By asking him how he was doing, it put the ball back in his court to be vulnerable with me and he felt.
Think about this, and try to imagine how awful it feels to be in the BS' position / on the other side of the street. Many/most/all WS lack empathy (cuz if you had it, you would never have chosen to lie/betray yourself OR your spouse). Learning it ain't easy, but it is absolutely necessary (and that applies no matter what happens in your M - IOW, empathy is CRUCIAL to any relationship, and especially to trying to heal/repair one that's been faced with infidelity).
What he really wanted was to hear how I felt about hurting him and how I was going to make changes to become safe for him.
I think that's true for most/all BS. And we need it to be more than "just" words. IOW, you need to actually DO what you commit to doing. So if you are saying to your BS "I will increase my communication/vulnerability and engage in total honesty" and don't follow through, we often see it as just ANOTHER broken promise on top of a mountain of broken promises.
If you aren't able to follow through - then don't make the promise to begin with. And this ties into my prior post - if you are doing bc you SHOULD do it FOR them, then there is higher risk of not doing the follow through... if it's framed as something you are doing because you WANT to change YOURSELF, folks are more likely to step out of the comfort zone.
Given this was your first post, I am assuming you've read "How to Help Your Spouse Heal From Your Affair" by Linda MacDonald. I would say that is a "must read" for any WS or BS. It's short, takes less than an afternoon to read, and is a pretty good outline/roadmap of the work the WS needs to do to start their healing. If finances are an issue, I'm told it's available in PDF online for free. TBH, I think it's a book that a new WS should be re-reading or at least referring to often, esp during year 1, as a sort of 'touchstone' as to their progress and where they are faltering.
You don't give many details - about your A, your dday (esp how long ago & whether you were busted or confessed), the decision to go to "counseling together", etc. that will help others (esp WS who WILL respond soon enough) share their collective wisdom.
Coming from the BS perspective, the communication piece was problematic from day 1, but the bigger issues I faced were predominantly the trauma and trying to manage my trauma response. MC - and the concept of "fairness" that many MC work with - was about the worst possible place for ME in the weeks/months after dday.
ETA:
And I wanted to echo wiseoldfool's comments. It may have been "how to help your spouse heal" or Shirly Glass' "Not Just Friends" (another very insightful book on infidelity) that talks about the BS feeling as if they must shoulder the pain all alone bc their WS will not raise the infidelity w/o prompting or unless the BS is experiencing a trigger or mind movie. For me, it remains another large injustice on top of the long list of injustice that was put upon my shoulders by my WH's unilateral decision to cheat. Can you imagine adding weight to the already EXTREMELY burdened shoulders your BS is carrying just from the knowledge of the infidelity?
In some ways, that inability is WORSE than the A itself (and there's a ton of folks here on SI who will say that it's often not the A that ends the M, but the WS not stepping up and doing EVERYTHING they can to heal/repair/change that kills it.. and that 'everything' starts with stepping outside your comfort zone).
Godspeed.
[This message edited by gmc94 at 11:01 AM, March 7th, 2021 (Sunday)]