hi Ashamedandhopeless, There were times during recovery that my husband engaged in activities that I did not think were a good idea in the long term (though they did not cause direct damage to me or other people, like overworking or being tighter with finances than was necessary). At first I told him what I thought - this level of work is not a good idea, you are not spending time with the kids, etc - but then I decided he needed to work things out for himself and decide for himself that it wasn't the life he wanted to lead. I think that might be a good idea in this case. You can set your boundary of not participating yourself, saying I have learned the hard way what I want from relationships. Infidelity is NEVER a good choice, but he might need to learn that for himself.
Now I will give an extremely lowbrow comparison that I have been chewing over.
One of my young adult daughters watches Love Island. She's smart, sophisticated, accomplished etc (my silly pride makes me add that caveat) but she loves watching it with her friends and roommates, commenting on the decisions people make and voting in the polls. She's been home for a week before leaving abroad for a few months, so I have been watching it with her. There's an episode almost every night (!) I assume you don't watch the show, because anyone raw to infidelity will be revolted, so I will summarize. A bunch of young people are dumped on a tropical island in Fiji for several weeks, and their only job is to look hot, "explore connections," avoid looking like a douche while "exploring connections," eventually couple up, and then some couple gets voted the winners. Like any other reality show, the producers throw situations at the participants to create drama. At one point, there were (I think) six couples, and they took all the men and put them in a different place with six new women, and added a bunch of men to the women left behind. After a few days, there was a decision to make: would each of the original couple choose to stay together, or would they choose the new person they had been getting to know? Each individual made this choice in isolation, without knowing what the other person would choose, and they had been fed all sorts of photos and videos of their other person interacting with the new person. If you are still reading this nonsense, be patient, it is getting somewhere. (btw I HIGHLY recommend NOT watching Love Island unless you are bonding with your young adult daughter on her terms. It is foul. But there are things within the foulness that are worth saving, as the Christian God well understood).
When the decision happened, there were two couples who stood out to me. KC (m) and Aniya (f) had been a couple by default - they were kind of the leftovers of the initial coupling decisions - but they had spent a few weeks working at building some kind of relationships. But then KC spent time with a new woman (TiTi) who he instantly connected with. He did and said some hurtful things (not aware the camera was rolling -
) and when the denoumente came, Aniya was ANGRY. She attacked, she yelled, she got her friends to yell, she cried but it was not tears of pain but of humiliation and the drama Oh My Goodness the drama! the producers must have loved it. God help KC, they lingered on this horrible drama and milked it for parts of three episodes.
Another couple was also tested. Trinity (f) and Bryce (m) were also put together by default - they did not initially choose each other. And they were not each other's types. I think they each mentioned at one point they don't usually or had never dated outside of their own race, so that was new. Their senses of humor were different, but it worked - they were always laughing together. When they were separated, Bryce did what he was expected to do on the show - "explore a connection" with a new girl - but halfheartedly, all the while pining for Trinity, staring across the lagoon to where she was with the new man, wondering what was happening. Trinity also "explored a connection" with the new man, and she did it a little more enthusiastically, including kissing that was not required by a challenge (in the morality of the show, kissing during a challenge is OK if you keep your hands in a respectful place e.g. not on their butt, but kissing outside of a challenge is considered disrespectful if you are in a sincere relationship). So Trinity not only kissed outside of a challenge, but did it in a photo booth, wanting to capture a moment to remember with the new man! After that she seemed to reconsider, backed way off and separated herself from the new man, telling him clearly that he was not the one and she wanted Bryce. But all Bryce knew was the photos from the photo booth. When the will-she-or-won't-she-choose-me happened, his joy that she chose him was so sincere, so sweet, and so heartfelt. He mentioned in passing that it was painful that she had kissed the other man in the photo booth, and his pain was so sincere, so genuine and so sad, that I actually teared up. And her response was not defensiveness, not justification (I was supposed to be exploring!), not anger, not looking to her friends for support, but just downcast eyes, in pain that she had caused pain. I'm telling you, it was quite a moment. It is sticking with me and I think will stick with me for a long time. But then the moment past, they were reunited, and their joy was so full that poor producers had to move on quickly because there was nothing to gawk at. My daughter looked at me and said, they will probably win, which gives me hope for the Love Island audience.
The point, if you are still with me, is that sitting with pain (the pain of the person who was hurt, which in this case is both your husband and you, AND the pain of the person who did the hurting) and staying with what you want despite humiliation and rejection, is the best path toward sincerity, authenticity, love, and a healthy relationship. It's not guaranteed but it's the best thing you can do. My advice would be - don't fight his wanting to experience what it feels like to be a shit person, but also don't condone it. Just say, I know what I want. I learned it the awful way. I want a relationship with you and only you. It's painful to me that I caused you to not want that, but I'm here when you decide what kind of life you want to live. And for you - if this is a marriage you want to keep - learn how to live with sorrow, with pain, with rejection and humiliation, show and share that pain with him but also be able to function - not looking for him to rescue you but for him to take responsibility for the pain by stopping what he is doing to cause it and expressing remorse - until he decides to be a better self.
[This message edited by Pippin at 3:24 PM, Thursday, July 2nd]