Hi Webbit,
Welcome to SI, I’m sorry you find yourself here, but am glad you found us.
You’ve asked multiple questions.
Like does one affair really change the person you originally fell in love with and married or did they change over the course of time and at the moment of the affair are the worst version of themselves? And why can’t they with work redeem themselves and be better?
I don’t think there is one answer to this question that can be uniformly applied. Some people truly believe their spouse was faultless pre-A and the A has them questioning if they ever knew the person at all. Others may have a sense of who their spouse was prior, but maybe didn’t appreciate the depth of the dysfunction. Regardless, most of us are pretty surprised that the person we pledged our fidelity to, was capable of this level of deceit.
I think that for most Waywards, the A does reveal some truth about who they actually are as a person. While a lot of Waywards act entirely out of character when they are in the A, I wouldn’t say that it was the A that caused it, in many cases, it was something that was present, at least in part beforehand that the A revealed.
There are people who will disagree with me, but I think most people are redeemable. That is not to say that most will do the work to make them worthy of that redemption, just that it is possible. Even if they do that work, it does not mean that they are owed a second chance.
And does an affair honestly end the marriage you loved or can you get over the event and be as happy as it once was albeit with a new piece of history.
Again, I think the answer to this is going to depend on who you ask. I am happily reconciled with my spouse, so take my response with that in mind. I think when a lot of people ask this question they are hoping for things to go back to the good old days, the moments before you learned of the A and your life changed entirely. So you can continue on the trajectory you thought you were on before all of this. That isn’t possible. You will never go back to that, and that marriage is dead. With time and work and honesty and vulnerability (and the all-in commitment of both parties) you can decide to build a new marriage, that I assure you can be perfectly wonderful and rewarding. Yes, this will always be a part of your history, but it won’t always hurt the way it does now. I personally, wouldn’t think of the A much these days if it wasn’t for posting here, nut there is no way to the new marriage without going through it all and breaking it all down before you can rebuild. There are no shortcuts on this, rugsweeping doesn’t work, and the only way past it is through it. Many people will say that it’s not something you ever "get over", more that it’s something you learn to live with.
I sometimes think that affairs can be situational.I also think that good people can make bad choices. And I wonder if all people are capable of affairs
I agree that affairs can be extremely situational. My husband’s certainly was, and although I don’t think it would have occurred had it not been for some very specific circumstances, I do think he had some personal vulnerabilities that always would have been there and always would have been a risk factor for some sort of affair at some point, maybe another time, in any event.
Having been here as long as I have, I do believe that there are some people who would never ever have cheated no matter what the circumstances. I do think that for a lot of people, myself included, no matter how much we believed that it was wrong, we could have found ourselves in a slippery slope scenario given the right set of circumstances. I believe that having been through this, and done the work, and seen the devastation , and tightened my boundaries, and been through all the therapy and self discovery I have, I think both myself and my spouse are way less likely to cheat than we were before any of this.