And, i come back to the question of why did you feel like your post didn't fit in Mickie's post?
I didn't want to derail their thread to the last 3 pages of this thread because it has nothing to do with her original question. She asked to post about things we lost/missing. I posted about things I never had to lose.
And, you can't really say whether there are worse things.
You may not agree with me. I know that many on this website would disagree. There are entire ridiculous threads in "General" with absolute claims regarding infidelity based on anecdotal evidence. Like I said, I saw 4 of my friends blow up; trust me, they've got it worse than any of us here - but I'm happy to agree to disagree on this matter.
It's not to say that surviving infidelity and thriving after trauma like it, is easy. But we should always strive to become better; the option is always there. For those that betrayed and those that were betrayed.
what you could have had if you walked a different path,
None of us here could have walked a different path. The only path we can choose is the path ahead of us.
Funny, we are Meatloaf fans as well, but I don't think I follow.
Was just a joke (not the part about liking Meatloaf, one of my favorite performers of all times). Not a very good one. My kids are always the first to tell me my jokes suck
there is a deep lack of confidence and trust in myself that I am not sure ever goes away.
You mention learning to be whole. And also say this. How do you see the concept of healing towards being whole? What is "whole" then in this context? Do you believe you can be whole?
Letting go of the things I thought I had, thought I was. I don't see that as losing them; any more than I see waking up in the morning as losing the dreams of the previous night. I'm not sure how we've tied the concept of missing illusions to the idea that I no longer struggle in life? I wake up every day, I take time to appreciate what I have. I struggle with lying still - though I'm getting better at it. My wife and I argue. We fight. Then we sit down and talk to try and figure out together what happened. Sometimes we need space. Sometimes we work on it immediately. But we also spend nearly every night a few precious moments drinking tea and talking about her studies or my work. We raise three amazing kids together. We travel. We laugh. We love. And yes, again, we hurt.
For example, just tonight we had an emotional struggle where at some point I asked her for space so I could better understand my reactions (she was obviously triggered by an earlier discussion which brought back memories). We sat down 20 minutes later and worked on our relationship. It is daily work. Reconciliation isn't a magical state of affairs (excuse the absolutely horrible choice of words). We've decided, together, that we're reconciled. And now and for the rest of our lives (as far as we can plan it obviously - a concept, which in and of itself, is a trigger for my wife given the traumatic existential experience that is part of infidelity) we are committed to work on us. On not taking each other for granted. On being married. I'm planning on spending the rest of my life showing her that she can trust me; I make no judgement on whether she is going to trust me just that the option is there.
I'm not changing myself for her - it's a pretense that does not work for me. I'm changing myself because I want to be the way that I believe I should be. Honest. Caring. Strong. Supportive. A good father. A good husband. A good friend. And everything else in between. I'm going to succeed in some things and fail in others. In that regard, I'm neither better nor worse than anyone here, "wayward" or "betrayed". We are all, in the end, human.
It just seems to me like you sound like a person who did not struggle in that dark place yet, and that's why your words are ringing hollow to others.
Why do I need to sound like any particular person? What dark place do you think I've missed along my way?
[This message edited by forgettableDad at 4:02 PM, November 20th (Friday)]