Well, this is what I'm now trying to get my head around.
How much of this is a "we need to work through this together" issue, and how much of it is simply my own personal trauma and resentfulness, and a need for personal work?
Well, ten years on, even if it was mostly rugsweeping, I would at least hope she had demonstrated some level of becoming a safe partner. In her efforts, has she given you full transparency? Access to all electronic accounts just to reassure you there is nothing she is hiding?
Step one is her becoming safe again. Until that happens, you actually can't really heal at all because you are living in infidelity.
"Not Just Friends" but Shirley Glass, and "How Can I Forgive You" by Janice Spring are instructive books on this topic.
We've had numerous attempts at couple counseling over the years. The problem is, and what took me a long time to wake up to, is that the focus is always on the relationship as a whole or the WS.
Marriage counseling prior to her becoming a safe partner does exactly this, more or less. It retraumatizes the BS and treats the infidelity as a shared problem to solve. It is not. Few counselors get this, unfortunately.
I've never ever had therapy that focuses on me individually.
Why not? Also, I do recommend you try it.
Even looking at the people over the years who knew our story (counselors, pastors, her parents), I don't think a single one of them took time to ask me how I'm doing and what I'm experiencing. I was never helped. Probably why I hate everybody now. It was always a focus on "us" and relationship strengthening. But those things are useless when one of us is traumatized and feeling utterly alone. Nobody's focused on me. I got sick of hearing marriage counselors discuss strategies for improving our romance and love life, and having date nights, etc. etc.
All I wanted was the counselor to say, "Hey, are you ok?"
How are you doing now? You don't really sound OK. It sounds like you are worn to the bone over ten years of Sisyphean effort.
How many of your friends know? How many have been able to offer you real life support? Do you feel the need to hide your wife's secret for her? That almost makes you a participant in her affair, since it qualifies deception as potentially useful.
What I read in your thread is you feel her decisions as a WW reflect on you as a man. That is the position of many in society, but it not your fault. I don't know how good/bad of a husband you were, but whatever it was, an affair wouldn't fix it. What's worse, plenty of infidelity happens in normally functioning, otherwise happy relationships. Cheaters are broken individuals, and it's not your fault, or the relationship's fault for what your wife willingly chose to do.
In fact, since she was the WS, everyone wanted to help her. Help her get over her issues. The entire first year of discovery was focused on rebuilding my wife and getting her back on track. Meanwhile, I was dying internally and nobody cared.
I agree with InkHulk that I think a number of people care. We care, but are ultimately internet strangers tied by a similar traumatic experience. You will do much better with real life support from friends and an individual counselor. They'll be able to actually pat you on the back and say, "I know you're hurting, but it's gonna be ok".
Sending strength.
[This message edited by This0is0Fine at 4:38 PM, Monday, July 1st]