I am saying that rejection of your spouse's sexual advances on a consistent basis for years results in deep emotions and responses as well. |
OP here. It's been three months. We were having sex regularly before I found out. |
Way to hide bombshell material information until late in the thread. Did your husband know about the childhood abuse prior to marrying you? |
i am also the survivor of a cheating spouse with same profile - sex at home whenever he wanted, but still watched tons of porn and engaged in multiple affairs outside the relationship and abused substances. People like this have very deep problems that will take a lifetime of dedicated therapy in order to gain control of sexual impulsiveness. Sex addiction is often a diagnosis in these situations, but for what it's worth, in our situation, the cheating was heavily driven by hypersexuality of bipolar mania. Therapy for the victom spouse is a must because with or without childhood sexual abuse, infidelity is a major trauma. |
You know, I hadn't even acknowledged it to myself until about a year into my marriage. Prior to that, the information had never integrated - does that make sense? So as soon as I accepted the information myself, I told my husband. That was just over two years ago. I've now cut off the family member - and as a result, the rest of that side of the family. I found out about his porn "habit" around the time I found out about the cheating, if you consider that important. (3x a day for years.) |
DH has been sober and in recovery since I found out about the cheating. I consider the sex addiction/dysfunction ancillary to his alcohol addiction and compulsive nature in general. He's also in a mindful meditation course. He's doing some work, which I give him credit for. |
We're talking generally, OP, not about your specific situation any longer. |
It isn't easy for everyone to sever meaningful relationships when they see fault. Some people do believe in the power of forgiveness, change, reconciliation. Sometimes it's a beautiful ending - sometimes it's. it. OP from what you shared it sounds like he and you have a conflicting emotional maturity as well. If this isn't resolved, you're postponing a day that will come when you do divorce. Good luck. |