Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife cheated on me. One year past D day. For me having a revenge fling with a much younger woman has helped me recover to some degree.
Maybe I’ll forgive down the road, maybe not.
Does your wife know about the revenge fling? How very immature of you. Tit for tat right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It took me 3.5 years. 12 years later, we’re very happily married.
Was he patient with the process?
He better had been or I wouldn't still be married to him.
Anonymous wrote:For me it really comes down to . . .
I have faith in myself. Those of us who have been cheated on learn the unfortunate lesson that you can never protect yourself from everything that can go wrong in life. Loving other people, letting them in, means that we will be hurt. Hopefully for most of it isn't infidelity or abusive, but it will happen. But we keep loving anyway. (Maybe not our wayward spouses, but definitely people in general.)
So I don't live with the "what if" of him cheating again. If he does, I will figure it out, sooner or later. I will be OK. My happiness doesn't depend on him. If he's adding to my happiness, great, we can stay together. But if one day he isn't, then I know will be OK.
The rest of it, the trauma . . . healing is not a linear thing. You will feel healed some days and wonder where that happy person went the next. But through therapy, introspection, and self-care, you can heal a lot.
I find meditation very powerful. I focus on what I can control and letting go of the rest. I focus on compassion, for myself and others. I focus on gratitude. When I have big feelings to let out, I do EFT/tapping. Any kind of trauma isn't a one and done kind of thing; sometimes the old wound acts up and you need to tend to it anew. But with intention and time, you will consistently get better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It took me 3.5 years. 12 years later, we’re very happily married.
Was he patient with the process?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the same exact boat except I'm in my mid 30s with 2 kids. We are 2 years out from discovery and I just don't know if I can do it. It makes me feel heartbroken for our little kids so I've stayed thus far.
You are in a way better position to leave than op. If you decide to. Your kids will be ok either way.
Op is in her 50s and hasn’t worked in a long time, it sounds like. That’s much more challenging.
Anonymous wrote:It took me 3.5 years. 12 years later, we’re very happily married.
Anonymous wrote:My wife cheated on me. One year past D day. For me having a revenge fling with a much younger woman has helped me recover to some degree.
Maybe I’ll forgive down the road, maybe not.
Anonymous wrote:As you probably realize, there is no ideal option at this point. You can stay, with all the problems you list, or you can leave, which will bring with it a different set of problems, some of which you may not even fully appreciate until confronted with them (financial, living arrangement, kids, alone-ness, etc.). The option of having a perfect marriage and total trust is gone for you no matter what.
It's hard--the choice at this point is intensely individual. It comes down to your preferences, your situation, what you value, your resources, how much you like day to day life with your husband, and a ton of other factors only you have insight into. Neither is going to be what you had before. But I do think it will get easier in time. You don't say how long it has been.
Anonymous wrote:Why do men believe in their ability to recover financially post divorce but women do not despite the fact that child support and/or spousal support will be there? It seems to me that women are more likely to be hesitant because of finances. Men believe they will recover. I read about all these very successful high earning women yet they are still worried about finances post divorce I don't get it. My ex wife earned more than me but I did not hesitate a single minute to divorce her and I didn't seem spousal support from her either. Post divorce I challenged myself to make a lot money and right now I make more than she will probably ever make. I learned new skills, did an online MBA and networked like crazy. We have 50/50 custody but I take our twin to their swimming clubs and travel with them to competitions. I attend as much events as possible for them. She probably attended 10% of such events since we divorced because she is always busy with work. So I am honestly puzzled about this worry that women have about finances post divorce. Can someone shed some lights?
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the same exact boat except I'm in my mid 30s with 2 kids. We are 2 years out from discovery and I just don't know if I can do it. It makes me feel heartbroken for our little kids so I've stayed thus far.