So in the slapping example, I can see where you are going with it.
Generally speaking, I did not feel obligated at all to stay in my marriage even though I cheated. Forget that he did it. Let’s look at that isolated. Yes, I genuinely regret what I did, and I have deep remorse for what I did to him. But that did not bind me to him. The process of that decision gets forged in steel when you truly put all the good, bad, ugly in the table and truly make decisions about what you want moving forward and have a deep sense of why.
My whys were not my remorse or need to make things right. My whys were that he has been my best friend, we share sensibilities, we have grown a beautiful family that only the two of us will fully appreciate, we share a s history, we are sexually compatible, we are compatible in lots of other ways. And though it got ragged and torn the love we have for each other is still very much there and deeper than ever. I could go on.
If he had done it first those things would still be true.
So if I tried to use your slap analogy - If I had done the slap first, I would have understood the emotions he felt when he slapped. But because we didn’t like what happened we would need to look at root cause and work on that for it to be truly resolved.
I guess it boils down to- in life there are lots of things we do not have compassion for, until we go through them. My middle kid criticized my older kid on some of her parenting choices. Now my middle kid is a parent and now understands how hard it is and now identifies with the older one.
So I guess what I am trying to say is while I hate what I did I still needed to accept it and show myself compassion in order to heal. So when he did it, I simply understood it better and while I still had to go through the pain of it, I had that same compassion to give. I don’t think it’s as simple as an eye for an eye, or remorse, it’s more I understood it better than had I not done it.
Our relationship with ourself and our experience always mirrors back to our relationship with others.
But had he done it first, I would not have had that. It would have been harder for him to get me to see what happened and harder for me to identify with it. It would have just taken longer. But the variables about staying together (assuming there had been remorse) would be the same. That’s why I am fairly certain I would have chosen R, absent of knowing any variables involved.
So the only advantage one has in understanding another is the degree to which they experienced it. Do I feel terrible to be the one who started it? Yes absolutely. But I do not feel it obligates me. The assessment of staying married should never be about owing someone. Be there because you want to be there because you have true reasons. Otherwise that’s just staying married and I think for a lot of people that’s going to run out gas. The people who are happy in their new marriage after infidelity came to many understandings about what they wanted out of a marriage, out of themselves, and they have truly designed a deeper more satisfying relationship with themselves and their partner.
That’s why I stayed as both the ws and the bs. Remorse really doesn’t play into it, other than it’s a fundamental requirement for the equation to work. The person needs to understand the damage they caused, understand the hundreds of decisions they made were wrong, and fix the things that made it possible. That’s the purpose of remorse. It is not tied to the outcome of the marriage. Even if I had gotten divorced the remorse would always be there.
I think the part you see that you are trying to put your finger on when the ws becomes a bs is we have experienced it. We know what it is. An affair is not a totally blissful experience, it’s a complicated experience with very deep pitfalls. Did I get high? And did it feel good? Yes. But escapism is a mask for the river of turmoil that roared underneath. You can’t understand it until you do it. Or how much you hate yourself afterwards. Or the struggle to calm the shame and find your way back to loving yourself.
Which leads me to your questions about validation.
So bottom line of what sissoon is saying is that the ws can’t heal the bs just by showing them all the love and adoration. Convincing my husband of my love and commitment was very much needed to heal the marriage. But that’s not what heal d him. He had to work through that himself. All the past trauma and insecurities I made raw from the affair were always there underneath, the affair just brought them to a crisis mode. And loving himself is more important than loving me. The person you are in a romantic relationship with could come and go? You have to shore up what would remain.
Example- as the ws the reason I was starved for connection going into my affair is I didn’t feel worthy to receive it. As I mentioned before, our relationship with ourselves is reflected back in our relationship with others.
If we use other people to prop that up, then all that happens is we need more and more of it to keep it at a good level.
So as the bs is we look at what our ws is giving, and that’s what we are basing how we see ourselves then the expectations of what the ws shows you is going to need to escalate for it to have the same effect. It’s empty without knowing your worth.
What healing requires is to say "I will be okay without them". Then set out on a journey to make your own happiness, to appreciate yourself, to love yourself. To make your words kinder and more nurturing towards yourself. To see your value as an individual.
It’s at this point the relationship is a nice complement to your life. Something to enjoy and appreciate. And if they won’t step up to the plate and be the person you need, you will naturally shed them. I am not saying that process won’t come with pain. But the pain of not doing it will become greater than the pain to make the change.
This is why these arguments about artificial ways of feeling better like having an RA are not what is truly helpful to the bs. First and foremost, it continues the narrative that someone else needs to make you feel better, which is impossible. And secondly, both the ws and the bs need to go through that process in order to have a marriage that feels like it’s worth staying in after such a catastrophic and tragic event as infidelity.
So while sissoon’s statement feels strict, I agree with it. It’s a statement about individual healing. I do think everyone enjoys validation and it’s something that adds joy to our experience. We just can’t have the validation others give us as our main nutrition source for our self esteem.
In fact, think about the times that you were down or depressed and others tried to cheer you up or said nice things to you. They didn’t resonate as strongly as when you felt good about yourself and agreed with what they were saying.
To heal the relationship that it does not take the onus off the ws to make amends and to become a safe partner.
A remorseful ws that does this will appreciate you and the marriage above anything else. I strive to do something good for my husband every single day. Not always elaborate but it could be do something in his burdened to do list without being asked, make his favorite foods, say sexy or loving things to him, kiss him goodbye and hello, initiate sex and give him some good loving. He does the same for me.
Appreciation comes with the investment and effort you put into it. I also do nice things for me, keep connected with myself and what I want. I put my oxygen mask on first so to speak. If you live yourself you have it to give. If you are kind to yourself you will be kind to others. If you respect yourself you will respect others. Everything flows from our relationship with ourselves. If we look for other people to fill hole, the hole will only grow deeper. And that’s how I cheated. That’s how my husband cheated. That’s why I think Sissoon and chamomile tea are some of the wisest cats around. I would add a lot more names to that but I am afraid I would miss someone. There are a lot of people here that understand that concept.
[This message edited by hikingout at 4:34 PM, Saturday, February 8th]