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Just Found Out :
Confused and frustrated

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 Coffeelove (original poster new member #84299) posted at 6:52 PM on Saturday, December 30th, 2023

October 22nd WH(41) asked me(37) to call in to work because he had something to tell me and it was going to hurt. I called in and then sat down, and he told me he had been seeing someone else (Cow/25) for about a year. It had stopped for a few months while she was dating another Cow, but had started again when she broke up with the other man on Oct 8. OW's ex had found out they were seeing each other and threatened to tell me and he didn't want me finding out that way. He was confused about what he wanted, stated the typical ILYBINILWY. I asked him if he meant he wanted to leave me, got the "I don't know" response. We then tried finding him a place to go, he contacted multiple other Cow that didn't have anywhere for him to stay (OW doesn't have facebook and at that point he didn't even have her phone number). I called our parents (We've been married for 20 years and our parents got married in 2019 to each other) and his dad said he could stay there. I packed his things up and we drove over there, only for his dad to immediately dive into "we need to go home and just work things out". I stated he didn't want to do that, and his dad asked him if he could walk away from her, he said he didn't know. He wouldn't let him stay, so we went back home to continue to try to figure out a place for him to go.
He left for work that night (works a 5 pm to 330 am shift). When I got up in the morning, I asked if he had any luck, and even OW wasn't able to let him stay. I went to work and came home early. I woke him up after thinking for a bit and asked him if he wanted to work on falling back in love. We set up his intake with the VA, so he could get counseling scheduled with them, and set up counseling with a local therapist for me and for marriage counseling. No hysterical bonding, but did have a few talks where he was giving honest answers for what he was sure about, but a lot of "I don't knows" about his feelings. Didn't make it two weeks before I got frustrated at him being distant and getting no effort from him, and calmly talked to him about it. He broke down and said he had been with OW again. I told him that he needed to get a new job or be out by the time I got home in the morning. He asked "what if its someone else at the new job?" I'm guessing I heard from that "I would rather be with anyone than you" than him being terrified to trust himself.
I went to work the next morning and asked him in the afternoon if the kids were ok, he said they were and he had told them all. I asked if he was gone yet, and he said he was in a cab already. Had a panic attack at work, but managed to finish the day. I had assumed he had gone to stay in her car or something. The following Tuesday was what we thought was our first counseling session. I went and picked him up and we went to the appointment, where we were told that we couldn't get couples counseling until we'd had 3 or 4 individuals each. We both argued with the person that we needed immediate help to try to figure out our living situation, and she implied that the next appointment was couples. I didn't realize until later that we didn't schedule and individual session for me, so that should have been an indicator. I took him back to a grocery store where I had picked him up and went home.
We had discussed him coming over to see the kids on Sundays while I was at work, but he asked to do it on Saturday since we both had the day off. Saturday came and I picked him up, and took him to the house, that day I just stayed long enough to see his reunion with the kids and then went to see my mother. Came back home and cooked supper for all of us, and then took him back to the grocery store. Repeat for a few weeks until he got a car, and then he would just come over on his own on Saturdays. Tried the second therapy session, found out it was an individual session, they did let him come in with me, but of course nothing much was accomplished, so we decided to pull over and talk for a while after. Discussed our communication issues and it seemed to be helpful.
At some point in November, I asked him to meet up and talk. It didn't go very well. I asked him about something he had said on Thanksgiving, that he thought his whole family had turned their back on him. I said I know you mean your father, but what else do you mean? The response was "You...you kicked me out". (only point where he hasn't taken accountability I think) He also stated he was in too deep now. (Took that as he was falling in love with her, my therapist mentioned it could mean he doesn't know how to dig himself out) Confirmed she had put a down payment on a car for him, and she had paid for the first week in the hotel for him. I asked him to read a letter before he left for work that he had written me a few months after we got married that basically said we would always compromise and get through everything together. He was crying when he left for work.
After that I stopped reaching out to check on him/chat unless it was about the kids/household issues. Any of those times usually ends up in a little bit of chatting, but there's been no other reaching out on either side.
Usually the Saturdays and holidays that he's here are fairly natural besides the awkwardness of there being no affection, but a few weeks ago I was frustrated and kept going outside by myself to pretty much mope, and he finally came out. I asked him if he really felt I turned my back on him by kicking him out and he said "Not necessarily, no". I said I didn't understand what I did, and he said "I told you, you didn't do anything wrong" I said no, I mean the night before you left, I thought you wanted to go. He kind of just shut down at that point. He then said he wasn't ready to say everything that needed to be said appropriately and for the first time since DDay I cried in front of him, to the point that I lost strength in my legs and he had to hold me up. The rest of the times have been back to normal. He's still staying in the hotel I think, which is right by her apartment. I have no clue what kind of relationship that they have, because he stated she didn't want a relationship, never expected him to leave me, nothing like that.
OW's ex did eventually reach out and that first day we talked for 2 1/2 hours. He mentioned how hard it was to see them together every day. They come in together everyday and take breaks together, because no one else there will speak to them. He said they both look completely miserable and even mentioned a few days ago that they still do. He told me the first time we talked that she had told him about WH while they were dating, that she had gone after a married man specifically because she didn't want a relationship.
I've had a few sessions of therapy and am doing a lot of praying, self help books, reading stories like on here, etc. I'm doing okay, but still pretty firm that I want to work things out. I'm not quite sure if I've completely made that clear to him or not, but if he does try to file I'm going to make couples counseling a condition, for one thing it'll either give me closure or help us work it out, and for another it will ensure he gets the counseling he needs. I can clearly see the things that broke him, and feel as though some things can be fixed and other things can be healed.

posts: 11   ·   registered: Dec. 30th, 2023   ·   location: TN
id 8819841
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Cooley2here ( member #62939) posted at 8:36 PM on Saturday, December 30th, 2023

I am sure this comes across as cruel but I want you to be realistic. He is having a great time. He is having sex with someone 16 yrs younger than him. He is miserable because no one is saying "Way to go, Big Guy". They are judging him as a cheater. But he has not let her go.

Right now you are doing something called the "pick me" dance. He has chosen her. Whether or not they last should no longer be your concern. This site is about getting out of, surviving, infidelity. You are not doing that. You are standing still while he, with cruelty, lets you hurt and weep.

See a lawyer. Then see a dr about any anxiety you feel. You can get medical help until you no longer need it. In the meantime try to eat healthy, including protein drinks. Get plenty of sleep and stay hydrated.

And come here to unload.

[This message edited by Cooley2here at 8:38 PM, Saturday, December 30th]

When things go wrong, don’t go with them. Elvis

posts: 4377   ·   registered: Mar. 5th, 2018   ·   location: US
id 8819849
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sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 9:31 PM on Saturday, December 30th, 2023

Your H is still taking breaks with ow. If that's the only contact they have, it's too much. If your H were interested in getting back together, I suspect he'd dump ow. He feels sad and lonely because she's the only co-worker who will spend time with him? That should be a sign to him that he effed up badly, not that it's OK to be with ow. (I won't write 'cow' b/c I don't want to insult cows.)

I'm also concerned about you, as Cooley is. I don't think it's healthy for you to even suspect that you turned your back on your H. He turned his back on you. He wants to live at home while he's still in contact with ow. That's crazy.

Couldn't he find a way to get to your home on his own on Saturdays? Couldn't he find an airbnb on his own? The answer is: he's an adult. It's up to him to figure out how to live after he's betrayed you.

Are you OK with his inability to choose between you and ow? If you're willing to give him more time, OK ... but I recommend practicing the (simplified) 180 - see https://www.survivinginfidelity.com/topics/598080/the-simplified-180/?ap=1. I've bumped it, so it should be on the 1st page of this forum now.

You are the prize here. He's not. I know that keeping your family together is what you want; I did, too. But it worked for me only because my W wanted it, too, and because we both did a lot of work. Your H can change from cheater to good partner, but you're the prize.

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: 30447   ·   registered: Feb. 18th, 2011   ·   location: Illinois
id 8819855
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 Coffeelove (original poster new member #84299) posted at 10:29 PM on Saturday, December 30th, 2023

Oh I absolutely don't feel like I turned my back on him. I am just giving him time and healing myself in the process. I'm not exactly standing still, moving on with my life, but not romantically, even though a few people keep encouraging that. The thought makes me sick. I do feel a little in limbo because there's things Id like to do but can't because of finances. I've only started a career in the past year, have always been a SAHM/housewife except for a few short jobs to get us through. He is helping financially enough to get us by but I'm looking into a second job so I can have the money to do things I enjoy like fixing up the house and I'm starting to get an interest in changing my wardrobe lol.

posts: 11   ·   registered: Dec. 30th, 2023   ·   location: TN
id 8819858
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Justsomeguy ( member #65583) posted at 10:56 PM on Saturday, December 30th, 2023

I would concur with the previous poster that you are doing the pick me dance. It may seem completely reasonable to you, but being a gracious, understanding human being comes across as weak and unattractive to a wayward. You have become his second or third choice, and you deserve to be your partner's first choice.

Like you, I got the ILYBINILWY speech. Man it felt good to give my STBXWW the IDLYAINILWY speech. The D is for don't and N is for not. Funny thing, as I detached and no longer gave a fuck about her, she suddenly found me more desirable. Problem is, as I detoxed from the relationship and got my bearings, I found I had grown and she was no longer desirable to me. Thus, I was able to move on and heal.

The advice on thiscsite, while often given gently, can seem harsh to those that would really prefer advice more in keeping with the direction they would like to go. I would advise against flat out rejection of anything posters say. Take it in, weigh it, consider it. The aggregate wisdom and experience of the members here was, after all, purchased at great personal cost.

You sound like a really decent person. I hope you find your way.

I'm an oulier in my positions.

Me:57 STBXWW:55 DD#1: false confession of EA Dec. 2016. False R for a year.DD#2: confessed to year long PA Dec. 2 2017 (was about to be outed)Called it off and filed. Denied having an affair in court papers.

Divorced

posts: 1865   ·   registered: Jul. 25th, 2018   ·   location: Canada
id 8819861
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BoundaryBuilder ( member #78439) posted at 12:42 AM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

This will sound harsh, but the goal is to get Coffeelove out of infidelity. So here goes.

He's a cake eater. Wants OW but still wants to keep you in place for plan B fall back in case things go south with OW. Big tell - it sounds like he's living in a hotel or living w/OW rather than looking for a more sustainable living situation. Living in a hotel can get costly! Gently, are you sure he's not shacking up with OW? Yes, agree with Cooley2here, he's having a ball eating cake and having two women dance for him. OW is kicking in $$ to supplement his new single life style - you haven't pulled the plug and filed for D. He has you to chauffeur and cater his Saturday visits with the kids in the family home! He selfishly continues the Saturday full service visits when Sunday visits would be more helpful for you AND the kids because you work on Sundays. What a jerk. Bet you also did all the Thanksgiving/Holiday cooking/present/buying and all he had to do was show up. So why wouldn't he continue eating cake? This infidelity limbo is working just fine for him, thank you very much.

Coffeelove, IMO he understands full well you would reconcile IF he's willing to do the necessary hard work. It sounds like you DO want to reconcile, but he's busy eating cake with OW. The conversation when he said "he wasn't ready to say everything that needed to be said appropriately" is another cake eater tell. Sounds like at that moment you were ready to negotiate his return, but he made it clear he wasn't willing to do what's needed to begin reconciliation. 'Cause he wants to keep the infidelity limbo working for him as long as he can - keep on gobbling that cake. For R to truly work, both partners need to be 100% all-in on recreating a new marriage. After the betrayal of infidelity the old M is dead. And, the betrayer needs to be all in 100% to do whatever it takes to heal the BS. And, he must remediate his thinking - work hard to change HIS weaknesses. In a nutshell, he needs to drive the R bus. So far, you're the only partner that wants to "work things out." You're willing to stay in place as Plan B just in case he pulls his head out of his posterior and realizes that YOU are the prize.

You are not plan B. You're his wife of 20 years for heaven's sake! The first step towards getting you out of this infidelity limbo is to put a stop to his cake eating at your expense. A gentle suggestion - no more chauffeured and catered Saturday visits. If he wants to see the kids he can pick them up in the car OW is supposedly financing and take them out. Consequences! Talk to a few lawyers about what separation or divorce look like. Knowledge is power. Doesn't mean you have to D right this second, but looking into D or separation is the next logical step when a betrayer refuses to break it off with AP. He's helping out financially now, but how long can you assume that will continue? Kudos on getting your life together without him, starting a new career etc. Rather than getting a second job, how would it look if a codified separation or D agreement assured child support and maybe even some spousal support since you've mostly been SAHM? Talk to a lawyer about all of that. Soon. Hotel living, car payments, wineing and dining AP etc. can add up. Seems prudent to separate your finances, get credit in your name alone and so on just to be on the safe side. Best wishes to you Coffeelove!

[This message edited by BoundaryBuilder at 6:00 PM, Wednesday, January 3rd]

Married 34 years w/one adult daughter
ME:BW
HIM: 13 month texting EA with high school X who fished him on Facebook 43 years later
PA=15 days spread over final 3 months
D-Day=April 21, 2018
Reconciled

posts: 229   ·   registered: Mar. 4th, 2021
id 8819862
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 Coffeelove (original poster new member #84299) posted at 1:10 AM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

He's not getting the chauffered visits since he got the car. Part of the Saturday visits is that it's also his only day off, he works 6 10 hour shifts a week. It's definitely the hotel, the payment comes out of our joint account. There's just too many questions at the moment as to where his head is at. One question he can't seem to answer is if he didn't plan to leave me, why did he leave when I found out. They had never wanted to be in a relationship. Her paying for things could be out of guilt I suppose but I can't seem to have a vision of her feeling guilty. He's shut out everyone at the moment, childhood friends, army buddies, family, etc. I think he's actually helping more than I would officially get in child support honestly, on top of getting random things we need on the way here Saturday. Our heater went out last night and he stopped and got a few space heaters and a different filter to see if it would help for example. He's not letting me help him with things, so there's some growth there I suppose. He's never had to figure out how to pay bills, take care of himself, etc. I told him a week after he left that I felt like he was punishing himself too much and he said maybe, but maybe not enough.

posts: 11   ·   registered: Dec. 30th, 2023   ·   location: TN
id 8819865
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ChamomileTea ( Moderator #53574) posted at 3:09 AM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

There's just too many questions at the moment as to where his head is at. One question he can't seem to answer is if he didn't plan to leave me, why did he leave when I found out.

I'm not surprised that he doesn't want to answer that one, because from what we know about cheaters here at SI, it sure sounds like he wants to play around without being accountable to his spouse. He can come and go as he pleases, act like a bachelor, pay for it all out of your joint account, meanwhile you're holding the bag for the familial responsibilities.

I'll be honest with you (and you can read my profile by clicking the little person icon in the upper right hand corner), but like so many here, I've been there, dealing with a WS who didn't want to make up his mind. As you'll see in my profile, I was absolutely willing to make that decision for him. He would have been more than happy to continue doddering in self-deluded confusion, except that I made it clear that I was NOT "an option". He couldn't have both. I wasn't going to be hanging around waiting like a wallflower at the eighth grade dance. I just knew intuitively that if he kept stringing me along, the damage would become insurmountable... and the damage was already pretty damned bad.

Your WH is going to try to blame you for so many things. It's just Cheating 101. Things like "you kicked me out" are classic DARVO (deny, attack, reverse victim and offender). DARVO doesn't have to be loud and aggressive, right? The bottom line is that it's highly unlikely that you could have forced him out of the home in most jurisdictions. He had choices. He could have broken it off with the OW, refused to leave the home, engaged in immediate efforts to repair the marriage and remediate his poor character. If he felt like it was a matter of respecting your wishes, he could have created some kind of accountability system so you knew where he was at all times. He could have begged you every day to come home. He's where he is because THAT's where he wants to be. The moping might look really authentic, might even BE authentic, but it's not so important to him that he's making changes.

You're getting words. What you need are actions. wink

BW: 2004(online EAs), 2014 (multiple PAs); Married 40 years; in R with fWH for 10

posts: 7075   ·   registered: Jun. 8th, 2016   ·   location: U.S.
id 8819869
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BoundaryBuilder ( member #78439) posted at 8:09 PM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

He's not letting me help him with things, so there's some growth there I suppose. He's never had to figure out how to pay bills, take care of himself, etc.

Dear Coffeelove, I'm gonna push back on this statement a bit.So not only is he a cake eater, he's a man child as well. HOW has he demonstrated growth? He's been living in a hotel for what, TWO MONTHS now?

Housekeeping picks his dirty socks up off the floor and scrubs the toilet, changes the sheets, takes out the trash.

Doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out how to pay a weekly hotel bill slipped under the door.

Unless there's a kitchenette in the hotel room, he's been eating take out/in restaurants/OW's house for every meal. No meal planning, grocery shopping or cooking - or clean up.

Except Saturdays, when he has the freedom to waltz into a home with a stocked refrigerator and the luxury of your home cooked dinners.

Is he bringing his laundry to your house on Saturdays LOL?

And he's never had to deal with the realities of being SINGLE PARENT. He gets to play bachelor while you do ALL the adulting around the house to make sure the kids have a roof over their heads, a bed to sleep in with clean sheets, clean clothes to wear, food to eat, and on and on and on. On Saturdays he gets to play nice family man but you're the responsible one that provides the stable and safe home environment where he comes and goes as he pleases.

Yeah, his paycheck helps with FINANCIAL security, but surely the hotel bills and all that takeout is putting a strain on the family budget. Rather than setting boundaries with him around finances you're considering taking on a second job to cover the shortfall. Dear Coffeelove, you're allowed to say enough is enough. Separate your finances ASAP. His living expenses are HIS expenses. It's not your responsibility to pay for his easy hotel and takeout lifestyle.

He wants to be a bachelor, well, how about he steps up and faces the realities of being a single parent as well? No more family visits at YOUR house, etc. He wants to spend time with the kids, it's on his dime and in his living space.

He LEFT you and the kids. Rather than be a responsible adult and finding an AirBnB room or a month to month rental, he continues his man child ways by CHOOSING to live in a hotel fancy free. As Camomile Tea pointed out, he's right where he wants to be. Is this status quo okay with you?

[This message edited by BoundaryBuilder at 8:54 PM, Sunday, December 31st]

Married 34 years w/one adult daughter
ME:BW
HIM: 13 month texting EA with high school X who fished him on Facebook 43 years later
PA=15 days spread over final 3 months
D-Day=April 21, 2018
Reconciled

posts: 229   ·   registered: Mar. 4th, 2021
id 8819908
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 Coffeelove (original poster new member #84299) posted at 8:46 PM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

Of course it's not okay with me, but I am absolutely adamant that he be able to spend as much time with the kids as possible, and that hotel is definitely not safe for them to be at. I've decided to start finding something to do on Saturdays while he's here, yall are right that having the homecooked meals and stuff is a little too much give for me. I agree that there's not much definite growth but his day to day life is something he's never had to do on his own, and the growth I meant was not calling me to find out how to get to his check stubs, make dr's appointments or even as far as going to them on his own. The most he's done things like that was in the army, because they pretty much make them do those things alone. The growth I need is recognizing what caused our disconnect in the first place, but he's barely acknowledged that his job is the main cause. He's terrified to leave his job for a new one, and it really hurt that he was more scared of that than losing me, but true that's its probably because he knows I'll always be here. The boundary of being willing to and showing effort of getting a new job is very firm for me. I do realize that it sucks, because we haven't had a very stable life financially before and him having a job for 5 years at a place with the turnover rate of underwear is a big deal to him, but he's going to have to realize that there's no balance. Our relationship was always 10 times stronger when we were busting through the financial issues together too, but that hasn't clicked.
I'd like to remind him that there was less disconnect when he was in Iraq for a year and while he was over the road than when he's been at this hellhole of a job, but I'm not initiating any more talks.
I am a bit mopey today realizing that he won't be coming home at midnight, he's always rushed home early on New years eve to be with me at midnight.

posts: 11   ·   registered: Dec. 30th, 2023   ·   location: TN
id 8819910
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BoundaryBuilder ( member #78439) posted at 8:57 PM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

Sorry if my last post sounded judgmental. I see a lot of my own former "cool wife" behaviors in your situation, so felt comfortable pointing them out as I see them. Even PO'd on your behalf because some of the things you describe feel all too familiar. For example, your husband wasn't available much because he works 60+ (!) hours a week. Yes indeed that work load can be a marriage killer. My H traveled for work so was gone A LOT - at least 9 months out of the year with a few weeks home now and then. It was kinda like military deployment because he spent so much time away. It was my job to do ALL the adulting, bill paying, cooking, cleaning, and child rearing etc. because even when he was home between gigs he was "so tired." And I enabled his abdication of ALL responsibility because he "worked so hard" and it was simpler for me to take care of it rather than attempt sharing responsibility with an absentee partner. All this while I was working full time! AND, I put on a happy face and pretended I was "cool" with it while I juggled all those roles. Spoiler alert: I wasn't cool with it.

Post D-day all the unwritten marital agreements that served his needs were null and void. Cool wife has retired. We had to create a new marriage founded on mutual respect and shared RESPONSIBILITY or I was out of there. There's a reason BoundaryBuilder is my SI moniker tongue Post D-day He stepped up to the plate and reclaimed his abdicated responsibility, so here we are five years later. Is your H capable of finally growing up? I dunno....so far his choices don't bode well for creating a healthy new MUTUAL marriage in the aftermath of his betrayal. And, please don't let him DARVO you about the situation. His choices were his to make.

[This message edited by BoundaryBuilder at 7:37 PM, Wednesday, January 3rd]

Married 34 years w/one adult daughter
ME:BW
HIM: 13 month texting EA with high school X who fished him on Facebook 43 years later
PA=15 days spread over final 3 months
D-Day=April 21, 2018
Reconciled

posts: 229   ·   registered: Mar. 4th, 2021
id 8819911
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Jeaniegirl ( member #6370) posted at 9:54 PM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

Oh I absolutely don't feel like I turned my back on him.


00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000'

Coffeelove, maybe you SHOULD.

Good luck. His behavior is typical Cake eater.

"Because I deserve better"

posts: 3731   ·   registered: Feb. 1st, 2005
id 8819917
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 Coffeelove (original poster new member #84299) posted at 10:15 PM on Sunday, December 31st, 2023

I didn't see it as judgmental, it's ok. I even feel like the hours weren't the issue, but the schedule. He was leaving a bit after the kids got home from school, and then he'd get home at 4 am and wind down alone for hours until we got up, then go to bed a little after they left. Repeat for 5 years. Of course on Saturdays he'd get up at 3 pm or so so we'd have the evening together, but he'd need to stay on that sleep schedule so he'd spend the entire night up alone. He was always very hands on when the kids were little and needed that care, but we'd always both willingly had the dynamic of him working and me taking care of the house. He'd never shown anything but respect for that and I never resented it. I do resent the past year since I started working of him not helping, but that's also due to my own issues of not liking to ask for help, and obviously he's not going to be able to look around and see what's needing to be done the way I can. I still have hope that he will snap out of it, swallow his fear and step up. I told one of my kids friends the other week when he made a snarky joke about getting him a kids chair at the table that no, if he comes home it's cause he stepped up and he's going to get the respect that deserves.
We've both agreed that had he had he been able to go to his dad's right away, it would have given us the space we needed to process.
We've also never had an argument to this extent, never had a single disagreement that came close to ending our marriage. We rarely argued at all. We got married at 17/20 years old and even had a huge talk before hand about what to expect and how we'd deal with things we never expected. This is not something that was even considered in that aspect. I truly feel by him saying not necessarily about me turning my back on him was him meaning he's resentful of it but knows he shouldn't be.
He has definitely affirmed that nothing was my fault to the point that I even believe it myself, much as it does still kind of twinge my self-esteem.
One thing both he and his dad said, not to take blame from him at all, was "You don't know how hard it is to say no". That was about the only time I got angry, and told them both that I had done it over the summer without blinking an eye. I had a COW hitting on me, trying to get me to "just hang out" and said absolutely not. Of course now this COW is trying again since this happened and I'm still able to say no. Obviously I'm not ready, but the thought still makes me sick. When/if he snaps out of it and we can start working on us, I don't want one more thing to heal from. Not interested in "getting my lick back" And i don't feel it's right to lead him on.

posts: 11   ·   registered: Dec. 30th, 2023   ·   location: TN
id 8819919
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Cooley2here ( member #62939) posted at 4:32 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

Your husband being at war makes his behavior understandable. That is no excuse for him cheating. They get high as kites when actually engaged in warfare. There is nothing like it in civilian life. This affair gives him that high. You can’t compete. The cheating has taken the place of scary gun fire.

You need to look after yourself and stop waiting for him. He has made his choice. The ridiculous "I’m not in love with you…" crap is so stupid. I am no longer in love with my husband but I love him very much. What people mean when they say that is they are lusting after another. Oh brother!

Please don’t wait for him. You are so much more important than making yourself small in hopes he wakes up. Suppose he doesn’t? What then? You need a lawyer and a plan for your future, without him.

When things go wrong, don’t go with them. Elvis

posts: 4377   ·   registered: Mar. 5th, 2018   ·   location: US
id 8819969
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 Coffeelove (original poster new member #84299) posted at 4:50 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

I agree that it makes it understandable and its also no excuse. I don't really know how to describe if I'm waiting for him or not. I'm doing the best I can day to day with living my life in a direction that will work for me either way.
I also get frustrated with the excuse of ILYBINILWY, because lately I feel the same way, but I'm willing to work to get back to that feeling if he starts the work because I feel like it's completely worth it.
I'm definitely looking after myself and have decided to even stop making his parenting time smoother. Not going to hinder it, he's still going to be able to come over to see them here on Saturdays, but dinner/hanging out - he's going to have to figure that out on his own.
I'm not worried about getting a lawyer. If he files, then I'll go to legal aid and do what I need to do. But I'm not taking any more steps to a decision on our marriage, it's up to him. There's no way any judge would just give him the kids, and they've already mentioned they'd stay with me if for some crazy reason he tried. We don't really have any assets to worry about splitting.
I'm starting the 180 completely as of Sunday.

posts: 11   ·   registered: Dec. 30th, 2023   ·   location: TN
id 8819975
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FunHouseMirror ( member #80992) posted at 6:41 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

Things aren't going to change until you take the steps to change them. I sat on D'ing my cheating husband for years (2 or 3) before I had finally had it and started the proceedings. If you don't have much in the way of assets you can file for a non-contested divorce. Don't give him the power. You make a decision (to D or to R) and follow through with it. If it's R though, obviously he would have to make some huge changes and want it as much as you do.

posts: 250   ·   registered: Sep. 21st, 2022
id 8819983
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ChamomileTea ( Moderator #53574) posted at 8:07 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

My fWH also tried to blame a "disconnect" in our relationship. It sounds really plausible, particularly because while a spouse is cheating and during the ramp up to it, there does seem to be this almost palpable emotional gulf.

Here's the thing though, blaming a "disconnect" assumes that there are valid reasons why a person might cheat, that it's a legitimate option in one's decision tree, something that might happen to anyone. It's really just another variation of the "unmet needs" fallacy, whereby our spouse's fidelity is predicated on our actions rather than on his own core values. shocked

Have you ever heard that old saying, "when you don't stand for something, you'll fall for anything"? That's pretty much the bottom line. When temptation came along, there was nothing in your WH's character that said "no"... and there should have been. He and his father said to you, "you don't know how hard it is to say no", but you absolutely DO know, and more, you understand WHY you say no. It comes from your firm belief in the fidelity you promised, and what that means to you as a matter of self-identity and integrity. THAT's what your WH is lacking. It's not "disconnect" any more than my own fWH's reason was "disconnect". Sure, there's distance, but that's largely a symptom, not a cause.

Anyway, the more time you spend learning about infidelity in general terms, the easier it will be to set boundaries and stick to them. Relationships don't cheat. People do. It's not about hating on the WS that we insist on this kind of distinction in terms of accepting full blame. Until a WS is willing to remediate the flaws in his character which allow him to say "yes" to adultery, he's not a safe prospect for R.

BW: 2004(online EAs), 2014 (multiple PAs); Married 40 years; in R with fWH for 10

posts: 7075   ·   registered: Jun. 8th, 2016   ·   location: U.S.
id 8819998
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BoundaryBuilder ( member #78439) posted at 8:45 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

We get it. He blew up the marriage, let him file for D.

I'm no accountant or lawyer (favorite SI disclaimer :-)BUT - there's some potential pitfalls to a wait and see approach when a betrayer leaves. Primarily financial pitfalls.

You may not have many shared assets, but what you DO share as a married unit are credit ratings (ETA: WRONG see post below) and DEBT (ETA: POTENTIAL DEBT see post below).

Historically, you've been the budget keeper/bill payer.

He's an entitled cake eating man child.

I wouldn't bet on fiduciary responsibility from him.

Example = rather than make responsible lifestyle choices, he's living easy in a hotel eating take-out (sounds pathetic to me but that's not the point) for two months = racking up bills.

He could accrue ridiculous debt lickety-split and you could be on the hook for some or all of it. Basic living expenses not managed can get out of hand easily enough . What if selfish (obviously) OW drops hints about how happy that $1,500.00 Prada handbag would make her. How great it would be to take that cruise to XXXX.

Another financial caveat = He's feeling guilty NOW so is helping out financially. You can't assume that will continue. Especially if expenses start catching up with him - or if OW starts whispering in his ear.

You're probably thinking "the man I know would never leave his family financially in the lurch." The man you thought you knew wouldn't blow up the marriage and leave his family to chase shiny new strange, yet here he is doing exactly that.

Coffeelove, PLEASE talk to legal aide about what you can do to protect yourself NOW. Okay, you're not ready to file for D. What about legal separation where all informal financial arrangements can be codified and his debts stay his debts? Seems prudent to hash all this out now while he's still feeling some guilt and responsibility towards the family.

What about spousal/child military pensions/health benefits? If you and the kids are eligible for military benefits if HE files for D do you lose them? If YOU file for separation rather than D can you keep them? If you qualify for military benefits that stuff is worth protecting!

Dear Coffeelove, know you've got a lot on your plate and the day to day struggle of wrapping your brain around this new reality is difficult enough. PLEASE don't lose sight of the big picture. Protecting your family financially must be part of the new reality. Hugs to you and your kids Coffeelove!

[This message edited by BoundaryBuilder at 11:52 PM, Wednesday, January 3rd]

Married 34 years w/one adult daughter
ME:BW
HIM: 13 month texting EA with high school X who fished him on Facebook 43 years later
PA=15 days spread over final 3 months
D-Day=April 21, 2018
Reconciled

posts: 229   ·   registered: Mar. 4th, 2021
id 8820000
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FunHouseMirror ( member #80992) posted at 10:07 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

I wanted to clarify that credit ratings are individual and not connected to the marriage.

As far as credit card debt goes, it depends on whose name is on that debt. My husband and I have both joint and individual credit cards. In the event of his passing, I would not be (legally) responsible for paying his debt unless the estate had the money to pay it. We don't live in a community state so ymmv.

posts: 250   ·   registered: Sep. 21st, 2022
id 8820007
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BoundaryBuilder ( member #78439) posted at 10:10 PM on Monday, January 1st, 2024

Thanks FHM!

Yes, there's variables on who owes what depending upon whose name is on the debt, whether it's a community property state and so on.

Good thing I'm not an accountantLOL. Coffeelove, this brief exchange between FHM and I demonstrates how important it is to get advice about ways to financially protect your family - from someone qualified. Better safe than sorry.

[This message edited by BoundaryBuilder at 1:27 AM, Tuesday, January 2nd]

Married 34 years w/one adult daughter
ME:BW
HIM: 13 month texting EA with high school X who fished him on Facebook 43 years later
PA=15 days spread over final 3 months
D-Day=April 21, 2018
Reconciled

posts: 229   ·   registered: Mar. 4th, 2021
id 8820009
Topic is Sleeping.
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