WTDIEC,
Welcome to SI. There is a wonderful community here that can offer you a lot of advice and support if you'll allow us to. You should also expect some "tough honesty" as well, which is a good thing, despite it being difficult to hear sometimes. The aftermath of infidelity is brutal, as you already know. There are going to be a lot of tears and arguments and hurtful things both done and said in the coming months, and a good rule of thumb is that it takes 2-5 years to "recover" from infidelity. So my first piece of advice is to simply to get an idea of what's to come and what it will take if you wish to recover in whatever way you can. People tend to do better when they have their expectations set correctly. For example, if someone were to break their knee, that injury would take months (at best) to heal, and no amount of doctors or medicines could speed up the healing process. It heals at its own pace, and if we try to speed that pace up, we end up doing more injury than good. Recovery from infidelity is like that... it heals on its own time.
It feels like BH loves to remind me of it any chance BH can. If I have a negative emotion BH reminds me what I did to him. Which just makes me feel like I am not allowed to feel anything because I hurt BH and because of me hurting BH I am not allowed to feel anything. BH is what matters. I shouldn't care about me.
Every WS experiences these feelings. It can be really confusing and feel very hurtful at first. It's not that you don't have a right to your own feelings, you absolutely do, rather, it's that your feelings aren't relevant to him at the moment, nor should they be. The best way to explain this is with an example. Imagine that you get mugged, and the mugger punches you hard in the face over and over again. Afterward, as you are on the ground bleeding, swollen and in horrible pain, you plead with your attacker to call an ambulance, and he responds by telling you how much pain his hand is in from beating you, and how misunderstood he feels about being a mugger, and how you really need to stop making this all about you, because he's really the one hurting right now. How does that sit with you? Do you care that his hand hurts? Do you care about his need to be the best mugger he can be? Do you feel guilty for asking for an ambulance?
From your spouse's point of view, your feelings, hurts and concerns don't really matter very much right now, and that's not a comment on your spouse, but rather, the reality of infidelity. He essentially got mugged, and since you are the one that mugged him, responding by telling him your hurts and fears actually comes off as selfish and uncaring, just like the mugger above. Your husband doesn't care that you are sorry... because you SHOULD be sorry. You being sorry solves nothing, what your husband needs to know is:
* What are you going to do about it?
* What's changed or changing about you, such that you would be a safer/better person to be around now?
* Do you even "get" how their entire world, their sense of trust, of love, of safety... how all of that was destroyed, by you?
* Are you worth the risk of even considering R or any kind of future relationship?
And in addition to those things, which are about you, he needs to decide what he wants, who he is now, what he believes in, and a thousand other little pieces of life that have to be put back together again. And you cannot help him in that regard. The best way to help him to heal, is to simply not make things worse. So no TT, no getting defensive, no rug sweeping, and no heavy demands. Answer his questions, volunteer any details that he needs to know, and make sure to go get some therapy, join a support group, read some books and whatever else you can do to start figuring out why you cheated in the first place. This should be the start of a long period of learning for you.
BH says I don't have to prove myself and that everything else "good" outweighs what I did, This so far has been proven completely wrong. I get in a depressive or self-loathing mood and this is what BH says to me: I'm just a liar, a whore, a bitch, a cheater, a psychopath, deranged, a narcissist, calls me my mother (which is a whole different ball game) and purposely hurting BH and our children
This is difficult. I think you'll get different opinions on this, and bear in mind, none of us are there where you are, so bear that in mind. That being said, this type of talk is not unusual after infidelity. For most people, this kind of talk is usually short-lived and not unexpected. It's just anger and hurt coming out, and as much as it hurts to hear, it has its purposes. It's not a bad thing for the BS to express the anger and hurt they have inside and let it out, it actually allows them to process the hurt, and in so doing, heal faster. As a WS, while it hurts to hear those words, it's important to understand the depth of pain that we inflicted to incite those responses from our spouses. No one deserves to be called a slut or a whore, however at the same time, no one deserves to be cheated on, lied to and hurt for no reason either. So allowing for a little grace for forgiveness is paramount. If the abusive words and behavior continue for a long time however, or if things escalate, then come back and post for advice.
Now I am not sure why I'm posting. I have read the self help posts yet not one talks about how to do them when combined with ASD and possible BPD.
How do you do anything combined with ASD and BPD? I say this to you with friendship... don't allow yourself to make excuses to fail or to not try. Just last week I saw a blind kid that was skiing down a treacherous mountain pass with only his father's voice to guide him. I mean... wtf? If he can do that, than anyone can overcome their challenges. I have complex PTSD, severe depression and anxiety, was sexually abused as a child, was diagnosed with BPD, and have "fractured personalities" (similar to DID)... and yet, I managed to recover thus far. It took me a long, long time and involved a lot of hard work, failure and frustrations. But I did it, and so can you. To be honest, the fact that you have BPD should be a starting point for you. Talk to your therapist, and pose the question, "What contributed to my BPD, and how did that contribute to my decision to betray my spouse?" You didn't have an affair because you were bored and there was nothing on TV that day. You were looking to fulfill some need, be it positive or negative. The first step is in identifying that need/those needs and dealing with them. And in doing so, guess what? It helps answer those questions above about, "What are you going to do about it?" and, "What has changed?"
[This message edited by DaddyDom at 6:58 PM, Monday, August 29th]