First and foremost: the WS is committed 100%. Anything less and you don't bother with the rest of this list. You walk away! Because it's very, very hard work, and R is not in any way, shape, or form about "talking the WS into R." If they are not initially strongly committed to doing what's needed, none of this will stick in any authentic way. It doesn't matter that the WS does not know what is needed! A good candidate for R wants to try, try, try! The WS ideally has all the energy and desire, and the BS agrees to see how it goes.
If that is in place, then the rest of the list continues. If not, a BS must 180, detach, and move on. There is no other option.
When commitment is in place, then the real work starts:
1. IC
2. Sharing what is learned as the IC process goes along.
3. Willing to answer questions or have discussions about the A or about IC...
4. without being defensive or getting angry.
5. Reads articles and books that are suggested.
6. Agrees to safeguards that the BS needs--passwords, staying home, changing jobs, cutting back on work travel, getting rid of social media, telling family and friends. Each situation is different.
7. Writes a timeline if requested.
8. Does not pressure the BS for anything or prioritize his/her own needs (guarantees about the future, sex, intimacy, weekends away, socializing, whatever).
9. Tries to check in with the BS, asks what is needed, starts important conversations.
10. Never, ever blames the BS for past choices.
11. Figures out their Whys. Shares them.
12. Allows for a lot of time without anger or pressure to "get over this already."
13. Answers questions, answers questions, answers questions.
14. Even hard questions.
15. Is thoughtful, loving, and responsive in the ways the BS values.
16. Never, ever lies or says, "I didn't want you to get even more upset" or any excuses like that. All actions and communication must be honest.
"Doing the hard work" to become a safe partner requires walking straight into the belly of the beast when every fiber of your being is screaming, "Run!" Because you want the M, because you want to heal the mess you've made. It is completely uncomfortable for a WS who has already shown himself/herself to be an avoider. And to not get defensive? Even on Saturday night when you just want to watch the big game? Or on Friday night when you "just thought we could have a nice dinner"? Very hard. The most selfish of people have to instantly commit to the most selfless behaviors! Many WS cannot become this selfless. Lots of WS will try, but far less will succeed.
Wanting to R is the easy part. Doing it right is the hard part.
[This message edited by OwningItNow at 1:43 AM, Thursday, June 15th]