Struggling with this here too. I don't want to love myself right now--I shouldn't love myself right now. But somehow doing it is also how I fix the things I shouldn't love myself for? It's such a paradox.
Yes, I didn’t get it either. Not for a long time.
Your story is very similar to mine. Your affair was on the shorter end (3 months versus mine which was two) but both of us hyper-bonded with the AP. I truly believed I was madly in love with him, and I read that is basically how your affair went down.
That is called limerence. It happens more frequently with those of us who have abandonment issues. In my case I was emotionally abused and neglected by my parents and then experienced SA repeatedly by other sources.
As an adult, I did the same things as you are saying, I went along to get along. I didn’t consider my needs a priority. I people pleaser everyone including my children because I never felt worthy of love. And I don’t think all this was a conscious thing, this is something I became aware of after the cheating.
When I went to therapy, I felt frustrated that the therapist didn’t want to talk about my affair, or really my marriage. She wanted me to see that because I hadn’t taken responsibility for my own happiness, and because I spent my whole life trying to earn love I had become tired and resentful. And that wasn’t the narrative I had been playing in my head at all.
The escape of the affair then caused high amounts of dopamine and I became addicted to it. When your brain is producing very little and then all the sudden you get big doses it skews a lot of things that will make you justify hard in order to keep having it.
I associated all that to my AP and thought I must have some crazy soul connection. But truth was I didn’t really know him like that, and the whole time I couldn’t make sense of any of it. I mean, I didn’t really find the person that attractive, nor did he really treat me all that great. It literally made no sense why I felt so intensely towards him. But it was all simple brain chemistry.
So she kept talking to me about self care, creating boundaries so I had space for myself, so I could practice being myself or at least trying to get in touch with who that is again.
She encouraged me to try new hobbies. She said that I needed to find the things in life that ignites that fire I was looking for in the AP. I wanted to ring her neck. I had real problems here and she wants me to try gardening?!?
And eventually by doing those things it started to become apparent the better I was to myself, the more happiness I could find, the more compassion I could start to hold for myself, then the more I had to give. The generosity and love I feel today with my husband, and virtually every single one of my relationships is genuine because it flows through me. I light my own fire, and look after my own happiness, and find ways to be excited about my life.
I started with a few basic things that at the time I had no idea why I was doing them. They were simply assignments from therapy and I stubbornly couldn’t see how it was going to help. But just as stubbornly, I realized whatever I had been doing wasn’t working.
Here is what it was:
1. I had to think about three things I was grateful for each day. Not just name them but deeply reflect on them. Usually this took 10 minutes. At first I wrote them down so I could focus better. In less than a month this can begin rewiring your brain. Google it.
2. Try to be present as much as possible. If you are focused only on the present moment, there is a place to rest there. So if I were folding towels, I focused on that being the best folded set of towels on the planet. I didn’t allow the chatter in my mind, I just folded the towels. I still try and do this as much as possible, in the simple little daily tasks. Joy only exists in the present moment. not all your moments wil be joy, but if you are present as much as possible you will at least tune into it more. It’s restful and will help you with your patience and being in the moment when you need to be with your wife.
3. Self care- get some exercise, eat well, get sleep. Your brain doesn’t understand much but it knows when you are taking care of yourself and this is what we do for people we love. Practice being gentle with yourself a inhad to keep asking myself: would I say this to my best friend? Or my children? Then why do I allow myself to talk to me this way?
Understand shame is completely useless. All it does is make things harder to face. Shame is about how we feel about ourselves. Remorse is more helpful- it has empathy for the person we hurt and it wants to make repairs. Right now you have both. Focus more on the remorse. Read the book rising strong, as I have recommended. Shame is working against you in this situation. It will be a while before you feel like loving yourself, but if you do these things you will get closer all the time. And the better you feel the better you can be for others.
Definitely counterintuitive because people confuse being selfish and self love. Selfishness comes from lack. Self love energizes, it’s abundant, it’s strong. And all relationships that we have are a reflection of our relationship with ourselves.
Your wife doesn’t need you to fix her by getting her to believe you. Your wife needs you to be in it with her. Be in her pain with her and experience it together. The shame is too big and it gets in the way of that, those are your feelings about what you did. Work on that so you can make the room you need for her feelings.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:10 AM, Saturday, February 17th]