My WW was a RN and she cheated with a doctor also so I’m feeling you.
You’re getting peppered with advice here because there is so much work to be done.
First off, you need to get your head straight. As others have said, "We need to take a break to work on ourselves" is classic cheater code, right out of cheater’s playbook for: "I’ve got another evolving relationship on the side I want to devote more time to."
As others have said, you working 60 hours a week is definitely not an excuse to go cheat. That’s just crazy. If we all maintained our marriages with this approach, by summarily cheating whenever a need was not met, we’d all be livin like Glynn Wolfe. Nowhere on the long list of marital problem resolution measures does cheating exist. Divorce is the final measure and, divorce isn’t as final as the coup de grace of cheating. You can easily reconcile from divorce. Cheating not so much. I bet she advanced from measure zero to the nuclear option of cheating in one flirty instant and then,
trumped up this whole blame shift narrative and exaggerated marital history rewrite in a vein attempt to add some sanity to her misadventure, grease that slippery slope and put you on defense should you ever find out.
You can’t just decide to reconcile and "save your marriage" because you ain’t saving shit until she initiates reconciliation, in earnest, with devotion. She has to be the guidon leading the charge on this crusade. You ain’t saving the marriage, she is and, she needs to start by fixing herself and caring for you with loving patience, remorse and empathy.
You can’t force, maneuver, coerce, guilt or beg her to do it. She has to be compelled by her love for you. Nothing else. Not motivated by regret. Not motivated by a desire for stability, security, the kids or pragmatic agendas. She has to be unconditionally compelled by love and desire for you. If she is not properly motivated, her resolve will quickly wear down along the long rough road of reconciliation.
So stand back and observe. Don’t interfere too much. Just communicate your needs. Your boundaries. Your expectations. Your concerns. Your grief. It’s ok to guide her a bit-but not too much. No begging. No pick me dancing. Pull back and see if she follows. Protect your dignity. Enforce boundaries. Hold your moral high ground. Maintain composure. You’re the injured party. Don’t let her try and assume a victim role. Don’t tolerate blame shifting, waffling or fence sitting, defensiveness or impatience.
You’re the prize, the prize she’s after.
You must be prepared to ditch the marriage to save marriage and, she has to realize that.
Consult an attorney. Learn and prepare your contingencies and options. Let her see this. Let her see that you’re resolved to protect your personal best outcome and that outcome doesn’t necessarily include her.
[This message edited by RealityBlows at 9:42 AM, Thursday, October 6th]