I am going to go against the grain here and tell you to do a few things IMMEDIATELY, one of which is dropping out AS A LAST RESORT. As a former law student, PhD student, Masters student, and undergrad student (2 undergrad degrees and 5 degrees total) I have an ungodly amount of experience with going to school (and quite a lot of experience in fucking it up as well - most of my regrets in life, even post-infidelity relate to how difficult I made my career path due to bad management of my education). Sadly I also have the infidelity credentials to give you some advice.
First the school advice:
1) Contact admissions and or a counselor there (school counselor not someone on the mental health side of things) RIGHT NOW and explain to them what is happening and see if they will let you defer for a semester. When I was in law school we had someone going through something similar and the school was very willing to let them defer. When my father had a horrible accident when I was in grad school I was also allowed to defer (as it turns out I ended up moving so I never started the program) but they were very helpful. If you get someone who says no, keep calling, writing emails to whoever you can right now. Tell them you are having a mental health crisis or whatever you need, but talk to someone there - you may be surprised at what you find they will allow you to do. Also take a look at your course catalog which usually will have deferment spelled out in it - there may be a rule you are not aware of that allows you to defer. Again, DO THIS RIGHT NOW.
The problem with the program is that everything builds on itself and the program gets more intense. Then the last semester is the worst and demands every ounce of my time and energy. If I just half-ass the courses, it's going to be more and more difficult.
2) If not, is there a way you can reduce to part time - that may give you less to handle, depending on your graduate program it may or may not be an option. For my graduate degree, part time would have been okay for me (maybe) in dealing with the whole infidelity mess. Law school part time would have been a disaster. Only you know if your degree program is something where part time, if possible, may be a workable option.
3) If, after you exhaust the above options, and have no choice - withdraw/drop out IF your post-graduate career field will rely heavily on your GPA/grades. Example: law school and obtaining a legal job post-graduation in the US is heavily focused on your GPA and which school you attended in law school - (the better the GPA/school the more doors are open) and depending on the legal job you want, without the right waving paper, some jobs are simply out of reach unless you have a great inside connection - sometimes even years after you graduate employers will still ask (totally ridiculous but true). The career options post a masters in accounting isn't nearly as GPA/where you went to school-centric, so not having a perfect school resume isn't nearly the big deal law school grades were. If you want to move into academics (as in non-elementary/high school) then grades are a must.
Basically, try to defer right now if you can or go PT if you think you can handle it. IMO you do not need to f-up your resume if you can't focus.
Here's the infidelity example:
I took my dream job that I had worked years to obtain, and had d-day 2 the first day of my job. I had fantastic references, the job was close to our house, and I had been working in contract positions all over the country for several years to get the experience I needed to get it - and there was only about 6 positions that I wanted in my whole state, and I managed to get one of them! Needless to say I f-ed it all up post d-day 2. I stuck it out, but it was miserable, my job performance was NOT good, and I left at the end of 2 years. My job was one of those jobs where there was no way I could leave it off my resume, and there was little chance that my "dream job" boss wouldn't be called for a reference, and I desperately wanted to continue in this very very niche field where not everyone across the country knew each other but they all work for the same "company" so reference checking was likely. My boss indicated to me when I was looking for work the two months before I left, that it would be better if people didn't call him for a reference because he thought I was a really nice person, but he wasn't going to lie. In other words, my job performance was terrible, I had told him about the infidelity but he believed that should not have affected my performance for so long (it got better but it was pretty awful that first year-year and a half), and to avoid having people call him for a reference. I got lucky - COVID lockdown happened (which in my career field lasted until late 2021) and I was offered a similar temporary position and they didn't call my boss because they knew one of my former bosses who thought I was fantastic. It was very lucky - as I could have easily ruined the career path I wanted (and indeed I did have several rejections take place after interviews that went really well - one even said as we were finishing up "so I have to go through the whole references-formality thing and then I'll be calling you to get a start time in place etc" - and then several days later I got the thanks but no thanks email).
The lesson is, you know your post-grad career field so you will know better than I what the damage a bad semester can do. For the accounting path, I think I may have been able to get through part time. For law school I would have been toast and wrecked everything.
Interestingly when I told my dream job boss about the infidelity, he was very sympathetic. He said something very similar to this to me (just substitute program for job):
Start your program and see if you can not find some relief in your work!
I appreciated the vote of confidence from my boss and I believed it would happen for a bit, but for me, I was too distracted, too unable to focus, and I made a total miserable mess of it . I spent more time parked on a side street away from my work on breaks sobbing and crying and checking messages and obsessing than I did focusing. I will admit, during those years I spent a LOT of time sitting in my office on this very site - which kept me alive, but certainly didn't help my work product.
What I can tell you is that for me, teaching my classes and my regular service work on campus with committees and university governance kept me sane. It was the only time I did not think about the betrayal, rerun all the many interactions with the AP in our home, et cetera.
This quote above may be the case for you - It was not for me. That being said I think had I been able to work part time I may have been able to pull it off. IDK - my work was riddled with mistakes that I normally would never make, and I was very slow to learn the new aspects of my position, which again, never has before or since been a problem.
I do recommend getting out of there (your house with WS - that area) - which is why I still think the PT option may be better for you if it is available. Make that call to your school now and talk about OPTIONS.
[This message edited by ThisIsSoLonely at 7:37 PM, Tuesday, August 22nd]