@1994 the difference this time is that my husband is actually a part of the recovery and, for the first time in our marriage, he is truly talking to me. We have never worked on our marriage together like this before, and he has never shared himself with me in the way he is now. There are NO excuses for what I did, but there were very real circumstances that led up to my terrible decision, and we have both decided to unpack all of it. The way we are communicating and handling each other now is brand new. It feels like a watershed moment where we both realized that we had lost who we were long before the affair, even before we were married. The current level of communication is breathtaking ... It is like we are seeing and hearing each other for the first time. Seeing the whole person, not just the person as "my spouse" ... we are listening, crying, yelling, laughing ... it isn't all rainbows and sunsets. He is very angry. Of course. But he is TALKING for the first time EVER, and I am listening to him in a way I never did before.
How to stay committed? Keep talking, start MC, develop new habits, create accountability goals that we can track ... we never did any of this before. We just moved on with our heads down. It was ridiculous.
We have created some routines including daily talks before the day starts, walks, exercising together, adhering to a variety of boundaries, turning our devices off by a certain time, nightly talks before we sleep, GPS tracking (we already had that but he never paid attention to it - he will now), allowing any and all questions, keeping him in the loop about ANY attempts by the AP to contact me in anyway .... we are working on it every day. We have check ins. We talk all the time. It is all either of us had dreamed of in the first place, and all we had wanted really, but it arrived at a terrible price and we are focused on repairing and moving forward.
I want to be clear: there is no moral equivalent for what I did. I own my choices completely. But the affair didn’t happen in a vacuum. Our marriage was deeply troubled from the beginning. Almost immediately after we were married, my husband disconnected emotionally. He became guarded, addicted to work and poker, and unable to engage in meaningful conversations or intimacy with me. I was miserable and lonely, constantly asking for connection that never came. Eventually, we were like two robots living together, and I began to normalize that distance. I resorted to my own set of workaholic habits. I allowed him to avoid, and then I would avoid as well. I gave up on intimacy completely. Until I couldn't anymore. I never imagined myself as someone who could cheat. I had always judged people who did. And yet in my weakness and unhappiness, I crossed a line. That is on me. 100%.
After my first disclosure, I made many changes. I changed jobs, blocked the AP, apologized daily, and was faithful and remorseful. But nothing changed on his end. He refused marriage counseling, and I arrogantly thought I could repair everything alone. I carried the weight by myself, while he stuffed things down and avoided them. This was not new to the A. It is how he handled any kind of conflict. I responded with anger and resentment. We were a mess. I eventually relapsed when the AP resurfaced. I was like an addict, trying to stop on my own many times, but I couldn’t escape the cycle while our marriage remained broken and disconnected.
What makes this different now is that my husband is finally part of the process. He knows everything, and I am not hiding anything anymore. For the first time, he is opening up, talking, and being present with me. We are working together instead of me trying to do all the heavy lifting by myself. This isn’t just about me deciding to be a good partner; it’s also about him choosing to be a good partner too. It’s about both of us acknowledging the years of distance, addictions, and communication failures we allowed to fester, and finally having the courage to face them head-on.
Reconciliation can only work if both people change at a fundamental level. This time, it’s not just me apologizing, changing my behavior and hoping he’ll heal. It’s both of us committing to real change, real accountability, and real connection. That’s why this time is different.
[This message edited by dlvp at 6:21 AM, Friday, August 22nd]