It is so hard to find a balance when we are both trying to heal from our own childhood issues that are SO different (I have issues being vulnerable) on top of that we have the A issues, his IC gives him things to do and mine gives me things and they don't always align. I am not really in a place where I can be understanding yet, I try but it is the hardest thing I have ever done is give him understanding and compassion when I can barely get through my day. EVEN though it makes sense and I know he has a path to walk to heal, I don't think I am ready for him to walk it if it affect my mental health. I know part of OUR healing his that he has to heal too.
It's hard when you know something logically, but your lizard brain has you freaking the fuck out... btdt.
If you haven't had a chance to read The Body Keeps Score by Bessel van der Kolk, he does a great job of explaining how trauma affects the brain and how our the higher reasoning of the prefrontal cortex isn't terribly affective in dealing with our amygdala (fight, flight, freeze).
What helped me so much was learning to recognize when I'd been triggered, meaning my physiology was experiencing the influence of stress hormones. Sometimes, the triggers are really subtle and might have nothing to do with the infidelity. It seems almost like having your amygdala stuck on hyperalert, where stress hormones are released at the drop of a hat, and when it happens, your mind turns straight to the infidelity. When you've been living on that edge for months, it's like a stuck vinyl record with the needle wearing a groove into it. Your brain just keeps going there.
It takes time to sort of reprogram your brain... and it takes some effort too, to make yourself do it. Believe me, I know how hard it is. It took me a really long time to not only see the necessity of it, but to practice until I had it down. It's natural to look to the WS to soothe us when we're in R, but the real healing comes from within, when we have invested enough in ourselves to know that we'll be alright no matter what happens. At that point, the vulnerability that you've been struggling with becomes so much more manageable, because you're never giving more than you can afford to lose, even though you're giving quite a lot. When you're really full in the knowledge of your own ability to love and care for yourself, things fall into place.
To be honest with you, I don't think trust is ever what it was, but when you are full in your SELF, you realize that the person you need to trust most isn't him, it's YOU.
I was super codependent in my marriage, even though for all intents and purposes I believed myself to be an independent, modern woman. What I've discovered in the long and arduous process of R, is that I didn't want the kind of enmeshment I'd experienced before. Our kneejerk reaction is very often to try and recreate what we had, and the more we struggle for that, the further away it seems to get, right? It wasn't until I recognized that the old bond had been severed completely and that it could NOT be exactly the same again, I realized I could make that primary connection with MYSELF instead, and then, everything else would be gravy... and the gravy is GOOD.
Your WH has his own work to do in order to be a whole, healthy human, and yeah, I remember how hard it was to step back and let mine do what he had to do. Reinvesting in ourselves though makes it easier, because when we're successful, we know we've got our own back while we're taking these emotional risks. There's someone looking out for me in my relationship and in my day to day... and that person is ME.