We recently moved from the West Coast to the East Coast. H had been in IC since D-Day, although he'd had to switch a few times due to a previous move. When we were ready to leave the West Coast, he led me to believe he would find someone new at our new location. He told me his current therapist does not do video appointments, but she was going to get him some names of people in our new area. Fast forward four months after we arrived, and he had not done anything about it. So I brought it up in a couple's therapy session (we are still 'seeing' our West Coast therapist via video for appts.) after he made a comment about 'letting sleeping dogs lie' when we were discussing a non-affair related issue. It about set my hair on fire I was so livid.
He's been in therapy for six years, but again, three different people. He has learned a lot about himself, but from my viewpoint, I still see behaviors that raise red flags. For one... he led me to believe he was going to continue after we moved, and when at some point he decided not to, he didn't level with me (not that I would have been happy about it) - he just let me continue believing he was going to resume. Secondly, there are two major experiences in his life that he has never dealt with in therapy. He has no knowledge or memory of these experiences, but his brother told me about them when H was away at a residential treatment center: 1) their father had affair(s) - their mother told H's brother, who then relayed it to me. 2) H was sexually assaulted by some neighborhood boys when he was around 7 or 8 years old. H's brother has no reason to make any of this up. He provided me with details. When I went to visit H at the residential treatment center, I told him what his brother had told me. Again, he claims he has no knowledge or memory of any of this. So he has not made it a priority to explore these possibilities. So of course, his therapist never really pushed the issues.
I have a really hard time believing that those kinds of experiences are not formative; I believe that he's somehow rug-sweeping them because he doesn't want to deal with the possibilities and pain. Again, the 'don't let sleeping dogs lie' remark hit me hard when he made it in our couple's session.
He's always been completely honest that the only reason he was doing therapy was to save our marriage. He's never gotten to a point where he says he's doing it for himself. That bothers me. If I were to walk away tomorrow, he'd never resume. We've had many discussions with our couple's therapist about my anger at him for leading me on about his willingness to continue therapy in our new location. He has stated that he doesn't know what his goals should be in starting over again. Our couple's therapist has shared that most times, people go into therapy because they're curious about themselves and want to understand themselves more. He says he's not curious about himself... which again, is a red flag to me. But wtf good is it going to be for him to pick back up again if he's only doing it for the marriage? He wants to know how long I want him to do this, like what am I looking for. I don't have an answer to that is what I've told him.
I remember when I started therapy many years ago and was reluctant (mostly due to money). I remember my therapist encouraging me to consider why I didn't value myself enough to spend the time and money on myself. That alone was enough to open up a Pandora's Box. But it took me a while (at least 3-4 years) before I let go of the money and time sacrifices and committed to the process. I was pretty screwed up back then. I had a wonderful therapist who knew how to challenge me while being supportive. FWIW, his previous therapists all know that he was only doing it to save the marriage. I just kept hoping that they'd somehow make him see why it's so important to do it for yourself first, then a relationship.
So I guess this is all a long way of asking, did your betraying partners go to individual therapy just to save the marriage, and eventually decided they didn't want to look at more painful stuff from their childhoods, so they wanted to quit? Because I don't think I can stay with someone who possibly has that kind of trauma and is unwilling to explore it. He says that our being in couple's therapy is his way of showing he's still invested in the process. And to be fair, our couple's therapists have told him he's doing good work in therapy. But I don't think any professional therapist would force someone to look at childhood traumas.
For the past couple of weeks, he's been saying after the holidays he was going to reach out to a couple of names on the list he got from his previous therapist. But he won't admit he's doing it for himself. He says he's doing it for me. Why isn't this enough for me? I mean, he's an adult, he can do whatever he wants. I told him I was pissed he led me on right before our move because it was disrespectful to me, to not let me make choices based on his choices. When I explained that to him, he said he understood now how his behavior was hurtful to me. So with that in mind, he will make some phone calls this week.
I see people here talking about radical honesty. That's what I want, even if telling me something leads me to make a choice he won't like, like leaving him. I don't know how to explain that concept to him.
If he doesn't, what recourse do I have? How can I explain to him how dismissed I feel? I don't want to be in a relationship with someone who is not curious about themselves. Is that too much to ask?