Hi TE, sorry you're in in it. I'm Mindjob, a near 50 y/o Gen-Xer, married 25 years ago, and 2 sons, 1 teen. I handled the aftermath of my wife's adultery with a church friend much like you did and are, and I learned a few things (here on SI and from my own observations). You have an excellent sense of assessment, come up with plans and follow through, list out your goals and desires, and seem entirely competent and willing to captain your own ship. These are all very, very good traits and characteristics, and it gratifies me immensely (and makes me slightly jealous in retrospect) to see you navigating these new waters with a firm grasp on the core skills you'll need to...well I don't think the word "thrive" is the right word, but I think "solidly plant your feet on the holyshitboat and steer with a clear eye" will serve nicely.
You have golden, lovely advice from some of my favorite people here on SI. I still regularly quote stuff I have learned from sissoon and I regard him as one of the elder statesmen that advised me on righting my own ship of state. There are others, but point being, I won't give you specific tactical or early-storm survival advice here, but rather share a few differences in the mindset(s) I ended up with. You seem to be handling the situation in a similar fashion to the way I did, so I want to share a few items that I saw as pitfalls in the early going. Please keep in mind that nothing anyone writes here is gospel, and everything on SI (including my input) is best grazed at for what is most useful to you.
In no particular order:
1) The marriage is dead. She killed it, and it will never return.
You've already started to get a good hold on this, but it's a critical point, so I'll reinforce it, here.
This concept was really hard for me. I, too, wanted to "save" the marriage, but quickly realized that this sentiment was actually holding me back from saying and doing what I needed to do. In some cases, holding on to the corpse of the marriage, the fading innocence and beauty of it, enabled my recently-adulterous, not-yet-changed WW manipulate me -- which is an entirely unacceptable situation, post-A and in marriage generally.
We use the word "Reconciliation" but what we're really doing is building an entirely new marriage from scratch. This has to be done in complete truth and authenticity, with competence and awareness from both parties.
And...here's the hard part...the old marriage has to die completely. It has to be mourned, eulogized, put on a longboat, pushed out to sea, and set ablaze with flaming arrows whilst you look on with manly tears trickling unimpeded down your impassive face.
The new marriage you build doesn't start forming until bothpartners are worthy and willing to build it in skill and demonstrated commitment. As a man, you can and should be leading this process (my Judeo-Christian predilection, feel free to discard if it offends). But you should never drive this process. A good marriage is two people standing together and contributing 100% of what they have to offer. I trust you will immediately pick up on the value and differences between leading vs driving, and move to the 2nd point, which is closely related to the first.
2) You are dead. She killed you, and you will never return.
What on earth do you mean by that, Mindjob? Well, that's one of the reasons I picked the name Mindjob. This was likewise one of the hardest things to wrap my mind around. But, accepting this fact and its implications ended up being one of the most valuable, far-reaching tools in the belt, both in the short term, and long term.
-In the short term: Understanding that my old self has actually been violently ejected from this mortal coil puts a lot of my ongoing suffering into context. In the aftermath when I was randomly bursting into tears or raging by smashing a pile of branches with a shovel, my WW actually said she felt like she was "being punished" (which I now know is a flag for recognizing how selfish and self-centered a wayward is pre-changes. I would tell her "no, this is just me paying interest on the loan you took out" and leave it at that. (It's her responsibility to adjust to the new situation, and her responsibilities are not my responsibility. I'm curious about them, and they're important to me, but she must be the one to do them (and choosing to NOT pursue her responsibility is a clear decision that she's not choosing you and the new marriage; something to keep in mind.
I would also tell her these are the death throes of the old Mindjob that she poisoned and killed. She might be sad at that, but it's just the truth, and seeing how she deals with it is also enlightening. It helps put the landscape in context and also makes sure she has to face the full implications of what she's done without beating her over the head with them -- mostly.
This concept also helps short-term with the irritating phrase "I don't want to hurt you anymore" (resisting sharing details of the adultery). My response to this was: "You can't hurt me anymore. Not because you are unimportant, but because you've hurt me the most you possibly can short of actually injuring and physically killing me. But that's almost beside the point - the fact that you resist communicating doesn't fill me with confidence in you." (It's not a threat, it's just a statement of fact which she really should take into consideration, and gives you information about her state of being and skill levels.)
-In the long term: The old you dies off and the new guy grows into his place. This is inevitable and unavoidable. The concept of "that's just who I am" fades (or burns) into irrelevance in the death of the old self and growth of the new one. I'm not trying to scare you here, just inform you it WILL happen, and the more you are aware of the process and fair to yourself, the less you'll resist it and the more you just kind of find out what the new guy is like.
The new guy is different from the old guy. He's more authentic, he's more wise and informed. Maybe he's a lot less naive and relentlessly idealistic. He remembers and misses that innocence, but he knows the futility of trying to recapture a thing that is gone beyond recovery. He knows exactly what he wants, exactly what he needs, he has a plan, the ability to plan, and a ton of experience implementing those plans. He isn't afraid to hold himself and everyone around him to account for their responsibilities and is fearless in cutting rot out of his life, because he knows he will be fine even regrowing from scratch. He doesn't have "resilience" like he used, to, no. That word carries a brittleness that might shatter, and everyone are this new guy knows for damn sure that he doesn't shatter under pressure. He takes whatever comes his way and bends it to his unshakeable will. He's not as nice as the old guy, but he kind of enjoys that too, even as he acknowledges he leans into it a bit hard sometimes, just for fun.
Now...I'm not saying this image WILL be you, I'm just putting it up as possible example of what it looks like to grow into something you weren't before, and why that's ok (and even something to look forward to). Point being, you will change, sometimes not for the better, and that's ok. Be fair to yourself and every aspect of the new guy. You still have the ability to shape yourself, but pay attention to what is clay and what is stone.
3) Fragility is avoidance.
Your WW, like mine (was), apparently falls to pieces when faced with accountability and difficult conversations. Mentioning anything meaningful devolves her into the scared little girl that childhood and early family life wrecked.
I'll just say it: stop giving a shit about it. You must NOT be a jerk, or be mean, or deliberately hurtful. This situation is not license to abuse. However, if she can avoid facing the awful things she's done and the effects that her inaction continues to have, that's exactly what she's going to do. And if falling apart every time you mention it gives her an out because you back off, rather than (patiently but firmly) requiring her to face it and put in the work, she's going to use it every single time.
You don't need to be indifferent to her issues, but you do need to insist on her handling them. Until she does, she won't be any kind of worthy to build that new marriage we talked about above. I think I told my WW something like "I am building a better life and circumstances. I dearly want you to be a part of it. But unless you join in my new life with confidence, clarity, regard and respect, I will cut you from the branch and watch you fall. Don't confuse my love for weakness, and don't think my love compels me to do anything one way or another."
Again, not that we should deliberately crash around wrecking things (much) but that no situation is an excuse or reason to avoid putting in the work and doing the right thing. You can help with that accountability, but don't put in any work that others are obligated to do.
4) Leaving is always an option.
From now to the end of time. You will never, EVER go wrong by remembering this. It is always ok for you to leave. It's not always ideal (i.e. children do better in stable nuclear homes). But it's always okay. Your WW should always be completely aware of this. You should not threaten her with it every time you turn around and should NEVER be used as a lever to get what you want. But it absolutely MUST be present and understood by both of you.
I actually filled out divorce papers at one point. My WW caught wind of it and descended into hysterics. She said "I thought you wanted to build a new marriage?!" I asked "Have I informed you otherwise?" She: "No, but then what are those for?" pointing at the D papers. Me: "In case I ever need them, we'll have a leg up on the process."
She doesn't like it. Hell, I don't like it. But it's an option.
5) When it comes to improving oneself or working to be and do better: dragging your feet or refusing to choose IS a choice and it's not choosing your spouse and marriage.
It doesn't exactly inspire confidence in one's worthiness as a long-term partner.
You should tell her this. Nice and calm, just be dispassionately curious about what she does and how she responds. You'll make it through, whatever it is she decides.
This is especially important because of what you said about her mindset here:
- She says she is "sorry she hurt me", but has never said "the affair was wrong, and I will never do it again". The closest I have gotten from her is "I will never have another affair because it has been so painful leaving my affair partner and seeing you in pain"
This is utterly unacceptable. Why?
a) It is unconscionable to have this kind of moral incorrectness around your children. They MUST learn that betrayal and inflicting pain to human beings is, in fact, wrong. It's not just unpleasant. It's not just sub-ideal. It's wrong. Ask her if she thinks it would be "just painful" to see her children being deliberately subjected to soul-shattering harm and permanent emotional damage.
b) If the adultery isn't wrong, why did they hide it? Why is the whole thing mired in deception and deceit? Are these things good? The answer is, of course, they ARE wrong. This is one of the oldest, most ubiquitously understood sins that human beings commit, so much so that adulterers are still killed with rocks and swords in some parts of the world. And at some level, she already knows it's wrong, which is why she buried the whole thing (and still trying to bury it) like the cat turd it is.
Resolve to cut this kind of immorality out of your life, for your sake and for the sake of your children. If she's still holding on to it when you cut it out of your life, let her fall with it.
6) Problems must be dealt with now.
The handling of an issue does not improve with time. If it is not addressed it just festers out of site and compounds into something far worse. You can probably feel the long-term effects of unresolved issues from childhood as physical rot on the inside, if you have them. If you are well-adjusted, you (and she) will acquire health problems from not dealing with these issues now. Our brains try to shy away from the unpleasant sensations, because we instinctively try to avoid harm. But like gold is purified by heat, separating the dross from the metal so they can be scooped out, so too are we improved by dealing with unpleasant problems and ejecting them from our lives.
Accept nothing less. It gets far, far easier and natural to do this the more experience you both have doing it.
7) Separate the discussions.
There is no excuse for adultery. None. She is absolutely trying to justify her shit decisions with her grievances and this is utterly inadmissible. She needs to own up to the fact that her decisions were crappy. Until she's done so, there's no real recovery or possibility of reconciliation.
She'll never be honest about this process, at least not at the beginning. This is a skill that every wayward has to develop, and it's usually a long, hard haul for them to get there. Hold her to account as much as you care to, and be clear about your willingness to cut her loose if she can't firm up her ability to properly address individual situations.
During one of my WW's accusatory meltdowns I told her "You know, I'm actually all out of guilt. Since we've addressed this situation already, I can't figure out why you're bringing it up, other than to try and get one over on me. Trying to assert this kind of control over any relationship will kill it. If you want something from me, ask. And find better ways to motivate me."
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I'm a trucker, just got a load, so I'm off to New Orleans. I hope sharing what worked for me helps you in some way. You already seem to have a good handle on yourself. Take your time, be fair to yourself, and accept nothing less than the ideal from her. The time she has to do so is entirely up to you, and whatever decision you come up with in that regard will be the correct one. Some of those paths have a lower statistical chance of regret, but that's also for you to decide.
Take care;
-Mindjob