It's been another year, and I have to say I feel exactly the same way today as I did when I posted last May. I am starting to feel very depressed and perhaps ready to accept the reality that this marriage cannot continue. While life is good 90% of the time, the other 10% (maybe even 5%) is just really soul-crushing and painful and I am not sure I can keep subjecting myself to it for the rest of my life.
I'm tired of being triggered, I'm tired of having the same mental images replay in my mind, I'm tired of feeling so alone with my feelings, I'm tired of the injustice of it all, and I'm tired of being disappointed in my wife's responses whenever I voice these feelings to her.
Ugh. I'm getting ahead of myself. It's hard to parse so many thoughts and actions into a coherent post, but I will try to summarize.
We live a good life. No, we live a GREAT life. We live in a beautiful house with two amazing kids, no money problems, we travel a few times a year and love to vacation as a family, we have a great sex life, we laugh together and generally just enjoy each other's company. It's the life I dreamed of and the life I worked intentionally to build, from a young age.
The problem is, of course, the ghosts of the past that haunt me and this "great life" is built on a foundation of lies and trauma. So, so much of my life is triggering for me to think about because of how my wife acted and how long she lied about it and how badly it wrecked me when she confessed. Our early years are ruined for me because of the affair. Our wedding is ruined for me because of what I didn't know at the time, and because one of her other "lesser" APs was in attendance and knew she had cheated, while watching me tie the knot. Our life around the confession is ruined for me because my life was in ruins - while our kids were toddlers, we spent most of our time fighting and crying. I barely remember my kids at that age because I was so full of rage and sadness all the time, I was completely and totally consumed by the trauma of my wife's confession.
It took about 3-4 years for the trauma to subside and for me to decide I truly wanted to reconcile. We re-located, in a bid for a "fresh start", and it worked for a little bit. I was triggered way less often in our new home town and the excitement of getting settled into a new house and new town kept my mind off her A for a while. I was optimistic about our future.
However, over the past year or so, the pattern that has repeated is this - something triggers me, I get distant and withdrawn, my wife does not check in with me proactively, I get angry and eventually voice my feelings, she responds in a way that leaves me disappointed and more angry, and eventually enough time passes that we move on and start over again.
Recently, the triggers are piling up and I am really hitting a bad place in my head. My wife has joined a social circle here that triggers me badly - they're like the "adult cool kids" club, a bunch of MILFs who are always at the pool, drink too much and all seem very superficial. My wife is like halfway in this group - she doesn't like them, but she can't help but want to be a part of the social group. Many of the SOs of these women strike me as the exact same kind of good-looking, morally-bankrupt douchebags that my wife cheated on me with 10, 15, 20 years ago. I have zero interest in being friends with or hanging out with them, and I now actively detest going to the pool because I can't stand them and I feel judged (I am and always have been slightly overweight).
One of these guys, who is dating my wife's best friend (anyone remember our story for years ago? If you do, you might remember this is a recurring theme of my wife getting entangled with her friend's SOs), has particularly rubbed me the wrong way. He is a doctor and my wife suffers from a condition in which he specializes. During an evening when we were hanging out with this couple, he offered to be her doctor, which made me sick and panic, and my wife responded something like "that would be great!". The next day, I fully expected her to come to her sense and realize how inappropriate that would be, but instead she had already called his office to schedule an appointment!
I was sick over this, and very angry. I couldn't believe she didn't check with me first. Her response was basically "I am worried about my health, he is a professional, he wants to help". I remind her there are probably 50 doctors within a 20 mile radius of us that practice the same medicine, and that a patient/doctor relationship is very intimate in a sense, not to mention with lots of touching and time alone together in a room, and I am incredibly uncomfortable with this guy being your doctor and very upset you didn't check in with me before making this appointment. She eventually agreed to cancel her appointment and said she was sorry she did it. She is always sorry - she's SO GOOD at being sorry, and SO BAD at not doing the things in the first place that she apologizes for later.
Anyway, this same guy then texted my wife last week, privately (even though there is a group chat that includes me and his girlfriend) to wish her good luck and that he will be thinking positive thoughts for her while she travels to deal with a very stressful family matter. My wife shared this with me (good) but then acted defensive when I told her how upset it made me and how scummy I thought it was of this guy (bad). I am incensed - it's been almost 7 years now of processing her confession and affair, and EVERYTHING that we have read, all the therapy we have gone, everything on this site and elsewhere, should have caused a giant red flag to pop up in her head when she received this text. Instead, her words when she showed it to me were, "___ texted me, I thought you should know because you will probably be upset about it". I said "aren't YOU upset about it?" She said "no, not really, his girlfriend (her best friend) probably told him to do it. I don't want him to text me! I didn't ask for this."
My thoughts are you DID ask for this, when you agreed to be his patient you basically give this guy a green flag to try to break boundaries, you're just somehow still too naive to see it even after all we've been through.
Did I mention this doctor is single because his marriage ended as a result of his infidelity? Yeah, small point of context there, but I'm sure it's just like he says it was, "the marriage was already broken, it would have ended anyway". Any of you heard that story before??
It just makes me feel so mad and disappointed. And triggered. Here we are, in a new home, new town, and yet all the same patterns keep materializing.
Anyway, a few days after that (and just a few days ago), we're at a mall with the kids and we happen to walk past the retail store where she used to work when she had her affair with her co-worker. I was still reeling from what I described above, and now the invasive mental images compounded that and I got very upset, very withdrawn, and I've spent the past few days just stewing on everything all over again. When I finally vented to her (again, she never solicits my feelings proactively, I think she is just too scared) her response was to say "I'm sorry, I just don't associate with the person I was back then at all, it's very hard for me to think about it or talk about it". Gee, thanks. I wish I didn't associate with the person I was back then, but I don't have that luxury.
This brings me to where I am today and why I feel how I feel. My wife is absolutely great whenever the affair is not a part of our life, and I love her very much. However, when the affair IS a part of our life (and for me that is still very often, for her it is only when I bring it up and voice my feelings, which is rare) she is never what I need her to be in those moments. She is defensive, she deflects, she throws in the towel ("if you can't be happy with me then maybe you should leave"). What she doesn't do, the things I am dying for like a parched man in a desert, is to fight for me, to share in the suffering together, to mutually talk about what we hate about the past, to hear her specifically say how much she hates her past actions and to tell me again how remorseful she is and how much she wants me. Mostly just to be real, to speak from the heart, to empathize and connect with me and reassure me.
I want to be wanted. I want to be worth fighting for. I want my pain to be enough for her to feel her own sadness along with me, instead of being "disconnected from her past self" or arguing with me and getting defensive ("I've tried so hard, I've put in so much effort..."). She'll tell me she wants to do better, but she never does. I don't know if she's capable.
Maybe I am impossible to please. I probably am. I cannot get over what she did, and I know I never will. It will haunt me forever. It hurt me in such an incredibly vulnerable spot, in the absolute worst way possible, it validated all of my worst fears about myself and the pain is unbearable to think about sometimes. It makes me feel so pathetic and I feel like I have lost a lot of respect for myself in trying to reconcile, because I always had a very hard line in my mind around infidelity.
I need help figuring out how to move forward. I don't want to be divorced, or for my children to have divorced parents, or give up all the good things we have in our life together, but I also can't tolerate living with this for the rest of my life. I love my wife but I can't suffer alone through these episodes forever.