I am the ws, 7 years out.
I started to respond yesterday but I wasn’t sure if I should or not. I want to say I have great empathy for the things you have said in this thread. Much of what you say has been a fear of mine as we have taken this journey through reconciliation.
It takes honesty from both sides to start the repairs. It also takes honesty from both sides to start a divorce. It seems like you all have just hoped time will cure it. And truth is it takes active participation from both parties to do their healing as well as both to intentionally rebuild a marriage. But as you certainly see, holding it in and not communicating doesn’t resolve anything.
Why would a WS care now? It just feels like "had my fun, whoops got carried away!" "Didn't mean for you to find out!" "Gonna keep working overtime doing little things to try and make up for something that can never be undone." "Still need you for some things, just not an honest relationship." Maybe that's crass, but bahhhh.
I think it’s natural to feel that way without the work a ws has to do as well as the communication streaming both ways.
I think you are imagining what she would say and how she would feel and lumping it as truth. The reality can look very different. I can say to you with a straight face that I never causemed myself as much damage by doing anything like I have by having an affair. It’s my only deep regret in my life. Not only is it the worst thing I have ever done but it robbed me of happiness for years on end. not one moment was worth it and I have no fond feelings about that time.
Now, I am not your wife. And she could feel precisely what you describe. But without open conversations you really don’t know what she thinks about it.
And you say she isn’t interested in an honest relationship, but you are holding everything in. That’s not honest either.
I am not trying to give you any lecture, I feel terribly for you as this weight you are carrying, but you have to look deeper at why you carry it. And you have to work on yourself on it. Not for her, but for you.
I like steven’s advice. Show her what you have written. Let it all out. It will be a relief.
I think you should consider working with a therpist in this. Not for marriage counseling, but for individuals. I don’t mean that in a stigmatized way. I just think there is a lot here that you are not sure how to cope with and I think if you find someone good they can help you unravel it in a step by step way. It’s hard to find clarity just swimming around in your own thoughts.
I wish you the best no matter what you decide. But I urge you to start speaking your side of things. If she has worked through her issues, she will want to help you work through yours. If she has not, then she will be defensive and start the gaslighting. There you will have at least a piece of the puzzle. That’s the other issue- you only have parts of the puzzle and you have had to imagine what the other pieces look like.
Your wife has stayed too these years, and it sounds like in that time you have withheld love and affection because you understandably don’t have it. Why do you think she has stayed? I think whatever her reasons are they must be strong, because all this time she likely craves the same things you mentioned…like feeling loved. I am not saying that to make you feel badly, she caused it. But I am saying it because it’s been seven years she likely does feel strongly about staying in the marriage and may even see an opportunity to work through it to have a happier marriage. If not, that’s it, she will have given you clarity that it’s not worth staying a minute longer.
[This message edited by hikingout at 11:40 PM, Wednesday, August 28th]