Hi everyone thanks for the responses I really appreciate it. It's been a few months since my last post so I wanted to give some updates. I will try to respond to people without making this post too long.
Update:
I canceled our couples therapist. Best decision ever! I've heard it said that couples therapy isn't very useful right after betrayal and from my experience I have to agree. I'm not convinced that couples therapy is useful at all in this situation unless the therapist knows how to handle a couple, and will hold my wife to account for her actions and the damage those actions have caused, and also her evasions, and gaslighting. If we go back it will be to one I have selected myself (she selected the others we wen't to), and feel confident they will address the situation well.
4. I love my wife, and really want to reconcile. The last few weeks I've been having a difficult time though. Every time I think positive things about her, the "she intentionally betrayed me" thoughts creep in and ruin my good mood.
I do still love my wife and want to reconcile. Unfortunately this is still happening on the regular for me. I'm getting more and more angry about what she did and how she has handled it since D-day. We have had many fights, and I am starting to see how emotionally damaged she really is. She is going to therapy but won't let me into that world at all so I just have to trust her that she is addressing her why's. Thats pretty hard to do for me obviously.
waitedwaytoolong
The fact that it hurt her (and probably him) to end the affair is not a deterrent for this to happen again. Either with the AP, or another guy down the road. The fact that she says she hurt you as a reason to trust is also crap. The fact is the affair was wrong. She should be telling you it was the biggest mistake of her life and be begging you for forgiveness.
I 100% agree. I said as much to her the other day. She asked for a list of things she could do to show me she is committed and one of them I mentioned is that I need her to convince me that that she believes the affair itself was wrong. I said that if she doesn't feel it was wrong that it's likely she will do it again. She disagreed with me on that one.
HouseOfPlane
They can do absolutely everything right, and it may not be enough. If it’s not enough, then it is you, not them. And that is OK.
It is okay, but I would like to know before putting years worth of effort into it. How does one know this is the case before hand? What questions could I ask myself to give me clarity on this question?
Chaos
And she's probably clinging to the facade that "it wasn't really me that did this to you"
I believe she is clinging to this facade. The other day I pointed out that her actions certainly hurt the kids. We haven't told them about the affair but they know we are fighting, and it's causing them stress. Her response "the conditions in the marriage hurt the kids. They will be fine"
And IMHO that bullshit of how "letting go of that relationship was so painful for her" is a mega bitch slap to you. How dare her! I'm sitting here fuming on your behalf.
I've done a fair amount of fuming myself, but only after I came out of the betrayal fog. Before that I was just in shock.
sisoon
If I were in your shoes, I think I would hold off on committing to R until and unless my WS realized how her A was a betrayal of herself and of you.
I wish I could, but I have already committed to this path. Now I'm faced with the choice of do I get off or stay on. It's maddening. I wish I had the presence of mind to make decisions like that right after betrayal, but I didn't.
I would expect a good MC to thank a WS for honesty, and if the WS continues to say they had a great time in the A, I'd expect the MC to recommend D. I just don't see a WS who has fond memories of a period in which they lied to their BS as a good candidate for R.
This one is difficult for me because she clearly knew the affair would hurt me, and she did it anyway. She also has fond memories with her AP, which I'm not surprised about, but still hurts. This is why I want her to convince me that she views the betrayal itself as a bad thing. If she was totally fine with betraying me then I would want D as well. Only a crazy person would stay with someone who intentionally hurt them and didn't feel bad about it. I struggle with that a lot but it does seem like she feels bad about it. I try to reframe it as "everyone makes mistakes and she made a huge one" instead of her intentionally trying to hurt me.
But wanting is different from doing. I didn't actually commit to R until I had seen my W work consistently for R for 90 days - and it would have been better if I had waited longer, just on general principles.
Again I wish I had the presence of mind to do this in the beginning. One of my personal flaws that I'm working on is that I am way too nice to people. I'm not good at putting proper boundaries in place especially with people I'm close to.
I'd question myself if I didn't hit rage somewhere between 4 and 12 months out, but I could be wrong.
I hit the rage stage a couple of weeks after making this initial post. I'm moving from that to the exhausted I'm not sure I can do this much longer stage.
Stabbedintheheart
Each time I try and share where I am emotionally, the hurt and betrayal I'm working through, she reminds me of everything I have ever done which contributed to her decision to have an affair.
This is exactly what I've been going through for the last 8 months. It's getting really old. I think maybe she is just trying to communicate what she wants our "new marriage" to be, but it comes across as her criticizing me for everything.
Formerpeopleperson
You should both read the Living in Limbo books by Michele Langley.
I looked this book up on Amazon... it's $100! I guess I'll have to get it from the library.
Bigger
I like this version of trust. Seems very practical.
If you truly believe you will never again trust your wife... Divorce.
I honestly don't know how I could know this.
I think that by telling her you want to reconcile – basically no matter what – you have removed that fragility from her. She has no need to be careful.
I think your six month thoughts display that. They are normal, and they are augmented by the fact she doesn’t seem to understand what she risked.
100% agree here. Again I wish I had been in a better place mentally after finding out. But here I am.
Make it clear that you too have your doubts, and that her contributions so far have not convinced you that you two should be married. If she truly wants you and this marriage, then she too needs to convince you. This can’t be one-sided.
I haven't used these words but I have said something similar lately. Especially the part about convincing me.
The1stWife
My point is that many cheaters never plan to D. They just want to have an affair or get some cheap thrill etc.
I don't believe mine planned to D either. She would have left already if she had. She can be very strong willed. Unfortunately I can't pull this card until I am fully ready to D, and I'm not there yet. I still hold out hope, and she is still making significant efforts. Not always in the ways I want or that I feel are effective, but effort none the less.
SacredSoul33
Really, that she's being authentic with her feelings is a good thing, even if it's painful for you. She's not placating you. She's being real.
I (grudgingly) agree that it is a good sign. I am still plagued by the fact that I have been WAY too nice and haven't established any real consequences for her behavior. I doubt she believes I would really leave. Again the only way to pull that card is to be fully committed and I'm not there yet.
[This message edited by Theevent at 9:42 PM, Thursday, December 19th]