I feel like it would be crazy NOT to feel that way. It’s logical. The hard part is sometimes it’s not always logical to someone to divorce for entirely practical reasons. And there is the whole love is not always logical either.
Every situation is very different.
It’s hard to move forward with uncertainty- in any aspect of life. Holding the questions will continue to help you evaluate and the answers do come. I don’t know what any of your answers will be yet.
However, coming from a place where I do think we have achieved reconciliation I think it comes from being able to reframe over time and that come from an authentic place.
For example, my husband and I suffered together through a lot of it and over time I don’t think he believes I got away with anything. Even if he had not had his own affair, I struggled mightily to come from a dark place and rebuild myself and our marriage, it is undeniable to him. But that didn’t come in a year, it didn’t even come in two years, it was a long, consistent climb. This is not to pat myself in the back, so wish I didn’t even have this to write about in my life. It’s to say that he is married to someone different now. I am the same in many ways but i can cope differently, I am not avoidant, I give him love daily, I have boundaries, I understand love and connection differently, I have rebuilt trust, and I am much happier living my life in a wholesome way rather than escaping with things that are not good for me.
I think he is different too. I have a husband who is very in tune with me in a way he was incapable of earlier. And truth is I never stopped trusting him in some areas- his desire and value of fidelity was the major area to rebuild. I still trusted him in other valuable areas of my life.
However, it’s different circumstances for everyone. We had a long, good pre-a marriage for example. Not perfect obviously, but still probably better than most. Having an improved outlook on life, improved knowledge, skills has enhanced that. We have now built something that would be very hard to achieve with a new person and have preserved our family unit in time to enjoy our grandkids together.
But it has been a process that removed those doubts and it’s taken time.
This is not a bid for you to reconcile, I do not know what the path to your highest happiness is or what will go on. I am only explaining how I see reconciling, and it truly does take years. Your fears and logic are all appropriate and needed in that process.
I so often think of the cold a callous nature that my WW pursued what she wanted in her A without a regard for me, but somehow I am to muster the strength and forgiveness to give a second chance to someone who doesn't "deserve" it.
It takes a long time to feel the ws deserves it. That’s why you have to flip it to what do I want? Why am I doing it? Because it’s YOU who deserves to have what YOU want. It’s true reconciliation is a gift to her, but until you are sure you feel she deserves that gift, focus entirely on what you want to see happen and why that’s what you want. Otherwise, you are not taking accountability for yourself and she is never going to be able to help you with that.
I was never in charge or entitled to a second chance. He gave me a second chance because he saw value in that and had to have faith in himself that he would ultimately do what was best for him. Not everyone is cut out to give a second chance no matter what the ws does.
Also, callousness doesn’t always come from malice. I was so callous before, during, and even after my affair. Callousness comes from not caring what happens to oneself due to emotional numbness. When someone can’t cope with their own pain, it becomes a process of numbing. I know that malice doesn’t have to be in the intent to do the same damage. It doesn’t excuse the damage/ but it does at least allow you to understand the state these decisions were made in.
I think an affair is often its own punishment for someone who isn’t like a psychopath, sociopath, narcissist, etc. those who have one and become remorseful inflict trauma on themselves. They are not an innocent victim, but they certainly did not act in their best interest. It is the worst decision of my life followed by years of digging out of it. Nothing about it was worth it, it just was a way to gift myself with malignant shame and to critically injure the most important relationship of my life.
This is not to gain empathy for your ws, (and definitely not for me) but if YOU do decide it’s what YOU want, there will eventually need to be understanding on what actually happened there in your wife and how she has rebuilt her life to never come to that point in the path again. I am writing my experience to give you an idea of what that sounds like.
I question myself as to why I am even giving that second chance...
I question if I am some schmuck for doing so...
Am I setting myself up for future hurt...
Is all this remorse just an act....
Can I trust myself to judge correctly what I am seeing...
It’s going to take a long time to trust her again. What you do need to do is know the answer to the first question. Why are you giving her a second chance? For me/my husband it was a lot of things. Love was only one. The others were more practical- shared history, we had been compatible in the past in a way that would be hard to find in another, family, and we truly do wnjoy each other. It took a while to get back to that. But you can’t stay for her, this has to be about you.