The last two years has stripped me of these points especially the honesty and especially the understanding and the empathy but I can now only move forward and need to stop clinging onto misguided beliefs
Yeah, honestly, you can't be any of those things and still have an affair, because affairs require betrayal, dishonesty, selfishness and cruelty among other things. Somehow it doesn't seem to feel that shitty while you are in the middle of it (what we some call "the fog"), however, once you start to pull your head out of your ass and become human again, these things end up haunting us. And to be fair, that self-disdain never goes away 100%. What we did is a chapter in our lives that we can't rewrite or change, and so we have to learn to live with it. In order to "carbon offset" our self-hatred, the path forward is to consciously focus on being someone you are proud of being. It takes time and a lot of effort, as well as a great willingness to fail 1000 times and still try again. But the work is worth it. At the end of the day, whether your marriage survives or not, you still do this work, because if you don't, you will continue to suffer, and everyone in your life will too.
If you don't mind a suggestion, I would take that list above (write it down and put it in your pocket if you need to) and that make an effort to cross off at least one of those items each day by doing something that fits that category. (And don't try to do them ALL. That's too much unreasonable pressure. You are seeking progress, not perfection.)
You can do something as simple as hold a door open for someone else, or letting that asshole that cut you off on the road simply go on his way without paying another thought to them. Listen to another person tell you about their day, and instead of thinking of responses about yourself, think of questions you can ask them about their day, their feelings, their upcoming plans. Offer to help someone. Whatever you do, the important part is give yourself credit, even if it feels silly to do so. Your goal here is to replace the negative image of yourself, and instead, focus on the fact that you are now someone new, someone better, someone who is not only making an effort, but showing progress, and the way you measure that, is by giving yourself a break and acknowledging your successful efforts, no matter how small. Over time, it not only becomes more natural to be honest, giving and empathetic, but you also notice that some of those internal voices that tell you "you suck" will be replaced by "You did okay today, good job".
Keep coming back and sharing your progress and challenges. We've all been in your shoes. Our goal isn't to judge, it's to help guide you, especially in places where we all tend to struggle or fail. I know this hurts, and it sucks, but you are not alone, and it does not have to define you for life. Time to start a new chapter in the book of you. You get the write the ending any way you want. So hop to it.
[This message edited by DaddyDom at 4:13 AM, Sunday, September 22nd]