guvensiz - I think I can understand a bit of where you are coming from in that if my WH had told OBS against my specific wishes, I would not have been very happy. HOWEVER, whether to tell the OBS was never a question - it was really only timing bc I was on a high profile project and had objectively valid concerns that AP could go bunny boiler and put my WH's As in the newspaper to further harm ME - the BS (it would only have been newsworthy bc of my work on a particular project with a relatively short shelf life). Once the dust settled from that project and I felt reasonably confident that not a newspaper on the planet would give a damn, OBS was informed.
But here's the thing - look at OP's responses to the question:
response #1: The OM is married and no I haven't told his wife. From my perspective that's not my decision to make.
response #2 (less than 2 hrs after #1): Although I haven't spoken about this with my H, I know him well enough to know that it's not something he would want to do.
response #3 (after SIers/BS weighed in): He doesn't want to discuss the OM, his situation or anything. My BH does not want to tell the OBS.
The point is that telling the OBS was originally "not her decision to make", and who knows about her BH, whom I suspect is in deep trauma mode and doing his best to get through the days trying not to think about it.
If I'm reading the posts right, OP and her BH are S. I still believe that OP informing her BH she intends to tell OBS, and then following through, show real commitment to change. To honesty. To integrity. To atonenment. I get that this is a tough call if the BS doesn't want to tell. But I still believe that absent some basis (other than BH trying his best to avoid all of it - which we all know will not get very far for HIS healing, a prerequisite for R), telling OBS is the right call. Even if it's OP saying I will give you some time, but it's something that has to be done and I want to do it with your blessing and following your needs is better than "it's not my place" (which is hogwash) and my BS doesn't want me to.
And all the crap about who made a commitment to whom is just that - crap. I didn't make a commitment to not take a dump in my neighbor's back yard, but if I did that, I like to think I'd clean up my mess and apologize.
And FWIW, while we've gotten off track on the telling the OBS issue, there still remains an OP who is hurting, and trying to figure out if there is a way to R, along with all the other consequences that rain down after dday.
Unfortunately, I don't think I have much to offer, other than to do what you can to educate yourself (and coming to SI, even with what can often feel like very harsh treatment, is an excellent step IMO).
You can read "how to help your spouse heal from your affair" by Linda MacDonald (I'm told you can get a free pdf online). It's a pretty quick read (maybe 100 pages) and chock full of solid steps (full disclosure: IIRC, it assumes that the WS and BS are communicating). You can read "not Just Friends" by Shirley Glass - an oldie but I'd call that my encyclopedia of infidelity. You can learn about trauma, esp relational betrayal trauma, to help understand some of what your BH is going through.
You are already in IC and it sounds like you are taking the early steps in the whys. Some here on SI believe the "hows" are important, and I agree. IOW, it's not "only" why choosing a 3rd party to your M seemed like a viable choice, but "how" you were able to do it, how deceit felt comfortable to you, etc. There are other WS that would be able to describe that aspect better than I am, and I hope they come along in due time.
I assume you've already read some in the healing library on SI. There's a tagged post at the top of the wayward forum called something like "what ever WS should know" that I would read - more than once. I believe that DaddyDom recently bumped a couple of his threads (admitting it vs getting it, etc) that I think have a LOT of really good stuff in them.
I read a book called Resilience by Rick Hansen that was a real game changer for me. Has nothing to do with infidelity, but about seeing, accepting, and incorporating joy into our day-to-day lives. Many -WS & BS - get a LOT from meditation and mindfulness exercises. I use a free app called insight timer that I listened to several times a day for a while. It just helped get me centered and more able to cope with the stress and anxiety, etc.
I got a lot out of Brene Brown and learning about shame - which was a rec I read on SI from a WS. I think we all "get" why a WS feels shame, but I don't think WS ever really understand the ways in which a BS can experience overwhelming shame, but we do. Shame for feeling not good enough. Shame for not deserving a faithful spouse. Shame for leaving. Shame for staying. That can be a very long list. And Brene Brown knows her stuff. She has an excellent audio called The Power of Vulnerability that I just loved. It's about 6 hours, comprised of a series of lectures. I got it on Hoopla via my local library. I read all her books and found that audio to be a pretty good synthesis of the first few (and she's just an easy to listen to speaker. I still use her "be the container" mantra on a damn near daily basis).
That's about all I got off the top of my head.
Godspeed to you, DevastatedI.
ETA: And Guvensiz, I absolutely agree with Hellfire that it does not matter if it's WS or a stranger. One of my WH's AP's informed me, so she was both the WS AND a stranger to me. Is it the 'perfect' way to find out? No. But better to find out in a less than perfect manner than to never find out at all. Esp when one considers that the OBS could still find out at some point in the future and go ballistic. It's a ticking bomb no matter how you slice it. Better to diffuse it as best you can - and earlier vs later.
[This message edited by gmc94 at 11:36 PM, April 8th, 2021 (Thursday)]