I’m sorry you’re struggling. If it helps, I think what you are "stuck on" right now is totally normal and reasonable and rational. I also think that at around 5-6 months out, you’re right where you need to be in terms of processing/healing. That’s when I hit the anger stage. I had moved beyond the fear of losing my husband and everything I knew about my life, and my sense of injustice about A and the shit sandwich my husband’s actions had dealt for me was …acute (to say the least ).
I don’t know if there is one thing I, or anyone else, can say that will every make anything he did feel okay or just to you, and so I wont try. The fact that you’re feeling this way isn’t because of some deficit in your pride or ego. I don’t think your goal right now should be to swallow it or try to convince yourself that you should feel or think otherwise. It *IS* unjust and awful, and you should feel ENTITLED to your outrage about this. Sit with that for a bit and mourn how shitty it is and be morally outraged that the person who promised to love, honour, and respect you, not only caused this but had a good time while doing it.
Him doing the work now doesn’t cancel out what he did. Him feeling awful about it now, certainly doesn’t mean you can't be mad it happened. Nothing he does or say will ever make what happened acceptable. Full stop. Do not swallow or push down your feelings on this, or try to justify it, to make him or anyone else more comfortable. Anger can be toxic and obviously you don’t want to get stuck in the anger/outrage stage FOREVER (don’t worry, you are FAR from that right now), but it can also be productive and motivating and empowering. Harness your outrage – and you SHOULD be outraged - to ensure that you accept nothing less than every single thing you deserve going forward.
I think the only way past this was through it. Trying NOT to feel it, wont make it go away. Repressed or unprocessed anger leads to resentment, and in the long-term, resentment is TOXIC and will eat away at you and your health, happiness, well-beings and your relationships with others. I don’t want that for you. I actually ENCOURAGE you to talk to your IC about it, so you can work on ways to face it head on and fully process it. There is nothing crazy about feeling angry about something that is unacceptable. "Getting over it" now or ever should not be your goal right now, or ever. Do not feel guilty for those feelings, acknowledge them. Eventually you will get to a point where the thought of it doesn't make your blood boil, but that's probably not going to happen anytime soon.
Things I tried to remember as I processed my anger (keeping in mind that none of this made anything less awful or okay or acceptable, it just helped me put it into prospective and stop catastrophizing):
-I would rather hear that he enjoyed it because of course he did. If he was telling me otherwise, I wouldn’t believe it and I’d be furious that he was lying. I can work with someone who did something awful, who is being honest about it, owns it, and works on never allowing his brain to justify that again. I cannot work with a lying, self-protective asshole who is continuing to put his instinct to self-protect above my need for honesty, truth, and security.
-Just because he’s being honest, doesn’t make what he’s saying okay, and doesn’t mean I don’t get to react to it.
-I have enjoyed touching, and flirting, and sex, and the excitement of ‘newness’ with other people in the past. I have felt that rush. That rush is not about the person, it's about how *I* feel. I wouldn’t cheat, but I am readily capable of finding other people attractive and I can absolutely imagine enjoying the feelings that would come from doing those things with someone new, the same way I can derive enjoyment out of fantasies that do not involve my spouse. Those things are objectively fun and enjoyable. Being able to enjoy that does not detract from how I feel about my spouse.
-The fact that he gave the OW compliments, does not mean the compliments he gives me are not true or genuine. The fact that I couldn’t hear them without thinking of the OW didn’t mean that he was thinking of the OW, or didn't mean them.
- I'm fucking awesome. I am fucking awesome whether he thinks so or not. If he fails to notice or appreciate that, that's his problem, not mine.
I am trying to re frame things and positive self talk, he builds me up through his actions and words but I keep going back to "He had his hands all over her and loved it"
Gently, I'm glad you're being kind to yourself. It's good he's doing his best to make you feel appreciated and cherished......BUT you should be building yourself up. Your worth, beauty, value, intelligence, humour, etc etc is not dictated by his beliefs, or whether he notices it. All of that exists independent of him and what he chooses to focus on. Your value is yours - it has nothing to do with her. If you give him too much power over your self esteem, you are also giving him the ability to destroy it. The goal should be to knowing all those things about yourself independent of how he feels about you.
You are the best, finest steak in the world*. The fact that he decided to scarf down some cheap ass fast food burger when he knew he had steak at home, doesn't change the value of the steak. We all know that steak is objectively the better cut of meat. The fact that he enjoyed the burger at the time, doesn't make the steak any less delicious. That was always true, regardless of the fact that he now has the shits and his tummy hurts.
*Sorry for comparing you to a piece of meat!
[This message edited by emergent8 at 7:17 PM, Thursday, March 28th]