I chose to D, so take my words as just one point of view among many. And sorry for the novel...
My WW (now EXWW) was forced to confess or be outed. After I kicked out of the bedroom for a couple weeks, I offered R. I had not found this site yet, so I was flying blind and making all sorts of mistakes. One thing I did was read every book, article, and self-help website I could find. I was looking for hope that my M could be saved, and there are plenty of publications that will take that position. In fact, some will tell you that your M can be better than ever. There is even a whole industry that has popped up, selling just that idea, for a subscription fee. Maybe that's true, but in my opinion, it would have had to be in pretty rough shape to begin with in order for the post-trauma version to be an improvement.
I eventually found SI and read every post, sometimes repeatedly. I gave myself the recommended 6 months to clear my head and decide if my WW was R material. I didn't tell her about the 6 months, as I always knew she was performative and goal oriented, so she would have shot for the end date and nothing beyond that. No, her change had to be real.
When the 6 month mark hit, I went for a week road trip, returned and asked her a simple question: "What are you doing to help me heal from your affair?" She responded that she could not be there for me until I was in a better place because I made her feel too guilty. Just like everything else in our 27 year marriage, she made the A and the trauma, all about her. I looked her square in the eye and told her I was divorcing her. I got up and went to bed.
It took time, but as I started to detox from the M, I started to see my life with new clarity. I was the one who carried the load during the M, and my WW was quite content that I carry the load in R. As I detached, I came to realize that I was in love with the idea of my wife, the mental projection I had crafted. I realized that the version in front of me, the real one, had few, if any redeeming qualities, and I really didn't like her much.
I also realized that all of the reading I had been doing was with a view towards R, and I failed to really take to heart the deep psychological trauma I had suffered. Oh, I read the chapters on that, but with a view to fixing my M and not with the intent of healing myself. It was pure confirmation bias on my part.
Since then, I have done much reading, and now am firmly in the evolutionary psychology camp. Many of our behaviors like HB have a evolutionary driver to them and is the reason we struggle to make sense of them. Sure, our meaty frontal lobes are great, but it's that primitive brain that drives much of what we do.
The reading I did post S and D, really explained to me why I felt the way I did after the A. I realized that I was not wired to recover from a betrayal like that. Some are; I'm not. Sure, life would have been much better financially, but I would have died a slow death of the soul, shackled to a woman for whom I had lost respect and found physically repulsive. It would have been a life of discontent.
The books that have been recommended are excellent, but there are three more I would recommend, just to flesh out the field. The first is "How Can I Forgive You?" By Spring. I come from an evangelical background, and the pressure to forgive and rugsweep was intense. Often, the idea of forgiveness is presented as a binary option, with unforgiveness roundly condemned. Spring presents a third option which really helped me move forward in my healing.
The other two books are ** No soliciting ** and "Cheating in a Nutshell". The latter is often criticized as being anecdotal, but it draws on a myriad of studies to argue the thesis. The authors argue that our visceral and physical reaction to betrayal has an evolutionary basis and is rooted in our survival. It explained why I felt what I did. Most importantly, it helped me not feel guilty for reacting to the A in the manner I did.
About 5 years after I had the conversation I mentioned earlier, I spoke to my EXWW again and revealed the 6 month deadline. She wept upon hearing this. The tears were for her, of course. In the 5+ years we have been apart, she has not grown at all, and treats her BF just as she treated me,if not worse. Even my kids comment on it, so it serves to confirm my decision to D.
I'm not advocating for D or R one way or another, just telling my story in hopes that it might help. Practically speaking, R is the better option, if you remove the emotional aspect of infidelity. I just wasn't wired for it. But even though I lost a 1.5 million dollar house and now live in a shitty townhouse, I am actually much more content than I have been in many years. I have peace in my life now.
Whatever direction you choose, I hope it ends with a deep sense of peace for your future.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 10:59 PM, Wednesday, December 27th]