C,
I am a betrayed spouse, but don't worry: I am not here to bash you. I would like to help if I can. I followed you on the other forum, and I truly am rooting for you and for your husband.
It will be difficult for you and your husband to reconcile, but not impossible.
My wife and I are very successfully reconciling and I am happy about it. I say this because if we can do it, I think just about anyone can.
I understand that some of the things you did were some of the most difficult things from which a man can hope to recover.
However, I think my wife was way worse, and we are making it. She had three affairs with three different men. She hid two of the affairs for over twenty years. As to the third affair, I caught her, but she hid most of the details and the full nature and extent of that affair for over thirteen years. She deceived me and lied to my face many times. When she finally fully confessed, she then immediately insisted that we never discuss it ever again. She left me for one of the affair partners, but did come back the next day, but only because he told her he did not want a real relationship with her, just sex. She brought one of the affair partners into our home and had sex with him in our marital bed more than once and with our two little children right across the narrow hallway in their bedroom hopefully sleeping. After all that, she treated me horribly for the next couple of decades to the point that one of our daughters was convinced there was a medical/psychological problem with her because of how nasty she was to me and insisted that she see her doctor and that she (daughter) went along to make sure my wife told the truth. During all this time, she was never truly remorseful and never empathetic. She felt guilty and ashamed, but did nothing to understand my pain or to help me in any way. That's not even everything, but I think you get the idea.
I stayed with her throughout all of that for some pretty stupid reasons to be honest with you. I had considered leaving when the kids all moved out but the youngest did not "launch" right after becoming an "adult" and then when she finally did she was troubled and then died of a drug overdose. So I had just taken it for a long time.
But after our daughter died, I reevaluated my life, made some serious changes, and got into therapy. I finally got to the point of leaving. Lo and behold, she then changed. She not only became a model wife, she got therapy, get remorseful, and allowed me to open up to her and she opened up to me. I know many people re and were skeptical, but she has been very consistent for close to a year and a half to two years now.
I say all this to say that you that you and your husband can succeed if you both want to reconcile. However, it will not be easy.
There is a lot I could say to your husband about things that helped me, but he is not the one on here. I can say that reconciling under such tough circumstances is not for the fainthearted to try, but I get the impression your husband is a very strong man.
So, I am going to tell you some things my wife did that I feel really made a difference in me changing my mind and deciding to give her a chance and then to decide to want to stay with.
She became more honest and open. The deception and lies hurt me badly, way more than the sex. She not only got honest and open about the affairs but also more so in general. She came to understand that she could not lie about anything and keep me. I had my fill. She was a bigtime liar before. She would lie about anything, but she would also especially lie to me if she thought the truth would upset me. She is still working on this, but she understands that I need the truth and need to and can handle it as an adult.
She became empathetic. She came to understand the depth of the hurt and damage she caused. She apologized sincerely and specifically and often and still does so on occasions to this day. She checks in me occasionally if she can see I am having a tough time.
She became interested in me and very attentive. She focused on spending time with me, really talking with me and doing things with me. We both discovered that we really do enjoy each other once the effort to connect started.
She does and says things to help me feel good about myself. Having someone you love more than anyone or anything in the world betray and hurt you is devastating to a person's confidence and sense of worth.
She really has become everything I ever really wanted from her as a wife.
If you want to successfully reconcile with your husband, I think you need to open, honest, empathetic, compassionate, apologetic, remorseful, interested, attentive, devoted, and affirming. It all has to be sincere. It must be shown through words and actions. You will also have to be willing to accept a range of wide and varied and extreme emotions. You have to be willing to talk when he wants to talk. You have to leave him alone when he wants to be left alone. You have to answers his questions and some of them more than once. If this sounds extremely hard, that is because it is. If you are unwilling to do ALL of this, you should let the poor guy go. If you are wiling to put everything into ALL of this and believe you can do it, then give it a try and good luck to you.
And actually, he may not even want to try. I hope he will give it a go if you can commit to everything above. I believe, like many others who have commented on your threads, that your husband really does love you a lot. He is just hurt, angry, confused, sad, etc., and understandably so. Believe me I know how he feels. But deep down, despite everything terrible she did, I have always loved my wife, pretty much from when I first met. I think your husband loves you the same way.