Hi!
Yes, I felt the same.
Entitlement was a big one. Unearthing the deeper truths in that takes time to unwind because it seems like as you work on your self awareness and mindfulness over your motivations and choices it’s just epiphany after epiphany.
So I think early on I felt entitled because I worked so hard and got so little in return. But as I became more aware of myself, I realized that I created that narrative of a martyr and so many things I did were unneccessary. Instead of blaming my husband or being married, I had to start to take accountability over my own resentments and my inaction in making the changes that were needed.
From there, I started to construct a life that I was happier in. That meant having more disciples, learning to confront my problems, ask for what I wanted.
So to me, the work of whys of the affair really about mindfulness. I would often ask myself why I was doing things. I found a lot of times the answer was to try and seem like a good person or a person worthy of love. I had to change my thought process and do things that were more authentically motivated. Like if I do something nice for my husband, it’s not transactional. I am not expecting points or praise, I genuinely want to do something that makes his day brighter. Before it would be moreso that we could both see me as a good wife and therefore I was earning the love I wanted.
So I guess what I am trying to describe is being present, aware, challenging yourself to be curious about why you think or do the things you do.
I also think it’s about embracing there are major flaws in our character. I had integrity until it was inconvenient for the highs I wanted to chase in the affair. Practicing better decisions around those flaws builds a new recent history. And the more you do that the better it will feel to you.
It’s often about boundaries too. Some of us have to push others boundaries so they will prove they love us. Or some are like me, I had poor boundaries over making sure I was taking care of what I wanted instead of always trying to people please and get people to like me based on inauthentic actions. I obviously had bad boundaries to get myself into an affair and I had to start being mindful of those as well. The driving force was I didn’t self validate and looked for external validation wherever I could find it. Not just in an affair but through different aspects of my life.
So if you have been following along, the whys are not that complicated. I was selfish & entitled and had low integrity. It was an immediate way to feel good, rather than doing the harder job of feeling good from conducting my life in a way that made me genuinely happy or that I could be proud of.
The reasons the whys are important is because it takes you down the path of being self aware and changing the more granular stuff. Therapy was help for me on that because we traced many of my coping mechanisms, character flaws, and perceptions were formed to earlier situations that I used them to survive. I needed to see that and how they no longer served me so that I could see what I was doing in the moment and make different thoughts or choices instead.
Big picture: you are trying to learn to reach for healthier things that make you feel good when you are down. Form a life you don’t have to use escapism to survive.
You are ultimately trying to reconcile yourself to become someone you love, respect, have compassion for, advocate for, and hold space for. When you can do that for yourself, you can do it for others in your life. And it really boils down to taking note of anything at all that led you down this destructive path and being mindful of those patterns so that you can bend them into something healthier.
But it’s normal that you are starting with the outer layer of that onion. Keep peeling. Make lists. Journal. Pay attention to your thought process. Most ws are emotionally immature to a certain degree, and that maturity doesn’t come overnight.
[This message edited by hikingout at 5:37 AM, Thursday, January 25th]