I picture myself laying on the ground trampled by horses and him taking off into the sunset on the horse that left me for dead, weird I know
This is not weird at all. You have been traumatized by him. And he is not traumatized. He is getting better and you want to as well. It to me is one of the harder parts of it. While you eat your shit sandwich he is having a personal awakening and feeling better.
I don’t talk that deeply very often about my experience of being a bs. It always feels when I wrote about it I either sound like a hypocrite or like I am pandering for sympathy when I fired the first shots.
But I have felt this exact way that you wrote here and to me this was a hard part to get past. My situation was very different but how you expressed this I relate to it so much.
My husband gave me a new ring early into his 18 month affair. He said it symbolized a new beginning in our relationship. I spent most of the months of his affair doing everything I could to show my love and appreciation for this incredible chance he was giving me.
When I found out, I struggled for the first year to not blame myself for it. I caused him pain, I did it first (though not even nearly on the same scale- but I still went first and cheated in a good marriage) and I had it framed in many ways that he cheated in a dumpster fire marriage.
But that wasn’t the reality I was living. We were closer than ever from my stand point. We spent a lot of tome together we were out doing things, we had a marriage that I had always hoped for. He was being attentive and loving and we were having deep talks and we were making love for the first time in our marriage.
And it wasn’t real.
So after struggling with how to even look at this for a full year, during which I sent him off to therapy, contacted the obs and doing all the things we tell people here to do. I started wondering if we should just get a divorce. Was I just staying to save face for cheating on him?
And here is where what you are talking about kicked in. He thinks we are reconciling, and I was really on the fence. But I decided to try and get more vulnerable again and try and make it work. I did the thing with guard up/guard down because the entire idea of reconciling had been tainted. I spent 3 years trying to reconcile to find out that this false closeness was likely a combo of hyper bonding and guilt.
He didn’t feel that way because he didn’t experience false R. This was around the time we were preparing to sell the house and travel in an rv for an indefinite period of time. This was something we planned before his dday.
I almost didn’t go. People here told me not to. There was this feeling I was leaving myself behind. That once again he was calling the shots and I was along for the ride. The idea of working on reconciling again and experiencing that falsely again seemed inevitable. I was watching him growing lighter and happier while I felt more and more like the world was closing in on me. He was excited for the trip, I was dreading it.
In a sense, getting in the rv to go was like trying to climb up on that horse and ride away with him. It was the scariest feeling, because it felt like I was agreeing to reconcile but my heart wasn’t in it.
Here is what I learned: it wasn’t true. I wanted to be there or I wouldn’t have been.But accepting that was very hard because of all the implications that come with it. Meaning, I was rubber stamping it, condoning it, accepting it. It’s as if your life is moving on without your consent. Things were on a trajectory that didn’t line up with where my broken heart was.
Truth is it never mattered who cheated first. This was only holding me back from coming to terms with my pain. Like I wasn’t entitled to because of what I had done.
And I think for you- you know you are entitled to feel how you do because of what he has done. You were completely innocent in all this.
However, when you see how hard he is trying and how wonderful he is being is boils down to the same concept - how can you feel all these terrible things about him and watch who he has become. You feel left behind because he has gotten better but you haven’t moved very far yet at all. This is normal because like I said, you have been traumatized and he has not. The healing journey for you is more of an uphill climb than it has been for him. And dammit, why couldn’t he climb his hill without having an affair? And that action has made you have to climb a mountain.
In many ways what you said snapped this into place for me. But- remember reconciling is not the decision to stay: it’s the decision to keep trying. The process gets better over time for some people, and for others it gets worse. Take it day by day. There is no finish line. It doesn’t exist. Being vulnerable with him today doesn’t make a contract you will tomorrow. And just because he is doing better doesn’t mean you have to reward him or stay.
While there is no finish line or a day engraved in stone that says we made it. When it comes to your healing it will happen regardless of the outcome of your marriage. You will not be in this pain forever. You will heal, you will have a greater capacity for compassion, you will be wiser, and have a much richer relationship with yourself that will flow out to all the relationships in your life. You will feel connection and joy and satisfaction….with or without him.
[This message edited by hikingout at 5:01 AM, Saturday, August 17th]