MyandI,
I am going to tread very carefully here because there is a stop sign and I need to post this from WS perspective rather than BS perspective. That's difficult mad-hatter to mad-hatter.
I do agree with you , we should be able to vent on here because this shit is hard on both sides, so I am not here to condemn you for that. We have to get out the poison sometimes. I get it.
My reaction though comes from the similarities in our situation. I had a 2 month A, and my husband went on to have an 18 month A. There were 3 encounters in my affair, and that many or more a week in his affair.
Also, keep in mind that I feel like healing from my own affair was probably the hardest and longest thing I ever had to do in my life. I had so much shame I was carrying around from before the affair that the affair to me was the living proof that I was garbage and a very unworthy person. Getting to a place where I had rebuilt myself and finally felt deserving of love and then turning around and learning that most of the time I was working my ass off on our marriage he was having his own affair.
I also do not believe his was a revenge affair either. It was an affair. Period.
The problem with that is that it drops you back to your knees. Some of the work you thought you did on yourself isn't worth a hill of beans. I have spent a lot of time oscillating between blaming myself and then feeling furious with him.
The other aspect of this is I truly believe that people who have affairs do not believe they are wrong to their core. They believe they are wrong until they feel there is a reason it's okay for them to do it. I can say that about myself, and now I say it about him. So, it's difficult for me when I see you say this:
I'm so over her PA, I hardly think about it anymore.
Because it reinforces to me that the reason my husband feels this way is because now he has bent his integrity to suit him, so of course he is probably better now about mine. He doesn't have that thing anymore where it's something you NEVER do to someone.
So, that adds to the insecurity of it all.
The thing I find a bit disturbing is how defensive and mad you got with others here trying to help you. I can't imagine what she is getting from you when you are feeling defensive with her.
This:
Then I was irritated and said in the case of both movies I'd be the chump off working while the happily married wifey enjoys strange d*ck for a weekend.
Would send me over the edge. I can not describe the anger and hurt this would cause me if when I am trying to work my way through a trigger and that's what the person who is supposed to have my back says to me. It certainly does not build trust that's for sure.
So, where I am going with this is your reaction to her concerns and issues, while I understand them, is adding significantly to her trauma.
And, what you have to realize is that trauma is not one size fits all. People react differently to it, people can be traumatized worse by the same thing because we all have different coping mechanisms.
Why that tends to be is that we carry trauma forward in our lives until we do something with it. If she was carrying around a lot of unhealed things, it creates such a bigger hole to climb out of.
I do agree with you that your wife needs to go to IC. But, I likely think it's for different reasons than you do.
The fact your wife is just now asking about if the AP was tighter and all that other stuff tells me that something has hindered her from being able to get past the detail phase. These sorts of detailed questions were things I asked over and over and still revisit. (maybe not that exact one, but things like it)
I am going to guess it's probably one of three things causing that:
1. She was still so much in her own shame from her own affair that she didn't feel she had the right to ask those things. She may have tried to swallow your affair because I guarantee from where I sit she feels semi-responsible for your affair. I can logically tell you that my husband made his own decisions, but it's difficult sometimes not to feel like a hypocrite in my moments of anger and sheer depression of it all. It's very stifling and I think this can cause the timeline of 2-5 years of healing to be even more skewed.
2. You get so defensive that she can only get so far in each session? This is a theory not an accusation.
3. She never healed from her own affair so now she carries twice the feelings of shame and unworthiness.
Certainly, I can tell you why I believe she is so concerned the movie didn't bother you. I would feel 100 percent the same way, and actually do:
I was absolutely god-smacked by what I did. The overwhelming feelings that I was a piece of shit and life needed to change took me down and I almost didn't come back up. I see remorse with in my husband and recognize he is just in a different stage of healing. But that lack of god-smacked, being brought to his knees? It's not there (yet? It did take me almost a year after DDAY to get there so I get it doesn't all come at once) I am definitely looking hard at him, his work, his blind spots, etc. Because I think the kind of change someone who cheats has to do has to come from that rock-bottom place of "this is not who I want to be".
And, maybe those are MY issues and that's not real. But, the lack of triggering is just more evidence of that to her.
So, what I want to advise is this:
1. Become more patient. If she sees you are patient and care about her feelings it will begin to build trust. That defensiveness, and things that you say in anger is just things she is storing as proof of lack of love.
2. Bring up the affair to her. Yes, I know, I know. You are sick of hearing it. But, it goes a long way to see someone is interested in making sure you heal. I believe by her questions she has been holding them for a long time and if she feels like you are being loving and patient with her that will allow her to let it all out, and therefore let it go.
3. Decide if you really want to be married to her. If you do, then you need to find a way to have the energy to really try to understand her heart and mind.
Truly, and I can't emphasize this enough. Reconciliation is best done with communication. I do hope she will think about counseling. I wonder if she had counseling after her affair? how long between hers and yours?
The aspect that you need to understand is:
She probably hasn't healed from her affair, and then to heap your LTA on top of that, it makes it so much bigger and harder to navigate. If I had found out about my husbands affair any earlier, well, I don't know what would have happened. I am pretty sure that our chances to make it through would have gone down significantly. But, I had done so much work and still some days it's hard for me to get my head above water.
Maybe change your perspective to be less about you and more about what she needs. Just because you are over hers doesn't give her any solace. In fact, when my husband tells me that I don't even believe him.
This is going to be hard work, and you may also need IC because there is definite work you need to do on your side to be a successful rebuilder. Maybe read (or reread) "how to help your spouse heal after infidelity".
[This message edited by hikingout at 9:46 AM, February 12th (Friday)]