AhurtHusband,
Further to Sisoons post above:
From now on, even 10/20/30 years from now if you stay together, whenever she is 5 minutes late, [and so on and so on…]
This site tends to have two types of posters: Those that think a marriage can reconcile from infidelity and those that think a marriage can never reconcile from infidelity.
I’m definitely in the former group. I think marriages CAN reconcile, and I think this very site is a testament to that. First time you came here you were greeted by a page informing you that the founders had reconciled, and a dedication by the then-betrayed husband to his late-wife and cofounder. Not to mention we have a great number of posters that have reconciled
Now… What CAN means is exactly that – can. It’s possible. That’s not the same as easy, should always be done, the only route or have to or anything like that. It’s exactly what it implies: if things line up and both want to and are willing to make the sacrifices and do the work… it’s possible.
What thinking a marriage can NEVER reconcile means is that the only good, sane and logical path out is divorce.
Divorce is easy to understand. You go your separate ways, and if done correctly the only need to interact might be regarding kids. It’s a very good path out of infidelity and in very many instances it’s the only option open for the betrayed spouse. I guess I more-or-less equally guide people towards D as I do R.
Reconciliation… that’s a tougher nut… Simply remaining married or simply not divorcing is NOT reconciling. That’s trying to live with a big elephant in the marriage. You see loads of threads here from people that are still dealing with trauma-pain years and years after d-day. You see posters insisting that they will stick around until the kids leave for college in 12 years or so…
Reconciliation is tough. Its so much more than the initial 1-2 years of dealing with the infidelity. It’s an ongoing commitment to create a marriage where you both have what you envisioned from the marriage and are both working at personal and joint betterment.
I have used this comparison in the past: It’s like you have a serious health-scare like a cardiac arrest. Once you recover you reflect on your life and lifestyle. You stop smoking, stop eating fast-food for breakfast, lunch and dinner, get off the couch and start walking, organize your finances and work to lower stress, go to the gym, read rather than binge-watch Friends for the umpteenth time, cut back on your booze…
First time you try to jog a mile you feel like you are dying again, and your lungs want to leave the body… Yet you persist…
Two years from leaving the ER you might be in better shape than the previous ten.
If you quit there and then chances are you would be back in the fat, smoking again and all that within a year.
If however you maintained a reasonable healthy lifestyle then your daily 3 mile jog is enjoyable and relaxing, you enjoy the effort because you reap the gain.
This is what reconciliation truly is… It’s a decision from both of you to work on the marriage, to work on personal growth and to do so regularly and in an organized or planned manner. That "planned manner" can be such mundane things like a chore-schedule so the housework is in agreement, a monthly budget-night so the finances are in order, doing the groceries together once a week… heck… my wife and I went to the gym at the same time despite being in totally separate programs (she hot-yoga, me weights) simply to a) be together and b) utilize time that normally was separate.
It can also be marriage-oriented things like a regular date-night, quarterly couples-weekends, twice-a-year do what she/he wants like go to a theater or gallery…
Its whatever you two agree on as a tool for you both to feel good and therefore the marriage to be better.
Reconciliation is possible – if both have this goal. However this trip can also lead to one or both of you discovering that maybe you have grown apart. It can lead to divorce. But that’s what sometimes happens in marriage irrespective of infidelity.
Now – IF you really feel fear and pain 10/20/30 years from now because your wife is late… I put it to you that you two didn’t do the work… You ignored the elephant. Both in the sense that you are experiencing discomfort from a relatively small deviation, but also because the work of R should both make you fine with calling her and checking (if that was what you needed) and/or her showing the initiative of letting you know she’s late and why.
It’s your call AhurtHusband. IMHO you haven’t decided if you want to divorce or reconcile. Both paths are open to you and you and only you can decide which one is the one you want to try. But I do warn you against getting too comfortable with no definite decision… I would guess that within 2-3 months you should either tell your wife that sorry but this is too much for you OR that you want to reconcile but then outline what you want.
It’s a given that you want that she doesn’t cheat, but I encourage you to go further than that and that you outline what you want your marriage to be.
Finally – If I stick to the cardiac-arrest comparison:
Maybe 5 years after being rushed to ER and having paddles applied to your chest you might sit down and reflect on your life. Due to your changed lifestyle you are in good shape, good health, stress-free, paid all your bills… and you might be thinking "thank God I made all these changes after that near-death experience". What you would NOT be thinking is "thank God I nearly died. That led to such changes".
Just like you could have improved your life BEFORE nearly dying, you realize you could have your ideal (but undeniably infidelity-tainted) marriage without her having had an affair. But it is what it is.
Like I have said several times: Both R and D are open for you and IMHO you are doing yourself a disservice in delaying too long in deciding either path. How long? Well… right now its more recovering than healing… like catching your breath and staunching the bleeding rather than applying stiches and taking the meds… I would suggest you commit fully to either R or D in the next 3-6 months at the max.
The MAIN pitfall IMHO is to grow comfortable in neither, and then pretend you reconciled simply because you didn’t divorce.