You are still in a very overwhelming time of reconciliation. And with his work taking him away it will reasonably have a stretching effect in times where you are both doing the work.
My situation was different. But I was in charge of home and family life, while being an assistant to Mr Uxor’s work. But I was mostly separated and using a computer from home to do the work. He had a workplace affair during 60+ hour work weeks with travel.
This was ten years ago but I share some parallels with you
A couple of considerations:
1. Perspective - Even if there had NOT been a betrayal, some of the needs you have said and the needs of your spouse that you identified, still would have existed! It still would have taken the effort all marriages need during phases and progressions of work, homelife and raising a family. The pain of the betrayal is both clouding and amplifying the emotions that should be a part of this phase of life.
2. Needs vs Wants: In facing the collapse of our marriage, I established with Mr Uxor an expectation of evaluating wants vs needs. And to respect a hierarchy so that our personal needs, our marrital needs and our family needs were not neglected for many of the things that damage marriages, the spouses and the kids.
I could give you ten years of examples.
But let’s try one that did apply to my life back then:
Travling spouse requests a phone call at 11:30pm in the at home spouse’s time.
At home spouse has a day that begins at 5am. And not enough sleep will be had with meeting that call.
Traveling spouse’s unmet need is connection to home and healthy human connection.
Home spouse’s need is sleep.
Both are valid needs.
A discussion on strategies (different call time? A nap? Is this a once a week loss of sleep or every day? )
If it turns out that either need can have a strategy, it needs to be put into action for the sake of the needs of the marriage and family (including having to work to provide for the family. That should not be lost in this.)
That is need vs need with strategies and prioritizing actions.
These alternate examples would be need vs wants:
If the traveling spouse had requested a 11:30 nightly call, and home spouse says every night that is unavailable because one of the kids is old enough to babysit and at home spouse wants to go out with pals every night while spouse is gone,
Now you can see where a need for social connection and friends has been turned into a want.
Now there is a problem.
That might require a boundary.
Or if the traveling spouse will not make an earlier call time because they want to socialize with co-workers. That could be defining a want as a need. Again, that may need a boundary from the spouse at home.
I suggest consider establishing with your spouse a pattern of need vs want conversations.
We all have valid needs, our marriages and our children have valid needs, our extended families, neighbors, coworkers and communities have valid needs.
But there are a LOT of squeaky wheel gets the grease demands for wants to be met as if they are needs.
If we listen to that chatter, we get messed up evaluating and prioritizing the needs we and our spouse have right in front of us
In summary - this problem is an opportunity for you and your spouse to do what always should be done regardless of your betrayal history.
Discuss, prioritize and strategize your personal, marrital and family needs and push away the influences and noise of wants.
Last. When there is slack or extra energy for wants to be met. See, know and own it as a gift, the gravy on the meal of sustenance. Just don’t confuse it as a need just because it gave us the good feels that come with wants being met.
Hope some of this helps.
[This message edited by Uxoragain at 6:10 PM, Wednesday, June 14th]