Or is it just me that whatever the affair was 6 months or 3 years, the pain is still the same?
This is difficult to answer, because (unless we were cheated on multiple times--which some posters on this have been), we don't really have a comparison in our experience to know if the pain is worse depending on the length of the affair.
The question I would have is: Is the trust damaged more by a longer affair?
A longer affair shows a longer pattern of intentional deception, and, thus, possibly more ingrained wayward thinking.
Also, a longer affair may make a larger percentage of the committed relationship feel like a "lie."
These elements might impact how a BS feels about reconciliation.
Anyone who chose to be "positive" in the first few months and forgive their WH or WW and accept that it had happened already and there is nothing the BS can do?
I think how people view forgiveness really varies. I tend to view it like you may be implying, which is that forgiveness is about coming to grips with: This happened. It happened. Neither of us can go back in time and change that. So, can I live with that and even consider continuing this relationship? If the answer is Yes or Maybe (with certain conditions and growth met), I see that as forgiveness.
I think forgiveness can even be given by saying "No, I can't continue this relationship. I see you as a flawed (but not irredeemable) human being. I can't be with you anymore, but don't hate you."
I guess I see acceptance as forgiveness.
For example, both couple talked about why it happened, had all the affair details, talked about working the relationship and what needs to be changed, set boundaries, and decided not to bring up the affair anymore as much as possible and try to move forward.
I'm not certain that moving forward requires deciding "not to bring up the affair anymore as much as possible."
I worry that this can easily slide into rug sweeping--even if the couple is trying to avoid rug sweeping.
If this is part of the healing:
[we] talked about working the relationship and what needs to be changed
IMO, there needs to be an ongoing conversation about that work.
Committed couples in solid relationships (even couples who never experience infidelity) need to have state-of-the-relationship check ins and ongoing talks. This need is even greater in the aftermath of betrayal.
Also, healing for a BS is almost never linear (going at an even & upward trajectory). It's often spiraling in nature. A BS may think "I've reached acceptance. I can move forward"...and then the anger comes, or then suspicion takes hold again. Or maybe there is just some concern on the BS's part that the WS is doing work that is really resulting in change that makes them a safe partner.
I would be careful about agreeing to a "let's not talk about this painful part of our history too much anymore" policy.
The affair is now woven into the fabric of your relationship. It's there. It's not going away. This also something that a WS must come to accept.
A healthier approach, IMO, might be to set a goal to be able to discuss the affair with empathy and with clear & calm communication--to even be able to reach a point where the affair can be discussed with some ease.
There is a lot to be learned in the discussion.
[This message edited by BreakingBad at 12:13 AM, Tuesday, October 10th]