s things like "I don’t want to divorce because of" and the answers can have some to do with love but often you see kids, finances, shared history, not believing in divorce, and I could go on. They are reasons we throw into the mix that are valid but not really about free will.
Then came persistence. Seeing some success, it was less fighting yourself on the rollercoaster of stay/go and more "we are getting somewhere, let’s keep going" I think being stubborn is more about throwing obstacles up about ending the marriage. Persistence is more about intentionally staying because there has been progress. You aren’t at free will yet, but you are starting to want to be there more than you want to leave. Stubbornness is still present reinforcing.
Connection and compatibility are aids. Honestly I think most of the "relationship" words are just aids for R. The individual healing components is the engine.
Self awareness is a big ingredient for the healing process . Without becoming self aware, there is no way to change the perspectives, thoughts, and behaviors that are no longer serving you. And I feel this was important both on my ws and my bs journey. This is where things like FOO and patterns come in and tying some of your biggest triggers and emotional obstacles to beyond just the affair, but also to what the feelings bring up from past experiences or lack of.
Back to the relationship components. The connection actually can be strongest as you are in the earlier stages of trying to R. The ups and downs and instability have these glimpses of grounding during times like those soul baring middle of the night talks or other times you both manage to show up simultaneously in vulnerability.
We had the luxury of compatibility always being easy through our pre-a marriage so that aided us towards wanting to rebuild. That part was easiest for us to snap back into place so to speak. Having similar sensibilities can feel like you have something solid to point at, but not solid enough to drive the thing. Compatibility can be found elsewhere.
I think most couples who reconcile have those kind of pieces, the easier ones to put back, even if it doesn’t seem like compatibility. Those things that made it through the hurricane and are still there to rebuild with. Maybe it’s a shared passion, or enjoying the same humor. It doesn’t have to be full on compatibility. For us, I label it that way because there were many items on the list that could fall under that heading.
I would say the connection piece is the biggest of the two here because it means you are having honest conversations and feel there is understanding forming between you. Empathy is beginning to flow both ways, and even if the bs doesn’t like or accept the behavior, they can at least understand what the ws is saying as their realty is true for them.
Time. I don’t think time will cure all. It depends on how it’s used. But with those other ingredients some of the pain begins to mend into scars. It I think healing from infidelity is a lot like a thousand cuts and the scars all form as each cut is addressed. This is why it takes 2-5 years (and more). But because there is ongoing healing the pain gets gradualy less.
And eventually, I am going to agree with you. It becomes about acceptance and I will add compassion. Each person accepts their journey and has compassion for themselves over the parts that were more challenging for them to conquer. They have compassion for each other because both have empathy and understanding over the other. This only happens after thousands of details are processed and healed. The affair feels more like a shared loss, rather than just an individual one because you both can clearly see neither party won.
The biggest lesson infidelity has taught me is if both people love themselves and make happiness their priority and individual responsibility, they will learn to negotiate win wins in the relationship. It becomes less about sacrifice and compromise and more about freedom and love. I wake up each morning knowing I choose to be where I am and honoring that choice with gratitude and action, in all things not just my marital relationship.
So if I were to boil it down it’s what we say here often- the focus to heal yourself will be the most impactful part of the process. And reconciling, which I think rarely begins in year one, will become the art of honoring yourself while testing what can be salvaged in the relationship. And by the end it looks more like honoring yourself and the relationship for what each has become.
I used to think it was about building a new marriage. No. I think when both people do that much healing the relationship you both desire is elevated. I am not saying there isn’t a lot of intention and communication around wants, needs, and so forth, but a healthy relationship can only be formed between too healthy people. And it happens naturally.
Notice I didn’t address forgiveness. I think this is a nebulous term that has differing meanings and is difficult to qualify. Under the narrow understanding I have on it, my stance on that is what I did was unforgivable, what my husband did is unforgivable. But I am redeemable, as is my husband. The actions will never be exonerated. But the person he is today, I will gladly take over anyone and vice versa.
People ask all the time how they will ever get over the unfairness of it. How do you ever even the scales? You don’t. But because both have healed themselves and renewed the relationship, the rest is healed with grace. The definition of grace is UNDESERVED favor. Just like the divine gives us.
I am not a religious woman, but I don’t think I would have gotten through all this without developing a strong relationship with spirituality. I believe that the teachings that have been passed down in most religions is that there is a divine source that we are here to become more like. And so we all have grace to give and unconditional love. What you are calling acceptance I call unconditional love.
Now, if he cheated again, the unconditional love in me will say "I will always love you because we shared a great history, children, built a great life together, and because I chose you for many reasons. But get out and be on your own journey now without me because the relationship status now changes" and in that way the unconditional love extends to him, but also to myself. If I have been fooled again on his healing journey I know it’s futile to try and trust it again.
And to tie a bow around it, what has happened in my life (not the affair, the healing) allows me to not only be a better spouse, but a better mother, friend, daughter, employee. It’s made me softer and more compassionate and has guided me towards wanting to help others and be more like the divine teaches us to be- I am less judgmental, less worried and anxious, and I have learned to have joy despite circumstances.
I will never call infidelity a gift, but I will call what we both did about it a gift to each other. And a miracle given through becoming more like the devine.
But notice most of what I said if you take out the relationship components will apply to those who need to divorce too. Because the focus on healing yourself is something you get to take with you to build any life you want. When you feel strong in who you are and what you have to offer, and have gotten through something as profound as the trauma that comes with infidelity, you are a bad ass and the relationship needing to go is not a failure but a victory.
[This message edited by hikingout at 3:29 PM, Saturday, June 8th]