I still remember the exact night I realized that I could forgive my wife.
What I realize is that, right now, I am pretty far from forgiving her. But I do want to forgive her. Like you said, I do have to let go of the trauma to heal myself, and forgiving is a good step in that direction. I don't want to fill my mind and heart with hate. It's toxic and unhealthy for me. It's a burden of another kind. But, right now, my heart isn't into forgiving her. She needs to earn it first. Thank you for the advice.
I would have thought the same thing, but there are a surprisingly large number of WSs here who bristle at the idea that their BS would cheat. Revenge Affairs are frowned upon (I myself had a very tame RA and really paid the price for it), but even if not, all-too-many WSs suddenly find religion when their spouse starts getting attention from folks outside their marriage.
I don't know, man. Trying to understand a wayward's mind is not my cup of tea. I am trying to understand my own wife, and I don't think I have even scratched the surface. I have ceded that responsibility to my wife. Let her explain why she did what she did. If she lies or her truth doesn't workout for me, then I leave. That's all I can do.
Twinflamed, it seems like you are carrying the burden of her self discovery at the cost of your healing.
Not entirely true. We are going to ICs, and pretty soon we will be attending couple counseling. We both are reading healing books to better understand our trauma and ways to escape it. We are also coming up with a plan to help us navigate through this crisis. This plan will deal with boundaries, communication, transparency, and healing. She is also tracing the source of her problematic behavior. Yeah, she is on the path of self-discovery, but I don't feel she is doing that at the cost of my welfare. For the past week, she has been very cooperative and proactive.
Ideally you should take a temporary break, heal and work on yourselves individually and then reconnect if that is what you both want.
I did take a short break, which got abruptly ended after she attempted S. I can't abandon her at this moment. I think if we both stick to therapy and healing, we can escape this dysfunctionality and make it better, regardless of the status of our marriage. We have taken steps. It takes time to see the results.
Right now her actions are totally driven by the fear of you leaving.
Isn't that true for all waywards? Their initial actions are always driven by the fear of being abandoned by their BS. It's not right, but it's hardly surprising.
You need to involve family and friends.
Friends have been involved. They have been a great help to us. The family was also involved, but she says she doesn't want to stay with her parents, especially with her mother. My sister is her best friend. She has been checking on my wife on a regular basis. My parents, too, have offered their help. So, I am not here wholly on my own. I got support.
It is NOT your responsibility to keep her safe.
Easier said than done (No offense to you, mam). I can't yet abandon that responsibility. I still love her, and I am still her husband. Ya, she hurt me, but she's still my family.
I will try to do what I am doing now for a few more months. If I find out later that this is unsustainable and unhealthy, then I will back off. I will try an alternative.
You can demand boundaries and needs as well.
We currently are working on it.
As a nurse of 30+ years I have seen so many suicide attempts that are sheer manipulation efforts.
How can one recognize if such attempts are just a manipulation tactic? If we are talking about people pretending to commit S, then, yeah, I can see how such attempts are just manipulation. But, here, she actually did attempt S. She wasn't pretending. She didn't tell anyone what she was about to do. It was pure luck that her family found out what she did at the right time. This has been her first and only attempt. She has never shown this level of frailty in her entire existence. So, maybe she is not faking it.
I came here to give an update. My wife approached me and discussed attending couple counseling together. I think it's a good idea. We are doing IC separately. So, attending council together is the next logical step. My only issue, right now, is that her IC is not an infidelity specialist. Her therapy doesn't deal with her affair. I feel she should attend IC that deals with infidelity, before we move forward to couple counseling. I haven't replied 'Yes' or 'No' to her suggestion. I told her I would think about it. So what do you guys think I should do and why??
I also felt good that she took the initiative to make this suggestion. A few weeks ago, she was reluctant to go to any therapy, and now she is the one who is suggesting counseling. I take it as growth.