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Legatus

What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.

I had an experience recently which was made easier because of my wife’s infidelity. I’m not in any way saying I’m glad she stepped out, but there have been very few good things resulting from her affair so I wanted to put it out there to see if anyone else can relate.

Over the past 4 months at work there has been a lot of uncertainty for me and everyone else. The organization was going through a reorganization and a reduction in work force. It caused me a ton of stress. I’ve been through things like this at work before but this time I took it a lot better than I used to. Why? Because over the long process of trickle truth and false reconciliation with my wife, I developed some new coping skills. One big one was knowing and believing I would be ok no matter what. Something I didn’t really believe before. Another big one was letting the feelings come and go. Even now there are times when I,m doing just fine and then something triggers me to think about the infidelity. Heart rate goes up and the mind starts racing. I’ve had to train myself to let those feelings come and go, understanding they won’t last forever. Many times when I’d have those feelings I would think of and focus on the worse case scenario. So I trained myself to except I don’t know what’s going to happen, so I shouldn’t worry about the worst thing I can think of. That really helped me get through the work crisis. In fact I had a lot of decision makers make comments to me appreciating I wasn’t totally losing my shit like some of my peers. I ended up standing out in a good way.

I think those of use who have been through infidelity are more resilient than we were before, regardless of the outcome. While I’m not happy about how and why I had to develop these coping skills, I’m glad I have them now. Just wondering if anyone else has experienced the same thing.

6 comments posted: Thursday, October 24th, 2024

Different boundaries at work versus at home

Since my wife and I have been in reconciliation we have had a firm boundary for both of us not to have any opposite sex friends. That was a non-negotiable for me when considering reconciliation. I've noticed a sort of double standard that society seems to have when defining what a friend is or maybe it's more of an expectation that co-workers get a slight exception to the boundary. I've always agreed with the phrase "the opposite of networking is not working". Most of us work in mixed gender jobs where you have to be friendly to be successful and survive.

So, in our case my wife had an old co-worker contact her to let her know about a job opportunity. For those who remember my story, this is not the old co-worker she had an affair with. This was a guy she worked with after we established the boundary and I think she's honored the boundary. She applied for the job and got it. During the application process she reached out to him a few times to ask for advice pertaining to the job. She was careful to make sure I knew about the communication and let me see any test messages and gave me the option of being in the room during any phone calls. I want to be real clear, I don't think she has anything going on with this guy on any level. There have been no red flags and I'm not having any alarms being set off.

The problem for me came up the week she started the job. She showed me a text he sent saying she should call him so they could catch up and talk about how the new job was going. She didn't respond to the text, but a few days later he called her on her desk phone, and she said they chatted for about 30 minutes. I told her that it sounded like this guy was headed towards the friend category. They work for a very large organization and their offices are in different states. They do the same kind of work, but there are no overlapping projects. So, there is no reason other than it being a friendship to have future calls and communication. None of the couples we're friends with husbands called her to see how the new job was going. If they did that would clearly be weird and raise red flags. Buit for some reason it's ok as long as the person has the designation of co-worker.

The part we've struggled with is how to maintain the boundary without making things weird. Neither one of us is comfortable with her making a direct statement about not having male work friends. But situations come up where a male co-worker might ask her to go to lunch. For us that's a no-no, only mixed group lunches. It seems like a choice between oversharing at the work place by stating the boundary in which case people draw conclusions , or potentially hurting a co-workers feeling by declining lunch. I don't really care about their feeling, but workplaces are political and coming off as unfriendly can impact things.

I'm very curious to hear about how others have navigated this situation. Maintaining boundaries without alienating co-workers. Any thoughts would be appreciated.

14 comments posted: Tuesday, January 23rd, 2024

The various shades of reconciliation

It's been awhile since I've posted anything. My story has a history of false reconciliation. As far as I know my WW hasn't communicated with the AP in a few years. It's true the thoughts and mind videos fade over time. For me though, I don't think I'll ever really have any significant trust for my WW wife. We get along and are doing a good job co-parenting, but as time goes by I just continue to think she's a crappy person. I know people do things that are crappy when they are in the affair fog, but that doesn't mean it's not part of who they are in general. It's not an excuse.

when I first entered into reconciliation it was with the intent of genuinely rebuilding the relationship into something new. I imagined that would be something with less trust, but with a renewed bond. What I find myself in is a co-parenting relationship I will likely exit from one the kids are gone. I know there's a lot of schools of thought on staying for the kids. I've weighed the pros and cons for my specific situation with an emphasis on what's in the children's best interest and I've landed on staying married. There are some deal breakers that would force an exit of the marriage like me finding out she's resumed her affair. That seems a little hypocritical of me considering my position, but that's where I am.

Recently I found a new instance of my wife lying. My WW's affair was with co-worker. He lives in another state. She had gone to visit him and his wife to run race. It turned out the wife was out of town that weekend. There was one night where my WW and the AP had alone and had sex. The other two nights another female co-worker was there for the race. Yes, I've considered the possibility of a threesome, but never found evidence of it. The female co-worker was someone my wife knew, but wasn't really friends with. I haven't uncovered much communication between my WW and her before or after the race. The female co-worker was/is pretty close with the AP. She's married and I suspect her and the AP have something going on.

This woman had texted my wife in June saying "WW, is this still your number? Today is AP's birthday!!! I bet you knew that!!! Hope you are solid my friend!!!". My wife deleted the text without responding. Our agreement was that anytime anyone communicated with her and mentioned him, she would tell me. She just hid it. If she's willing to hide that, then she's still willing to hide a whole bunch more is my stance. And, I thought the word "solid" was a strange choice of words. To me it like saying, "I hope you are still keeping the secret." Any thoughts on that would be appreciated.

9 comments posted: Saturday, September 16th, 2023

Fooled again

I initially posted this on the reconciliation forum, but over a few days I realized I’m a just found outer again.

My wife and I are about two years post affair discovery. Here's the brief back story.

Wife had a EA with her former boss. It had likely been going on for years before it hit my radar. We were friends with him and his wife and did couple things together from time to time, but my wife and him starting to run together and that's when it started. In hind sight I feel a little stupid not picking up on it much sooner than I did, but I completely trusted my wife and believed she was telling me the truth. It was a deep trust, which wasn't typical for me with previous partners.

Their relationship started to bother me but I kept it to myself. I didn't even know about the concept of an EA at that time. Around the time it started bothering me we decided to move out of state across the country to be closer to family and for a better place to raise our young children. I felt better about the situation because they would not be working or running together. Again at this point I was worried only about a PA with no concept of a EA.

After we moved they continued to message each other and talk on the phone from time to time. I was ok with that only because I thought it was accruing a lot less than it actually was. Fast forward a couple years and we are in marriage counseling. The reason for the counseling was we were having a recurring argument about her not living up to her end of the agreement to resume working after the kids were in school. During the counseling she brought up that she missed her old friends, she listed female friends, but also listed her old boss. She said there was a half marathon coming up in his town and she wanted to go run it with him and his wife. I agreed, we resolved the before mentioned argument and that was that.

She flies out there for the race and I call her the first night. Turns out his wife was not in town, but was out of town on work for a last minute project she had to take care of. My wife knew about her not being there prior to going, but never told me about it. I started to dig that weekend. Everything you would expect to find. Phone calls well in excess of what I knew about. Tests at all time of the day and night.

When she came home I confronted her with the phone calls and asked if they were having a PA. She denied it, just friends, im being controlling and paranoid. Classic playbook stuff. This was the beginning of a year and a half of hell which I could have saved myself from if I had been more educated about affairs and how they work. Deleted messages, no contact agreements broken, gas lighting, a couple marriage counselors. I became an expert affair investigator or as close as you can get. I work professionally investigating child abuse cases, so I had a lot of tools in my tool bag to work with. Every time she went underground deeper I followed and uncovered the deceit. Confronted her and she would get mad that I had spied on her. I never uncovered any evidence of a PA, although I've always suspected it. I found a lot of information though and feel like there would have been some indication. I think she rationalized them being just friends because there was not a PA.

Eventually I figured out I was just pursuing her and trying to control what she did. I looked at the unhappy person who spent the majority of my day thinking about it or spying and I said enough. I told her I was filing for divorce. I didn't say I was filing unless she did something, I just said I was.

We decided give marriage counseling one more shot. My counselor made a recommendation and hit a home run. This new counselor was great. In counseling my wife refused to characterize her relationship as an emotional affair, just friends. During that session I asked my wife if she had communicated with him recently and she said no. I took a pile of email printouts dated from the last week between her and he man and handed it to the counselor. The emails weren't damming except they proved she was actively lying to me and the counselor. The counselor confronted her somewhat aggressively. She said the man was aware of his impact on the marriage and if he were truly just a friend he would back off not have secret phone calls and emails. That visit ended with the counselor telling my wife there was nothing she could do for us unless my wife accepted it was an affair and wanted to focus on the marriage. We stopped counseling.

That's where I made my next mistake. I had met with an attorney and was starting the process of divorce. I started to have conversations about division of assets. Turned out she thought I was going to go live in a shack and she would stay in the family home and live life as normal. I spelled out the financial situation to her and she started to do the math. Crap, all the sudden her affair was going to cost her something because my pain didn't seem to have any cost to her. She came to me in the month following and said she chose me and wanted our marriage to be rebuilt. She agreed to the NC (again)and to let me see her devices any time I wanted. The thing is, I had to fight her on that even. In reading other posts I see the best cases are ones where the betraying spouse in proactive about wanting to rebuild trust out of a feeling of remorse. She reluctantly agreed to the bare minimum. I should have realized in the moment how empty those agreements were for us.

Since then things have actually felt pretty good. Sex is good, time together seems meaningful. I had initially asked to see her devices a couple time and she complied. I eventually decided to resist asking her to see devices. If she was going to cheat again I couldn't stop that and I knew that if she started up again I would figure it out eventually even without spying. I didn't want to live a life being a full time investigator at home.

2 years since I discovered the EA and I started to get that nagging feeling. She was visiting my mother with the kids in California. I couldn't go because of work. I messaged her and asked for the login information for her work computer. Keep in mind it had been a good 9 months since I asked to see anything and maybe 4 times total since she agreed to let me see them. She went into a dialog about how me asking has triggered her and made her feel controlled... She said she wanted to be with me when I looked at it, which was a week away. I figured since she didn't have possession of the laptop it was secure. I figured I could wait a week. What I didn't expect is the emotional creep that's occurred during that week. I feel like I did during the bad times. She's home now, I haven't seen the computer. I asked for permission to hold onto the computer until she was ready for us to look at it. I didn't want her to be able to do clean up. I'm assuming she has accessed the work email remotely since it's strange she hasn't wanted to attend to work emails.

I don't want to go through the dance again, but I don't want to jump straight to divorce without new evidence. My thought is to start the 180 treatment and begin moving on. If she approaches me to reconcile I won't do it unless she is taking proactive steps, basically chasing me.

Please don't speculate on if there was a PA. I've gone round and round with that one and in my case I feel that the EA component was much more damaging than a PA. I've been tested and include it as part of my regular physical each year.

[This message edited by Legatus at 11:10 AM, July 23rd (Friday)]

462 comments posted: Sunday, July 25th, 2021

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