I don't know if I thought infidelity was a dealbreaker in such terms. I know I thought I would not be one to stick around if that were to happen, but it wasn't much of a thought to be honest. I also thought that people involved in such a situation should of course leave and they would "get over" it fast. I had little sympathy for people who stuck around with cheaters to try to R and I really didn't grasp why after a "whole year" some BSs were still struggling so badly.
With that context I had false R - twice. Did I struggle with going back on my own "dealbreaker" during those times? Not really. Not in those terms. But I was upset with myself for ever believing him, believing him again, and continuing to want to believe him. I was much more caught up with "who is this person I thought I knew?"
And yes, I do think my WH read my willingness to not just up and leave as a sign of weakness, 100% for sure, and he used that against me. And (after 4 years of IC on his part - after we divorced) he admits that he used my trust and willingness to forgive to further manipulate me, and to lead himself to believe he would not be caught.
Did you find it easier to "stick to your guns" the second time around or did you continue to "tolerate" A related behaviour until you hit a firm breaking point, or maybe you’ve reached that "a-ha" realization?
Yes, and after d-day 3 sticking to my guns was the only way out. I wrote a very lengthy post in another recent thread about this titled "questions for BS that have had d-day 2" also in the general forum last week where I talk about this very issue in detail (as do a bunch of the other members of the false R club). I think my post at least will answer a bunch of your questions about how I felt, what happened, and how I feel now (my post is quite the novel lol).
Honestly, it’s one of my biggest fears … working on R only to experience a second Dday and then not following through (again) with my dealbreakers
I am not going to lie - false R was honestly the worst of the whole infidelity experience for me, by far, as in no contest. The only way to 100% prevent it from happening is to leave your WS and never look back. That is the only guaranteed way. The rest is a gamble. And one you should accept going forward. You can be mad at yourself for going back but I will say that in my experience False R was so wholly catastrophic to my personal well being, my sense of self, my job, my mental health, that I really didn't have much time to berate myself for trying again and getting royally burned (I had false R for a year after d-day 1 - A ended for about 3 days and went on for a year until I set him up and caught him a year to the day after dday 1).
I'm not trying to say that to scare you...but the reality is that there is quite a bit to be concerned about. That being said, I STILL have persevered and I am doing fine now. So cut yourself some slack - most of life is a gamble you know! :)
[This message edited by ThisIsSoLonely at 2:37 PM, Monday, September 9th]