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Reconciliation :
Do relationships actually get better after infidelity?

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SacredSoul33 ( member #83038) posted at 9:32 PM on Wednesday, June 7th, 2023

I'm sure some are devastated that they caused their BS so much pain. We have a select few truly remorseful FWS here. But,not all ws are devastated after an affair. The posts in General,the forum,and eventually the divorce forum, are proof of that.

Amen to that. Lots of WSs are absolute shits. I read the stories here and am amazed at the gall of some of them.

I think remorse and empathy for their BS's pain is a requisite for true R. And I think many people stay together for financials and/or for the kids. Honestly, the money aspect was terrifying and one reason I decided to try to R, but not the main reason. Luckily, my H is also has a pretty high emotional IQ. Without some semblance of emotional intelligence in the WS, trying to slog on can be soul crushing.

Remove the "I want you to like me" sticker from your forehead and place it on the mirror, where it belongs. ~ Susan Jeffers

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

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SacredSoul33 ( member #83038) posted at 9:38 PM on Wednesday, June 7th, 2023

I suspect in many instances one spouse, mostly cheater, thinks the cheating helped...

They got to compare the OM/OW to their spouse and decided to stay relieving their feelings of indecision and loss.

They got wonderful experiences which enriched and expanded them as a person and partner

They got memories of love which made them a better person and partner

They learned sexual tricks they never would have explored/allowed with their spouse, which they now shared with their spouse

They got experiences with the OM/OW they can now think about when having sex with their spouse

This has me scratching my head. If you think this is true of your WS, what the heck are you doing there?

Remove the "I want you to like me" sticker from your forehead and place it on the mirror, where it belongs. ~ Susan Jeffers

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

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cedarwoods ( member #82760) posted at 11:54 PM on Wednesday, June 7th, 2023

Honestly, I think it depends. For a WS, I think it is almost always a better deal, if reconciling. I mean, they had their little selfish ego-boost for months, years sometimes, they had the sex and validation they longed for, they had the excitation, the newness plus the comfort of the BS... And now they get to work on their flaws and get a better, more transparent relationship than before. A win-win situation of some sort...

I feel this way as well. WS got to have fun, lot of sex, excitement of a new relationship, butterflies in the stomach, etc. while BS got heartache, sleepless nights, and a life time of trauma. WS got to try out another life and when that didn’t work out the way they thought it would, they got to come back to BS. I need to change this thinking because this hinders ability to fully commit to R.

Sacredsousister wrote

But they also get to carry the terrible load of knowing that they devastated the person whom they love the most.


If WS is truly carrying this load and feels remorseful, how does it manifest in real life? What can BS look for as an evidence to this?

[This message edited by cedarwoods at 11:56 PM, Wednesday, June 7th]

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SacredSoul33 ( member #83038) posted at 1:33 AM on Thursday, June 8th, 2023

If WS is truly carrying this load and feels remorseful, how does it manifest in real life? What can BS look for as an evidence to this?

Most of all, he just talks to me. He tells me it hurt him. He tells me he'd never do this to himself again. Transparency is the key, IMO. We'll be doing something completely unrelated, and he'll look at me tearfully, squeeze my hand, and say that he's so sorry that he hurt me. It's been 19 years and he still does this.

I don't think that I could be with someone who didn't feel deeply. And I think it might be based on personality types. We're quite compatible, sharing a propensity for intuition and feelings. I would venture a guess that most men aren't like my H. If you know anything about the Myers-Briggs, I'm an ENFP and he's an ENFJ. There aren't a whole lot of men with an NF type. I got lucky, I guess.

Remove the "I want you to like me" sticker from your forehead and place it on the mirror, where it belongs. ~ Susan Jeffers

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

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Fof9303 ( member #70433) posted at 1:57 AM on Thursday, June 8th, 2023

Hey there, sorry you are feeling kinda "flat or dark" about your marriage. I still think three years is still not far enough away from Dday to be feeling "great" yet. I know a lot of books say that your marriage will be better.. etc. etc. I am not sure I say that about my marriage.. I would just say that it is more understanding and that I know we have been to hell and back and we can just about tackle anything that comes our way. I also know that all these years later.. I am proud of our marriage.. we rebuilt it.. I was where you were.. 20 years married and with 3 teenagers when this stuff reared its ugly head for me. Now I am 12 years out from it.. kids are married and a grandchild is here.. we got to walk our kids down the aisle, sat toghether all night in the waiting room awaiting our grandchild being born... holidays.. special occasions... a baptism this weekend.. and enjoying life just us two... No, it wasn't easy in the beginning and for quite awhile, but it is never even talked about anymore... I am only here on occasion because I like to use my story to help others... and you will be there one day too. I had a close friend tell me six months after reconciling.. I am proud of you and this really kind of suprised me.. because I was kind of embarrassed. So if no one has told you.. I am proud of you.. May you be shown many blessings and that darkness disappear from your marriage soon. God bless.

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 Grieving (original poster member #79540) posted at 2:27 AM on Thursday, June 8th, 2023

Cedarwoods, I don’t know exactly what to pinpoint when I say that my WS carries a weight of sorrow and regret, but I know that he does. Likewise, I feel pretty confident that he doesn’t look back on the affair in some kind of roses and rainbows way. Yes, he felt the butterflies and the new relationship spark and the electric sex and all of that at the time, but I know he absolutely doesn’t think it was worth the devastation that it caused. I don’t envy his position at all, to be honest. He was in a rough place in life, trying to soothe himself with lies and destructive behavior, and now he’s living with the consequences. And I don’t think he believes we’re in a better marriage right now—he’s working and praying and hoping that we get back to as joyful and free a place as we once were.

Fof9303, your words brought tears to my eyes. I really think what you describe could be in the cards for us—I do actually have that sense of us having gone through hell and back.

Saltishealing, I’m sorry you are where you are. Thank you for the words of camaraderie though. If it helps, I am in a much better place than I was 15 months out. My husband is too, and we’re in a better place together.

[This message edited by Grieving at 2:29 AM, Thursday, June 8th]

Husband had six month affair with co-worker. Found out 7/2020. Married 20 years at that point; two teenaged kids. Reconciling.

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Luna10 ( member #60888) posted at 9:47 AM on Thursday, June 8th, 2023

I agree with those who say the WS probably feels they have a better marriage. A big reason for affairs is the need for external validation. And, what is more validating than having not only an AP ,and an affair and all the feelings that go along with that..but to also have a spouse who loves you so much that they want to stay with you, and endure an enormous amount of pain, because the thought of being without you is unthinkable.

I don’t think that a truly remorseful WS, one that has embarked on the tough road of healing and change, one that has used the affair as a catalyst for change, would think this way.

Coincidentally my WH was talking about his affair last night (in a certain context) and he reiterated again he wishes he would have become the man he is now without the affair and all the pain he inflicted on me. The thought of his actions often lead to apologies and no way is he proud or feels he gained anything from having cheated on me. (Except of course the insight through the work he had to put in to become the man he wanted to be).

When he talks about it (and yes, he still does, without prompting, without me bringing it up, not often but it does come up), he tells me that the situation was so shit post dday that he had one choice: to give up, run away, have a superficial relationship with our kids and be the selfish, entitled man he was by cheating, or work hard and use it as a wake up call, look in the mirror and become the man he wanted to be, a good human being aligned to his values that he temporarily ignored. The memory of his AP telling him he was a great man whilst he was obviously not, betraying his wife and kids, revolts him.

Also, in our case, by the time my WH got his head out of his back side, I was ready to pull the plug and he knows that, the thought of being without him may be quite sad but definitely not unthinkable.

In fact my own healing took me on a path that meant I needed to hold him accountable and request a high standard of work from him if I wanted to be happily married (to him) post his affair, as just remaining married to an avoidant, selfish and entitled person was not an option I was willing to consider.

True, not all WSes are remorseful, not all of them have in them the desire to dig deep and understand, for their own benefit, why they acted the way it did.

I just wanted to add my contribution as I do think it is unfair to assume that all WSes, including those who do work hard at their recovery, still look fondly on their fuck up and walk around somehow proud of their “achievements”.

————————————

One other thing I wanted to add to this thread is to reiterate what others have highlighted too: there is no better relationship post affair if you don’t work on healing yourself and WS doesn’t put in the work on healing themselves.

I often read threads here and it breaks heart to identify pretty early that either the WS has put in minimal effort to heal themselves and support the BS’s healing, or the BS isn’t focusing on their own healing much and their main focus is to prevent another affair.

Once I realised my own healing should be my main focus everything else fell into place, I knew who I was, I knew my worth and I knew that WS can only remain married to me if he meets my relationship goals.

[This message edited by Luna10 at 10:27 AM, Thursday, June 8th]

Dday - 27th September 2017

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sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 6:15 PM on Friday, June 9th, 2023

There used to be a thread in JFO, IIRC, titled something like, 'It wasn't the A that made your M better - it was the work you did after the A'.

fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
DDay - 12/22/2010
Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.

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 Grieving (original poster member #79540) posted at 7:32 PM on Friday, June 9th, 2023

I like that way of framing it, Sisoon. It’s much easier for me to wrap my head around. To extend the back injury metaphor that has been so helpful for me throughout this process, I have a better resting heart rate and better overall body strength since my back injury, despite there still being some activities that are more painful, and some that I can’t do quite as well as I could pre-injury. I don’t have a lower heart rate and more strength BECAUSE of my back injury; I have them because my back injury caused me to work harder and be more intentional and careful with my health. I had good health before the injury, but I took it for granted because it came naturally.

[This message edited by Grieving at 7:34 PM, Friday, June 9th]

Husband had six month affair with co-worker. Found out 7/2020. Married 20 years at that point; two teenaged kids. Reconciling.

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jailedmind ( member #74958) posted at 7:10 AM on Monday, June 12th, 2023

9 years out. Her affair was in May and I didn’t think about it so that’s a plus. As for the marriage, it’s meh.
I just found I don’t feel the same towards my wife. There’s always some resentment there. The elephant in the room. If we have an arguement and she says you do this or that my mind goes to you had an affair and I win. I don’t say it but it flashes in and out. I could do without those thoughts. Before affair I thought she would never cheat. Now I live with anybody is capable of anything. I totally relate to the guy on the Matrix who wanted to live in the fantasy and not the reality. I love her. But not in the same way. There will always be a piece of me she will never again have. Perhaps others have a greater tendency towards forgiveness and the ideal that people can change. Perhaps that makes for a better marriage after infidelity. And I agree that the WS has a much better experience than the BS. My wife has no problem forgetting her affair. It will never leave me.

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SacredSoul33 ( member #83038) posted at 3:23 PM on Monday, June 12th, 2023

And I agree that the WS has a much better experience than the BS. My wife has no problem forgetting her affair. It will never leave me.

This is a very good point. My H doesn't remember many details about his As (for which I'm grateful) except that he was stupid and that he hurt me. I remember almost every detail he ever told me, like I kept inventory.

He still carries the feelings about his A, but not details. I carry the feelings AND the details. I suppose this is the typical WS/BS dynamic.

I still would rather be the person who was betrayed rather than the one who perpetrated the betrayal. I wouldn't want to have to carry that load. No way, no how.

[This message edited by SacredSoul33 at 3:23 PM, Monday, June 12th]

Remove the "I want you to like me" sticker from your forehead and place it on the mirror, where it belongs. ~ Susan Jeffers

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

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Never2late ( member #79079) posted at 2:11 AM on Tuesday, June 13th, 2023

I just wanted to add my contribution as I do think it is unfair to assume that all WSes, including those who do work hard at their recovery, still look fondly on their fuck up and walk around somehow proud of their "achievements".

This is, of course, true. It can't be all. What is certain is that the BS will never truly know because what WS that thought this, to some degree or on some level, would ever reveal or disclose this private corner of their heart? If they really want to keep their BS they can read the books, listen to their counselors, learn to say the right words and do the right actions. Self preservation is a strong motivator.


The point is the selfishness that drove the A can also motivate the R.

[This message edited by Never2late at 2:13 AM, Tuesday, June 13th]

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WishidleftHer ( member #78703) posted at 2:33 AM on Tuesday, June 13th, 2023

Personally I don't think the marriage gets better. Just the opposite, it's tainted. As a BS, I still think about the A occasionally. It never ever goes away. The AP got something that was promised to me and I can never get it back. I'm still here but it's not the same as it was before the A.

[This message edited by WishidleftHer at 4:54 PM, Tuesday, June 13th]

Me: BH 74. Her: WW 70 Dday over 35 years ago and still feels like yesterday.

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Tav3n ( member #83401) posted at 3:57 PM on Thursday, June 15th, 2023

Im still early in the R process, but the people who say "it depends on how things were before the A in your perspective" makes the most sense if it gets better or not overall.

For me personally, before the A, I never felt good with our expressions of love and our ability for healthy communication. There was a lot my WW and I suppressed to each other, and both of our instinct was to turn away from each other when problems arose. And the 4 sessions of MC so far have already made our communication way better than it was before, which is sad how little the needle needed to move to make a noticable difference.

I am never expecting the trust to come back to what it was before, but I do think the other parts of our marriage could be way better if we put in the work. But I will see how things are in 5 years and report back with a better answer.

[This message edited by Tav3n at 3:59 PM, Thursday, June 15th]

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marriageredux959 ( member #69375) posted at 3:00 AM on Friday, June 16th, 2023

No, the marriage we had prior to the discovery of the infidelity (I found out about it years after the fact) most certainly is NOT better after the discovery of said infidelity.

It is not improved because it no longer exists.

My husband threw a grenade into that marriage years earlier.

Upon discovery, I poured gasoline all over the rubble and proceeded to burn it to the ground.

That marriage, and all of its dysfunctional infrastructure and baggage, is gone.

I've said it often on these SI boards: infidelity doesn't exist and it doesn't occur in a vacuum, as a stand alone aberration. It is the product of various pathologies and dysfuctional coping mechanisms that are influencing and playing out in other aspects of the marriage and in our lives as well.

I consider myself fortunate in that the actual infidelity itself was a one off and fairly minor in severity and almost inconsequential in fall out except that it was, well, sexual and physical cheating, which in itself is a pretty big deal.

I can actually get my head around the idea that 'It didn't mean anything!' with the rather huge caveat that it was a big damned deal, it meant quite a lot, it spoke volumes about my husband, his issues and the dynamics of our marriage that it even happened at all.

There were no further incidents of sexual/physical (or emotional/romantic) infidelity, but FOO issues that were baked into my husband's OS continued to dominate the dynamics within our marriage and in our relationships with the FOO, with our own children, with our relationships to our jobs/careers and with our interactions in the world at large.

While there was never again another sexual infidelity, Husband threw me under countless busses in the service of making his life easier with other people, people pleasing in general, conflict avoidance, and self-avoidance in that he didn't have to face or deal with his nearly non-existent boundaries.

Husband was raised by narcissists and personal boundaries were not tolerated, not allowed. Not modeled in a healthy manner. Agency was a one way street. Power and control uber alles.

Without understanding the true gravity or depth of what I was actually saying, I'd often quipped that I was the only person on earth to whom Husband felt safe saying 'No' so he said 'No' to me often, mostly just because he could.

That's truly an accurate description; most of the time Husband was so overwhelmed with making everyone else happy (or at least keeping them fairly pacified, several of those fuckers were difficult to the point of impossible, think high octane narcissists) that even the most pedestrian, minor bid from me was met with an immediate "NO!"

He got pretty control freaky too; he overcompensated for his absence of boundaries with everyone and everything else by micromanaging me and our household where ever he had contact with me/it. The only thing that made it bearable/manageable on my end was that Husband's people pleasing and absence of boundaries dovetailed perfectly with his workaholism. He was physically absent most of the time and that gave me some relief.

In one notable example from many years ago that remains with me to this day, Husband adamantly refused to allow me to hang one set of wind chimes *outside, in the garden, at a distance away from the house,* because he *might* hear them at night, and if he heard them even once at night, they'd keep him awake at night from that moment on.

Ergo wind chimes were forbidden in our yard *for years.*

The people pleasing, absence of boundaries and chronic workaholism coalesced into a clinical picture that presented as classic anxiety and depression, causing Husband's physician to prescribe antidepressants, which seemed to provide a modicum of relief, initially. It became a feed back loop: Husband got enough superficial symptom relief to take on even more work/responsibility, which in turn led to more anxiety and exhaustion and depression, which led to higher doses of antidepressants.

This of course was the death knell for what scant little remained of our intimate life, which was starved and on failing life support anyway. And it caused Husband to gain weight, which messed with his sense of well-being and self-esteem and basic wellness, and that didn't help his anxiety/depression, nor our sex life nor our general sense of well being in the marriage, not one little bit.

Finding out about a years ago sexual infidelity that happened in the early, vibrant years of our marriage on the backside of this shit avalanche was The Mother of All Mind Fucks. Never mind whether or not it destroyed what precious little remained of our marriage; it damned near destroyed me. And by that point I was exhausted: I'd already spent years trying to make life *perfect* and *beyond reproach* in a hopeless attempt to mitigate Husband's anxiety, which plagued and tortured both of us.

Perhaps the discovery of Husband's long ago infidelity was the kick in the head that *I* needed to take account and control of my own life and my own boundaries.

Boundaries are tricky in marriage.

It's often said on SI that in order for reconciliation to succeed, Waywards are instructed to embrace remorse and abandon all hope of controlling the outcome.

Interesting, I found the same to be true for me as a BS.

My own absence of boundaries and people pleasing tendencies and conviction that Only I Could Prevent Marriage Fires allowed Husband's poor coping mechanisms and lack of boundaries and anxieties and people pleasing tendencies and workaholism to run our show. Narcissistic, entitled and self-absorbed FOO members were more than happy to help themselves to their pound of flesh at our expense as well.

My own absence of boundaries didn't make, or cause, my husband to cheat.
My flaws and lack of boundaries did not make, or cause, the FOO's narcissism and dysfunction, nor did they create the pathologies present in others who took advantage of us and our foibles.

My absence of boundaries and co-dependence caused me to betray myself.
Repeatedly.
And once I saw that, Katie bar the door.

And that's when I had to let go of controlling the outcome of the marriage.
I was becoming a different person, a person who was not going to tolerate *any* of this bullshit anymore, and yeah, this marriage might not survive it.
And yeah, that's just fine.

I started kicking crap and people out of my life like that was my job.
And it *was* my job.
IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN MY FUCKING JOB ALL ALONG.

Hubs was, at first, horrified.
No, perhaps the better word is terrified.
Given who was given the abrupt and unceremonious boot, from his perspective, he was going to be next.
From his perspective, he should have been first.

I didn't care who the fuck you were, who the fuck you thought you were, if I had ever been or was currently being thrown under any damned bus because you exploited (taught, ingrained, enforced, depended upon, manipulated) my husband's and/or my absence of boundaries, YOU WERE GONE. *POOF!*

Not surprisingly, this *POOF!* banished several people who were 'closest' (ha! the irony!) to us.
By societal and traditional conventions, this was horrifying/terrifying.
By the most basic standards of decency, this was long overdue.
But yeah, it was pretty hardcore, and not one damned thing less would have been sufficient.

Four things happened pretty much immediately, as in, immediately:

1. FUCKERS ACTED OUT. LOL. "WHAT??? WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE??? YOU DO NOT SAY NO TO US!!!" It was Super Special lol and informative. In addition to illustrating and reinforcing *exactly who they are and what they do,* it brought what they'd already done into sharp focus. WHOOP THERE IT IS.

2. Kicking the shit starters out of *my* life at least, ultimately Husband is his own person and for better or for worse, he gets to choose who is in his life, but putting up at least a perimeter fence for a boundary significantly reduced the amount of bullshit/drama/toxicity in our lives. It was notable, immediately, for both of us. Hubs noticed it as well, on his own. Reduced the temperature and toxicity in our lives *immediately.*

3. Per above, Hubs is his own person. He gets to choose who he wants/needs/values in his life. That may or may not include people that I cannot tolerate. And that may or may not include eliminating me as a life partner, as a consequence. And in and of itself, as a fundamental, stand alone choice, that is a valid choice. I accept that. In fact, I welcome it. I do not control this outcome. I do not control his outcome. I *do,* however, have a MUCH firmer definition of whom and what is allowed in my life, and that includes and may also encompass Hubs, his dysfunctions, his baggage, and the hanger on fuckers who wandered or barged through our threshhold on the coattails of his dysfunctions.
Furthermore, if Hubs, of his own accord, discerns that I do not belong in his life, by all fucking means, PLEASE SHOW ME TO THE NEAREST EXIT. I ALSO DO NOT NEED THIS STRESS IN MY LIFE.
I TOO WOULD LIKE TO ENJOY MY BASIC STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY.

I'm not fucking modeling clay to get shoved through his or other people's molds.
Long story short, Hubs gets his own choices. He is free to be true to himself, and I encourage that.
Marriage to me is not a guaranteed outcome.
And that's OK too.

4. I modeled boundaries to my husband.
That was beyond overdue.
I modeled radical boundaries to my husband.
That was beyond overdue.
It is beyond convention or societal expectations or societal norms. Yeah, FUCK all of that. Worse than useless, in our case, absolutely exploitative and harmful.
Mutual respect, mutual courtesy, mutual civility, mutual dignity, mutual accommodation, mutual honesty/transparency while respecting mutual, basic decency and privacy, stay in your own damned lane, OR BE GONE WITH YOU.
REGARDLESS OF YOUR FAMILIAL, SOCIETAL 'TITLE.'
Rather than The End of The World as You Know It, the long promised apocalyptic outcome for breaking any of these stereotypical constructs, we received in return, wait for it-

A true sense of ourselves and our marriage.
Peace.
Absence of bullshit and the cease and desist of transference of other people's problems into our lives and into our marriage.
Finally, an accurate picture of ourselves, our lives, our marriage, our priorities, both together and individually.
Freedom.

Predictably, some of our toxic people scattered like roaches when the bright overhead light was turned on.
Some circled back for one more round, one more attempt at 'getting us back in line, back with the program.'
One or two still occasionally make lame, I mean *really sadly lame,* attempts to hoover us back into the toxicity.
Each of these responses further illustrate who these people have been all along, and what the dynamics have been all along.
Husband sees it for himself.
He is making decisions for himself, as am I.
Of each our own accord and volition, we are leaning into each other and into our marriage.

It took a full five years.
We are two weeks to the day from DDay2, the 'real' DDay.
It has taken five years to wade through all of this bullshit, sort it out, and flush what needed to be flushed.

Current Status Report:

I am no longer angry, frustrated, feeling chronically ignored and violated.
Hubs is no longer anxious and/or depressed.

Hubs and I are both in good physical shape.
Hubs is free of all anxiety/depression meds and has been for a good chunk of, actually the majority of these past five years.
He lost all gained weight with a lifestyle and diet that are comfortable for us both. He's in the best physical shape of his adult life.
Our sex/intimate life is as solid and as consistent as it has ever been, including those early years in our late teens/early twenties.
We've made long needed, essential, fundamental infrastructure changes to our life together and our marriage, that keep needy, narsissistic persons from using us, from using our marriage and our infrastructure, as some sort of vulgar, obscene, unholy 'kibble drive through fast food restaurant.'
We are no longer chronically sleep deprived.
We get plenty of sunshine and fresh air.
We process, cook, preserve and even grow a sizeable portion of our own food.
True friends who love us have filled in the voids left by flushing the turds who were abusing us.
We are no longer beset and burdened with problems that are not and were never our own, as a couple.

In the end, as I've said for years on SI:
The infidelity *is* a symptom.
It is NOT a symptom of the BS's inadequacies.
It *is* a symptom of fundamental dysfunctions and poor coping mechanisms in each person entering into the marriage, and into that basic marriage contract.

Obvs, long term affairs with emotional components and palpable consequences are more impactful, more complicated to resolve, and obvs may be intractible.
Also obvs, there are deal breakers, and deal breakers are legit and real.
My simplistic model does not apply to every situation.

We're in a much better place now.
Our basic dysfunction was our problem.
The infidelity was a symptom of our flawed 'first marriage.'
That bitch is ashes now.

There are several wind chimes in the garden.
Both of us sleep peacefully through the night.

I was once a June bride.
I am now a June phoenix.
The phoenix is more powerful.
The Bride is Dead.
Long Live The Phoenix.

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 Grieving (original poster member #79540) posted at 12:43 PM on Friday, June 16th, 2023

Thank you, TavTN.

MarriageRedux, what a wonderful story! Thank you for taking the time to share it.

Husband had six month affair with co-worker. Found out 7/2020. Married 20 years at that point; two teenaged kids. Reconciling.

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Abalone123 ( member #82896) posted at 9:00 PM on Saturday, June 17th, 2023

Do they ? Just self soothing on the part of a BS and reducing guilt on the part of the WS. If it helps me stay in my marriage with a person that is capable of back stabbing me in the cruelest of ways, I would want to believe it. I think if we all had the emotional/ financial/ social capacity to leave a cheater we would. Life is not as simple though and most often than not we have to wake up next to our biggest betrayer in our bed each morning and believe that we are ok.

The BS not only has to navigate the hurt but sugar coat it . We need to survive.

Grieving, sorry for the rant. I admire how you are handling things considering your experience. I always read your responses to every post since I know it comes from a thoughtful strong woman. Your WH seems to be remorseful and that is half the battle won. However It is ok for you to feel that void, that is your reality and you work with it.

My WH hasn’t been perfect and that void will never heal. I do not have to feel that I forgive him or that the halo on his head is back. He was on a pedestal all this while, now my reality is that I am married to a very flawed human being . I am not capable of sugar coating anything, I would be lying to myself.

posts: 292   ·   registered: Feb. 18th, 2023
id 8795771
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Sadismynewname ( member #63897) posted at 3:14 PM on Sunday, June 18th, 2023

Nope! No way no how is it better. Our counselor said it would be better. How can a marriage where we seldom argued and did many things together be better when I can never fully trust him or feel safe with him again be better? I thought he was this wonderful person instead I discovered a person with low morals and lack of empathy towards others pain.

posts: 216   ·   registered: May. 25th, 2018   ·   location: Northwest
id 8795820
concerned

Never2late ( member #79079) posted at 3:40 PM on Sunday, June 18th, 2023

Abalone123, exactly.

Anything is possible. I'm sure it is true for a few. I think if things were not so good before then sure, comparatively that could make sense. However, sometimes this stuff happens in an otherwise very good marriage. In these cases, it's tough. Perhaps for BS for which infidelity is not a big deal? I am not wired that way but there are all kinds of people. I do think some BS have to do daily affirmations to tell themselves this. I just can't, it is not me and I wouldn't be my authentic self to constantly reframe this situation. Perhaps a lobotomy would work if I agreed to subject myself to one.

[This message edited by Never2late at 3:44 PM, Sunday, June 18th]

posts: 208   ·   registered: Jul. 7th, 2021
id 8795823
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sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 11:59 PM on Sunday, June 18th, 2023

The BS not only has to navigate the hurt but sugar coat it .

If R is a shit sandwich, my reco is to D. R is about making as good a future as you can, and hating - or even disliking it - is IMO a lousy proposition. Why do that to yourself?

However, sometimes this stuff happens in an otherwise very good marriage. In these cases, it's tough.

No matter what, R requires building a new M. We had a good to very good M before the A. I saw no point in not going for something better.

Perhaps for BS for which infidelity is not a big deal?

Pre-d-day, infidelity wasn't a big deal to me. On d-day, I realized it was a very big deal. In case you haven't seen this in me, I thought we could build a better M and a better life for ourselves on d-day even though d-day devastated me.

I do think some BS have to do daily affirmations to tell themselves this.

Not me. I wake up and ask myself if there are any issues bothering me. If so, I bring up the damned problem, and we work to solve it. I simply will not affirm something unless I know the affirmation is valid.

R requires honesty, not lying, especially not lying to oneself.

[This message edited by SI Staff at 12:01 AM, Monday, June 19th]

fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
DDay - 12/22/2010
Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.

posts: 30215   ·   registered: Feb. 18th, 2011   ·   location: Illinois
id 8795871
Topic is Sleeping.
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