For me, it was the same answer for all three questions. I had to get to know myself on a much deeper level than I had ever even realized existed, and figure out my "why's" about pretty much everything. Once I was able to identify the parts of me that led to my "infidelity brain", I had to make specific and purposeful changes in the way I thought and felt about things. That's the nutshell version.
Look, none of us grows up hoping to one day be a cheater and a liar. The day we got married, we didn't think, "Well, this person will do until I find someone to affair down with, then I'll really be happy". No, instead, we all had the best of intentions. We wanted to be good people. We wanted a happy marriage, a family, a life together. We exchanged rings and vows and pledged our undying love and fidelity to our spouses. And we meant it when we said it. So what happened?
Since this is a site about infidelity, we often describe waywards and their broken thinking in terms of their infidelity. To be honest with you however, as a recovering wayward, it can sometimes do more harm than good to come at it from that point of view, as it seems to imply that what is broken is somehow related to the marriage. It's not. There are lots of people out there with the same broken thinking patterns as waywards, but who haven't had an affair. Instead, they end up being self-destructive in other ways. Many of them turn into addicts of one sort or another. Some are violent and/or have anger issues. Some become drifters, losing job after job, relationship after relationship. Some take a different approach and become narcs. Or homeless people. Many just live broken lives never knowing any better.
Asking yourself, "Why did I cheat?" is a good start, but it really is just a first step, as good as any. Let me ask you a very different question however. Why didn't you stick your head in the toilet and flush it today?
Now, you are probably thinking that's a ridiculous question, and it is, but still, for just a moment, think about it. It's not a trick question at all. There is nothing stopping you from doing that, right? If you wanted to flush your head, you could, right now even. People wouldn't even know, and no one else would get hurt or be affected. You could do it to your heart's content. So why aren't you doing it?
Well, let's go down that road. Together.
One good reason not to do that is that it's gross as hell. I don't want to stick my head where I and everyone else shits.
Also, I just respect myself more than that. I see flushing my head as not only gross, but demeaning, and stupid if I'm to be honest. I'm not that stupid.
There are other reasons. It would make my hair look gross. I would get toilet water up my nose in and in my eyes and that would probably get me sick. My clothes would get ruined from kneeling on the floor. If people caught me doing it I'd be embarrassed. I wouldn't want to get hooked on it and end up thinking about flushing my head every chance I get. Others won't want to be with me or even get to know me if they knew I was a head flusher. I don't feel I could ever talk to others about my problem because no one else could possibly understand this unique and embarrassing situation I've gotten myself into.
As you can see, the reasons to not flush my head are personal ones. I don't want to be a head flusher, and people who do flush their heads sound really gross to me. They seem mentally ill in fact, and I wonder if they do that gross thing, what other gross things do I not know about them? What I'm not worried about however is my relationship with the toilet. It isn't the toilet's fault that I flush my head, despite how cool and refreshing the water may feel. It is all on me. Something in me led me to do this gross thing.
Okay, now, replace "head flusher" with "cheater".
The reason people don't cheat is much the same as why they don't flush their heads. It's because they have more self-respect for themselves than that. They see it as gross and beneath them, and don't want to be seen as that kind of person, and don't want to live that kind of life. In fact, for most people, the mere thought of it is so very offensive that they can't even go down that road to begin with. People don't cheat because they have self-respect and integrity.
But you did. You chose to cheat. So did I. And so many others here. We chose to flush our heads despite how utterly gross it is. Why?
Well, if people who have self-love, integrity and healthy boundaries don't cheat, then it makes sense that people who do cheat... lack those things.
And THAT is where your journey begins.
WHY did you not respect yourself more to begin with? WHY did not see how gross cheating was and make a hard boundary that you would never cross? WHY would you choose to be someone you aren't proud of being? WHAT drove you to demean yourself? And WHY are you so damn angry when someone brings it up?
These are questions you need to answer. Not to me of course, but to yourself. Hopefully in therapy.
Let me get you started. Here are some questions to ponder, as they tie into everything else...
What is your first memory of feeling SHAME? What caused it, who was there, how did it end up? How did you view yourself while feeling shame? Did others try to help or protect you? How did you (or did you not) cope with those feelings? Do you still feel shame when you think about it? What could have happened differently? What do think that you or others could have done to help mitigate the shame and instead help restore your sense of pride?
Now, same questions, but use the word ANGER instead of shame. Work through your earliest thoughts of anger.
Anger and shame destroy our self-respect and our empathy. They are not feelings that promote pride and self-love. But notice how often they pop up when we discuss infidelity. In order to understand why you did the things you did, and why you react the way you do now, you first have to understand how you process shame and anger, and what tools you have to deal with them in a healthy way.
Once you understand these things, the rest is straightforward. (Not simple, but straightforward). Every time you get angry (for example), you stop, and think, and get to the core of the anger. Why are you angry? Why are you reacting that way? And then you choose a new way to feel and react. You say to yourself, "No. I don't want to be an angry, mean person, and I don't want to feel and react this way. I am going to calm down. I am going to handle what's going on in a better way. I'm going to do whatever it takes to walk away from this with some self-respect. And you keep feeding those new messages to your brain, over and over and over and over... until they replace the old, broken programming. It works. But you have to really be committed to it.