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Newest Member: Ncg88

New Beginnings :
Affair season 6 years later

Topic is Sleeping.
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 ADryHeat (original poster member #46484) posted at 11:32 AM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

Hi,

Some of you may remember me vaguely from my time on here - I was a fairly active poster from 2015-2018. My xwh had a brief affair with a cw from August - October 2014, which I caught via a text he received, and after 8 months of trying to figure out if R was possible I filed for D after discovering he had created an Ashley Madison account.

Since that time, so much has happened and I’m overall in such a good place mentally and emotionally. I have a great but challenging job, my kids are doing wonderfully and both in middle school now (online, due to COVID), I have paid off my car and am about to refinance my house, and I’m almost two years into a relationship with an amazing guy.

And yet. Here I am. It must be affair season doing this to me - I seem drawn here lately, reading posts in JFO and General and Reconciliation....and feeling confused about why I’m doing it. I’m not worried my bf will cheat - mostly bc of who he is as a human and how open and honest our relationship is. I never knew a relationship could be so transparent and vulnerable and he communicates so well; we truly seem to have established radical honesty in our relationship and it’s so mind blowing to realize just how dysfunctional my marriage was in that sense. To be completely honest, I’ll maybe never trust anyone 100%, and that’s a thing he knows and he’s worked hard to understand it and to give me all the words and actions I need to believe he is who he says he is. Nevertheless, I’ve found myself thinking about infidelity and testing him a little here and there (asking about past relationships, checking who he follows on IG, things like that) and I sort of hate that I’m feeling compelled in this way. He’s never ‘failed’ any of my ‘tests’, which is of course reassuring especially since I don’t think he even knows he’s being tested. None of this is because I don’t trust HIM, it’s more that I still don’t fully trust myself and I sometimes wonder if I’ll ever get to a place where I feel safe letting my guard down again.

Is there a secret for letting go of the past and learning to love again with full trust? Or am I just doomed to always have that little shell of protection I can’t shake off, no matter how much my partner and I both work on it?

Me: BSMarried 11 years, 2 young kidsDDay 11/3/14, Discovered he was still a fuckwit: 7/10/15 DIVORCED 11/12/2015"Sometimes when you're in a dark place you think you've been buried, but actually you've been planted."

posts: 2396   ·   registered: Jan. 24th, 2015   ·   location: AZ
id 8577681
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Owl6118 ( member #42806) posted at 12:49 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

I don't have any experience to advise on your question, but I wanted to tell you I am happy to "see" you. I am a shy poster, and I don't recall that I ever commented on your threads. But I remeber you very well. I admired the courage and integrity and even humour with which you walked your journey. You are an impressive person and I wish you well.

posts: 348   ·   registered: Mar. 17th, 2014
id 8577687
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BrokenheartedUK ( member #43520) posted at 1:59 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

ADH!! Hello!!

I’m sorry that you’re feeling this way but I think it’s relatable to a lot of us. I’m in a fantastic relationship with a kind, funny, smart guy that values me, and yet there are still times I get triggered with insecurity. Just last week he mentioned that a guy friend was heading over to have some drinks on his roof. My first thought was “he’s lying and his ex girlfriend is coming over” which is INSANE. He then sends me a photo (unrequested) of his friend on the roof on a beautiful summers night. There was absolutely no reason whatsoever for me to “go there” in my mind but I did. It’s just a lifelong side effect from our trauma. It is what it is. Im currently dropping my youngest daughter off to start her freshman year of college in a beautiful mid west town and I was relating this story to her on our 6 hour drive yesterday. She looked at me incredulous and said “he would never cheat on you. He’s madly in love with you, has rented a car to drive out her tomorrow just to keep you company on the drive back!! He’s shown me how to raise my expectations for how to be treated in a relationship.” So yeah... he’s pretty great but there will always be a tiny bit of mistrust from me.

If you’re generally back sliding maybe trying to figure out your greater context. Like “I’m beyond happy but I secretly don’t believe I deserve to be” kind of stuff. And try and reframe your thinking. I think the pandemic itself contributes to rumination because we all have a lot of time on our hands. Hang in there. This will pass but like all things 2020 it will just pass incredibly slowly....

Me: BS
He cheated and then lied. Apparently cheaters lie. Huh. 13 months of false R. Divorced! 8/16 3 teenage kids
"The barn's burnt down
Now
I can see the moon"
-Mizuta Masahide

posts: 3423   ·   registered: May. 24th, 2014
id 8577699
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Ichthus ( member #52779) posted at 2:58 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

It is the triggering of trauma for us. It will get better over time, but never completely go away.

I am the same here. In a new relationship and the communication is so exciting. I actually get really excited now when we might have an argument, because I know there will be honesty and openness about the topic. I no longer have to wonder if I am really being told what she is thinking.

The best thing I have found is to just be honest when I trigger. My significant other has her own triggers (from her ex husband). It is very weird to be in the easiest and best relationship ever in my life, and still have worries that she might be cheating on me. But she has also passed every test or every time I check on her about something.

Me: Divorced, moved on, and happy

posts: 341   ·   registered: Apr. 15th, 2016   ·   location: USA
id 8577714
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Phoenix1 ( member #38928) posted at 7:47 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

Hi ADH! Good to "see" you again!

I don't think the feeling will ever truly go away. I'm willing to mostly trust until I can't, but that doesn't mean I don't check things here and there. I think the key is not letting the feelings rule your life and your relationship. If your checking everything a partner says and does, then yeah, that's a problem. If it's very occasionally to reinforce he is being authentic, I don't see a problem if it makes you feel better. At the same time though, imagine how he might feel if you told him about it? Would he be okay with it knowing your history, or would he be hurt that you don't fully trust him?

It will get better over time, but I can say without a doubt I will never give 100% blind trust to anyone ever again. That's the lifetime scar of over 20 years of hardcore infidelity. That being said, I also take comfort in acknowledging that nothing is guaranteed and it can always happen again (it did for me with XSO), but I know I am strong enough to get through it again (which I did). Of course, no one *wants* to go thru it again, but that is one obvious risk of being in a relationship.

You will probably find yourself doing less "testing" the longer the relationship goes. Until a gut feeling took hold with XSO, I wasn't checking anything, but we were approaching six years together by then.

fBS - Me
Xhole - Multiple LTAs/2 OCs over 20+yrs
Adult Kids
Happily divorced!

You can't go back and change the beginning, but you can start where you are and change the ending. ~C.S. Lewis~

posts: 9059   ·   registered: Apr. 9th, 2013   ·   location: Land of Indifference
id 8577809
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NeverTwice ( member #74421) posted at 9:45 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

ADryHeat,

(asking about past relationships, checking who he follows on IG, things like that)

May I gently ask if you have or are currently in IC? 'Testing' a partner like that, with a high degree of confidence, will eventually backfire on you. Especially if he is like you have said - open, transparent and willing to help you trust. But, if he has never given you a reason to be suspicious, he is eventually tire of constantly being checked up on. Especially after 2 years!

And those 'tests' of your are being taken in bad faith. I know I would seriously consider leaving a relationship where my partner feels the need to 'test' my love and commitment constantly.

Just my thoughts.

Warm wishes.

[This message edited by NeverTwice at 3:47 PM, August 23rd (Sunday)]

"Solid boundaries discourage trespassing." - Shirley Glass

posts: 176   ·   registered: May. 12th, 2020   ·   location: Las Tablas, Panama
id 8577838
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 ADryHeat (original poster member #46484) posted at 10:38 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

Thanks for all the kind welcomes back and understanding.

NeverTwice, I’m not in IC. I’ve been considering it because of issues in my life I need to process that keep resurfacing - the loss of my dad to dementia and my relationship with my mom primarily. No doubt these things are all interrelated and IC is a great suggestion. Thank you!

You’re right that testing him isn’t fair, even if it’s not uncommon. I also am fortunate because he and I were only friends for a long time before it turned romantic, so he knows my whole history and is a saint about being kind and understanding. I also try to gatekeeper these situations a bit by asking myself: is this a me thing, a him thing, or an us thing. If it’s a him thing or us thing, we talk and so far we’ve done well with that process. If it’s a me thing, I almost always talk through it with him, with the caveat that I am sharing to be honest and not to ask him to solve the issue, because I recognize it’s a thing I need to work through and not his responsibility. I’m honestly so fortunate, because like BHUK, my current SO has big time raised the bar for me and helped me recognize what I deserve in a relationship, and our communication and respect is there completely.

I think once this season is past, and once the intensity of COVID is lessened, things will be better. But regardless it’s so nice to know I’m not alone in this.

Phoenix, your point is valid. I don’t check all the time, but sometimes I get into an overthinking head space so I get hyper vigilant. Anytime I’ve discussed these things with him, he’s understood and has been reassuring. But like BHUK mentioned, maybe I have some internal “I don’t deserve this” dialogue to unfurl still.

Thank you all.

Me: BSMarried 11 years, 2 young kidsDDay 11/3/14, Discovered he was still a fuckwit: 7/10/15 DIVORCED 11/12/2015"Sometimes when you're in a dark place you think you've been buried, but actually you've been planted."

posts: 2396   ·   registered: Jan. 24th, 2015   ·   location: AZ
id 8577848
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Phantasmagoria ( member #49567) posted at 10:54 PM on Sunday, August 23rd, 2020

I have a really simple philosophy on this, mostly due to the fact that I’m not prepared to let my ex’s fucked up behaviour in any way dictate my future.

Two basic boundaries that I communicate clearly:

1) If someone were to cheat on me in the future, I’m out...simple as that...no deliberating, no contemplating. I know myself well enough to understand that being cheated on is not something I’m prepared to tolerate or able to get past.

2) I’m not prepared to be treated as an option. Casual dating then no issue, but if we’re in an exclusive relationship, then we’re both in. Treat me like an option, mess me around, then I’m not interested. My time is too valuable, I’d rather be single.

I’m open to marriage again, shared finances again, all of it..but one of the many things infidelity has taught me as a BS is that having firmly defined boundaries enables me to not worry about monitoring, checking, wondering. All of that second guessing is too exhausting, mentally consuming, unfair on the other person, it’s unproductive baggage. I’ll know if either of the above boundaries are ever broken, the signs will present themselves without me having to go look for them.

This may seem a cold or black and white approach, but keeping things as simple and clear as possible is the healthiest mental approach, for me at least.

posts: 474   ·   registered: Sep. 10th, 2015
id 8577853
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Hawke ( member #47517) posted at 4:52 AM on Monday, August 24th, 2020

ADH! It is good to "see" you.

I don't have a lot of advice for you. I was seeing someone for a few years, but we broke up last fall. In some ways, breaking up cleanly (ie., with no cheating, just realizing that we didn't have a future together and choosing to move on) was quite healing. We are still good friends.

I don't find myself coming back here, but recently I have felt the pull. I don't know if it is the added insecurity of covid, but when my ex made a co-parenting gaffe a couple of weeks ago, I found myself coming back here.

In terms of trusting someone 100%, I'm not sure if I will again. Like Phantasmagoria says, cheating would be an automatic "I'm out". I just don't know how much of myself I'm willing to risk in the hope that the person won't abuse my trust. In three years of dating someone, he met my kids a handful of times and stayed the night once in a true emergency situation. I didn't test his trustworthiness, but I never really let him in, either. So, I'm obviously not the right person to be talking about learning to love again with full trust.

I'm not sure what the answer is, but I hope you can work through it. I'm in my mid-40's now, and I do think that everyone I'm going to date is going to come with some baggage to work through together.

Me: BS (b. '75)
Him: exWS (b. '76)
D-Day: April 2015
Together 10 years
2 kids: 2011 and 2014
Separated (no divorce required for common law couple in my jurisdiction)

posts: 2370   ·   registered: Apr. 13th, 2015   ·   location: Alberta, Canada
id 8577921
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EvenKeel ( member #24210) posted at 2:14 PM on Monday, August 24th, 2020

Hey! Nice to see you!!

This is what I do:

- When those things pop up, I remind myself to judge my BF on WHAT he has shown me. Not what my ex did. It is a dialogue I had to do internally early a lot in my NB but over time (I am 10 years out), it is very rare. Even if you think your BF doesn't know you are testing him, he probably does. It isn't fair to them.

- Secondly, I know in my heart that I will be ok if anything did ever happen. You would be as well.

So I would circle those things in my mind and remind myself to just ENJOY what I have now.

I am glad you are considering IC to help you with the other issues. You deserve to be the very best you...with all the happiness that goes with it!

posts: 6921   ·   registered: May. 31st, 2009   ·   location: Pennsylvania
id 8578028
Topic is Sleeping.
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