Cookies are required for login or registration. Please read and agree to our cookie policy to continue.

Newest Member: Marie0126

Divorce/Separation :
xwh started dating ow

Topic is Sleeping.
default

 loveendures314 (original poster new member #70534) posted at 3:49 PM on Saturday, April 20th, 2024

Well. I'm back on here. In 2019 I was very active here when I had just found out about my then WH having a long term A with a coworker. It was the most devastating discovery of my life, and I feel like a part of me truly died that night. He had initially ended our relationship a few months before our wedding and then three days later decided that out of a sense of responsibility he needed to try to rebuild our relationship. It should have been a red flag, that he didn't really WANT to be with me, but felt like he needed to out of obligation. He seemed like a perfect picture of remorse, and we had healed our relationship in about two years. We were good, I trusted him again, and we got married and everything seemed fine.

Except that I had changed. The woman that rolled over and let him stomp all over me was gone. I gained a new sense of self-trust, autonomy, and independence. I insisted on getting a second dog, who has become my best friend, and basically all around started standing up for myself. And what I learned over those two years was that he was so focused on healing our relationship that he didn't work on himself at all. He frequently talked about reaching out to the OW to apologize, since she had expressed many times how angry and hurt and manipulated she felt. I was admittedly very angry with her for thinking she had any right to a relationship with him, and put my foot down that he didn't owe her anything (in my defense, she spent most of their affair manipulating him too, and calling him worthless and saying he didn't deserve anything and wishing him ill and that I'd never trust again - and also had a partner of her own she was betraying; although that's all I heard from him so who knows). She had also tried to tell me before we got back together that I didn't know the whole story, and that he wasn't worth continuing a relationship with. I had chocked that up to her just wanting him for herself at the time, and knowing what I know now, probably true. So I told him to forget about her. Still, up until the day we eventually separated, he kept thinking about apologizing to her. He told me he never really forgave himself about the whole thing, and our therapist ended up being someone who I feel favored him and maybe enabled some of his self-indulgent behaviors. She broke up with me when we separated, but has still been seeing him.

When we separated, I told my WH that I still loved him very much and wanted to help him through the process, per our therapist's advice as well. I didn't leave him because of his A, but it was clear that my newfound independence was difficult for him. He needed me to stay in the area instead of taking an out-of-state job. I had a hard time feeling intimate with him because, to be honest, I never really did. I just loved him like one would love a best friend soulmate. That the reason I was with him in the first place. I truly adored him and looked up to him, even though I didn't feel a romantic attraction, and simply didn't want to lose him. But now that I realized I deserved better, I wanted to free him to find what he was looking for, while potentially rebuilding our friendship to what it was before we got together.

He was angry when I told him I'd been dating someone else. I talked him through it. I sat with him and his pain. I wrote a perspective letter for him. I offered my love and compassion. I wanted to do what was best for me, while helping him heal. But he continuously said I was "ignoring my responsibilities" and abandoning him. Eventually, he seemed to accept it, and things seemed okay. But then he told me he started talking to OW again. I'm not proud, but I lost it, mostly because he told me in such a way that it seemed like he didn't expect it to hurt at all, like it was just some casual thing. I expressed my anger, and he immediately pulled back. A few days later he said we couldn't communicate anymore. He said that friendship was most likely not in the cards again. I was heartbroken, because I thought our love, no matter what it looked like, would endure. That's why I chose this user name all those years ago. We had a love that was so strong, it would be impossible to just abandon. But he disappeared. I asked if he was going to date OW. He said no.

Two years later, we're finally divorced, and I discover they've been dating due to a facebook post from his father. I can't begin to express my pain. I know I may have no right to feel this way, but the fact that I tried so hard to help him through his pain, to LOVE him through his pain and witness it and heal it, and I have to find out he's STILL been lying to me through facebook. Ten years of love, of self-sacrifice, of kicking and clawing our way to healing, and this is how it ends. It hurts so much. I know I ended the romantic relationship but I tried to do so in the best way possible. I wanted him to be happy, and he wanted me to be happy. But to just treat me like a stranger, like he doesn't owe me the compassion and love I thought ten years would warrant me, I thought his infidelity would warrant me... Is it because I expressed my anger? Does he really not owe me anything? AITA?

I'm just so broken. I truly thought he was better than this. I loved him with more than I had. Why does it consistently feel like he never really loved me, he just felt like he had a responsibility to me? Why does it hurt so bad?

posts: 8   ·   registered: May. 12th, 2019
id 8834202
default

nomudnolotus ( member #59431) posted at 12:05 AM on Monday, April 22nd, 2024

I'm sorry you're hurting lvoeendures313. Very gently, you fired him from the job of being your husband. You separated from him, and what he does is not really your business. You need to detach from him so that you can go find your great new life.

posts: 500   ·   registered: Jun. 30th, 2017
id 8834321
default

BSPheonix ( member #72159) posted at 9:59 AM on Tuesday, April 23rd, 2024

I agree with Nomudnolotus. It's terrible that he caused you such pain but you need to try to move on. He may never have been the person you thought he was. It's difficult for any individual to ever actually know them self, so there's little hope trying to truly understand another human being - the best tools seem to be trust, experience (of their behaviour) and some faith, but once the trust's gone...

I can empathise. I am in the process of separating from my wife (she cheated; she initiated) and, so much seems unjust. I sometimes wonder if I've ever known her and/or if she's changed significantly over time and whether I'm partly to blame. In a just world,she would have attoned for her treatment of me, but that isn't going to happen. I am accepting things and moving on from the toxicity.

Would some counselling help?

Good luck.

[This message edited by BSPheonix at 10:03 AM, Tuesday, April 23rd]

posts: 146   ·   registered: Nov. 27th, 2019
id 8834443
default

SacredSoul33 ( member #83038) posted at 11:22 PM on Tuesday, April 23rd, 2024

But he continuously said I was "ignoring my responsibilities" and abandoning him.

Is he auditioning to be the example that psych professors use for projection? Good lord.

But then he told me he started talking to OW again. I'm not proud, but I lost it, mostly because he told me in such a way that it seemed like he didn't expect it to hurt at all, like it was just some casual thing. I expressed my anger, and he immediately pulled back. A few days later he said we couldn't communicate anymore. He said that friendship was most likely not in the cards again.

My guess is that this is coming more from a boundary that she set than from him, but my experience might be skewing my perception.

When my H and I were separated and moving towards D, I told him that I could not be his friend, which is what he said that he wanted, if he had AP in his life in any capacity. This angered AP, and she had the audacity to tell him that if he maintained any sort of relationship with me, she wouldn't be with him. It was a ridiculous boundary, because we had children together. I doubt that the AP wants you to have any relationship with him at all. I wouldn't want my partner's ex to be his good friend.

I truly thought he was better than this.

I think you've been believing your own story, your own thoughts about who you think he is or who you wanted him to be, and not paying attention to the truth of him. I did that. A lot of us do that.

AITA?

NTA. Most definitely NTA. You're the complete opposite of an asshole.

[This message edited by SacredSoul33 at 11:25 PM, Tuesday, April 23rd]

Gasping for air while volunteering to give others CPR is not heroic.

Your nervous system will always choose a familiar hell over an unfamiliar heaven.

posts: 1578   ·   registered: Mar. 10th, 2023
id 8834533
default

 loveendures314 (original poster new member #70534) posted at 1:26 AM on Friday, April 26th, 2024

Thank you all for your gentleness. It's been a few days and I've come to learn that they've had an intimate relationship pretty much since we broke up, helping me rest assured that he, in fact, was not the person I wanted him to be.

Moving on from love that lasted most of my adult life is going to be the most challenging thing in the world. On top of the trauma of seeing them together, and how it impacts my current relationships. Some days, like today, I don't know if it's possible. Hopefully it will get easier.

posts: 8   ·   registered: May. 12th, 2019
id 8834759
default

nomudnolotus ( member #59431) posted at 4:35 AM on Saturday, April 27th, 2024

It will get easier love, I'm sorry that you're having to endure the pain of this. Please remember that you are worth so much more than that, and wherever he goes, there he will be.

posts: 500   ·   registered: Jun. 30th, 2017
id 8834959
Topic is Sleeping.
Cookies on SurvivingInfidelity.com®

SurvivingInfidelity.com® uses cookies to enhance your visit to our website. This is a requirement for participants to login, post and use other features. Visitors may opt out, but the website will be less functional for you.

v.1.001.20241206b 2002-2024 SurvivingInfidelity.com® All Rights Reserved. • Privacy Policy