Based on reading through page 8:
Your wife was blackmailed and you don’t care? You don’t think that matters. Man, I completely disagree. I don’t know what else to say.
Look, if this is a stance that we are collectively taking to the point of dismissing the roll of blackmail in starting an affair, I just can’t agree.
The reason the blackmail didn't matter was that my chief concern was my own healing. I can't imagine the pain - anger, grief, fear, shame - that came with being betrayed could have been more or less than it was if my W had not been blackmailed.
Are you saying the blackmail somehow mitigated my W's misdeeds? If so, I could have decided her crime of cheating was exacerbated by being blackmailed. After all, not only did she cheat; she also committed the smaller crime that started the blackmail and the crime of submitting to the blackmail and thereby compounding the initial crime.
How do you view your W's A? I viewed my W's as a symptom of a lot of things, but what stood out most for me was that she was somehow sick. I still wanted to be with her - if she healed.
That's not the only way I could have seen her A. I could have seen her A as sickness and decided I didn't want to be with her any more. Those are 2 of, probably, many healthy responses. But seeing her as sick and wanting R comprised a major part of my response.
Another critical element of my response was knowing from the 1st moment that I had been a good enough H. I did not take her A as a comment on me. I knew she hurt me, but I thought - and said - she wouldn't have betrayed me if she hadn't betrayed herself first. I empathized with her as far as the stress of being blackmailed, but I couldn't forget that she could have stopped that by simply not complying with the 1st demands, which came months before any sexual advances.
The A was hers, not mine. I did not see the A as something she did to me. I saw myself as collateral damage.
What I had to deal with was the pain of being betrayed - and I had to process that pain no matter why my W cheated and no matter what mitigating factors might have been relevant. Although the following might be projection, IMO, all BSes have that same basic need: to heal, to process the anger, grief, fear, and shame out of their bodies. A BS who holds onto one or more of those feelings is not (yet) healed, IMO. I don't think many humanist psychologists would disagree with that, but there are other approaches.
This healing is the BS's responsibility. BS heals BS. The WS can provide emotional support, but the BS has to do the work.
My take is that the sooner you stop focusing on your WS and the sooner you start focusing on processing your own pain, the better.
I don’t want to pick on Sisoon, but that just really hit me in the heart.
No worries.
I'm curious about how that hit you, if you care to share.
If your point is that I may be deluding myself, rest assured that I keep that possibility in mind - but I'm also aware that I really like to wake up beside her and just be with her.
So ... bottom line: To figure out what you're going to do next, your best bet is to figure out what you want and what kind of person you are. You can't do either while you focus on your W.
My reco: Let your D/R decision grow out of who you are and what you want. Separate figuring out those things from the question of whether or not your W is a good candidate for R.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 5:12 PM, Friday, February 17th]