This might be nit-picking, but I think infidelity often says more about self-worth than morals. Having said that – I do think self-worth is reflected in morals and values. Like if I was aware of my self-worth then I wouldn’t be tempted to steal a million dollars even if I had the opportunity and thought I could get away with it. Partially due to morals, partially due to my list of values.
I think that the vast majority (and even all…) infidelity is due to some form of validation. We all need and seek validation in some form or another. Most of us get in in a healthy way; we see and appreciate love from our spouse, kids, family… We get affirmation from friends, coworkers, our boss, customers, peers… We reach goals we set ourselves, we keep our weight, pay our bills and set aside money…
For many that validation can be totally internal – we are self-sufficient. For others… we need eternal validation like the direct praise of other. Nothing bad or unusual about that – like being called out as salesman of the year, or being asked to join the board of a committee or whatever can give positive validation.
But… for some, the validation that the emotional and sexual attention of someone else gives…. That’s the kicker. That’s the snort of coke, or shot of heroin they thought they needed…
This is why I think IC is key to personal recovery if a WS wants out of infidelity. I think that other than sociopaths a WS KNOWS they are doing wrong. They can find all sorts of excuses, ranging from "he/she will never know" and "what they don’t know won’t hurt them" to "ILYBNILWY" and "the marriage has been dead for a year" or whatever. But those are still only excuses to explain to themselves why it’s OK for them to do wrong. As a cop I heard the road-way equivalent in "I was only following the flow of traffic" and "I have a really important meeting and I am a very careful driver". They need to realize what made them twist their thoughts in such a way that they moved past their values and morals to get their fix.
As part of that recovery – then with time and probably through IC – the WS finally has to stand in front of the betrayed spouse and fully acknowledge the blame and accountability for their actions.
Reconciling is a journey…
I don’t think a WS is capable of the level of self-evaluation, self-accountability, realizing the scope of the damage done and all that for weeks or even months after d-day. That’s OK… as long as there is progress and as long as they get there eventually.
Like… If your husband was to apologize NOW and was able to speak his mind with no constraints, I’m guessing he would tell you how sorry he was and that he does realize and knew all the time it was wrong, but at the end there would be a "but" and then some explanation that was really and excuse. Same scenario maybe half a year from now… that apology would end before the "but".
I think that if you two realize and understand this is a journey and that it takes time then you should easily be able to support him through the oncoming loss.
In some ways it has to be that he looks at you and feels a cold sweat break out when he realizes what he risked, and how fortunate he is that you gave him a chance to come good.
I see you two are doing MC…
Please – don’t go to MC to discover why he cheated… Has NOTHING to do with the marriage and it would allow him to hide behind his excuses. MC can be used to deal with how you communicate, when to deal with the issues due to the loss, when to deal with infidelity, hold each other accountable etc, but there is no way you will find the reason he cheated in MC.