CSCE, Your posts on this page was enlightening for me. I have been reading your thread, and your husband's thread for some time now... Mostly just your posts, and his posts. You both have some long threads. I have drifted away from these sites over the last few months. There is a lot I have forgotten or missed...
However, I need to respond to your post on this page. Maybe you are aware of most of what I am about to say...maybe most of it may not be helpful or useful. Hopefully there are somethings in the follow pontifications that you might find useful, helpful, and hopefully enlightening.
At any rate... take what is useful and helpful, and ignore the rest.
Your long term sexual rejection of your husband, followed by accepting and pursuing another man for sex, is probable a very significant issue here. A man's fundamental sex drive really doesn't change that much from the beginning for most men. So, if things tapered off as you rejected him over time, that was the response. The fact that he quit initiating is usually a form of emotional self protection. Sexual rejection and failure to initiate from spouse is usually interpreted as a loss of respect, desire, and love. I bet though, he still wanted you on a daily basis and thought about it as much as he ever did... He just... controlled it.
Shutting down for 2 years... That usually indicated there is a lot of buried anger, pain, frustration, fear, and loss of hope. For me personally, I have a lot of bitterness that I often have to control, deny, fight.
I personally, interpret your husbands current behavior as unresolved anger and bitterness from the long term sexual rejection. The affair is going to be emotionally interpreted as the ultimate form of sexual rejection. It caps off the entire message that you have been sending to him for a very long time now.
Men generally never put a woman in the "Friend Box". Well... except for a mom or a sister or an immediate relative....
The fact that you are in the "Friend Box" with follow through behavior, indicates...
there is substantial trauma to your relationship regarding the erotic nature of your relationship.
You have been emasculating him for a lot of years before the affair. The affair is close to the ultimate form of emasculating a woman can do to a man. A man really never get's over that. If your relationship survives, if you are still together in 10 years from now, if your sex life is the best it has ever been and you are having sex 2,3,4 times a week... every time.. in the back of his mind... he will still have a shadow of a doubt... he will often find himself asking...
Is this all and act? Does she really desire me? Is she faking? Is she still thinking about the other man and does she still prefer and desire him?
After all... you made it abundantly clear for a lot of years prior to this that you really did not sexually desire him before the affair.
Any sexual change post affair, is going to be, evaluated as no more than fake desire, as a trade off for keeping and maintaining the relationship after the affair. Is your sexual desire for him in the future going to be anything more than pity, duty, guilt sex? How do you convince someone that has a long term negative history with you that your desire in the future is real and true?
You may need professional help in this subject.
I don't say these things to be mean or hurtful to you. I am sending this to you so, you are, knowledgeable at some of the challenges that you two may face in working through this. This is a jumble up summary of a mix of personal experiences and what I have learned over the years from hanging around these sites.
You might be able to ... seduce your husband some night in the near future. Hope you do.. it might be good for both of you to find out a few things... from that experience. But, One great night, isn't going to fix this...
This is a marathon, the first 3 months, 6 months, 12 months at the trauma months. If or once things settle down, if you both try to move forward together one day at a time...
It is often reported that the second year is the real "hell" year for the Wayward spouses. The second year, the Betrayed spouse isn't usually trying to rescue the relationship, and isn't in shock. That is the year they begin to really start to re-evaluate and start to really test the meaning and value of the relationship for both of you. If you think this first year is difficult... the second year is often described as the worse one to survive. Note... at some point, one or both of you may decide to separate and divorce. However, that doesn't mean it is the end... It is never over, till it is over. Sometimes you want to quit, sometimes he wants to quite. Sometimes either one of you may actually quite. But, be patient, take one day at a time, work through it... Who knows... 10 years from now, you are wiser, he is wiser, and your marriage may be a very good marriage that both of you enjoy and are thankful and appreciate being in. Not, innocent, not perfect, but, older, wiser, more appreciative. Taking less things for granted.... being more mindful to appreciate the small things together... Forgiveness, Grace, Patience, Hope, Love,... go a long way.. and can perform miracles. Hoping the best for both of you two. A movie that deals with the subject of cheating with a positive message and ending in a marriage restoration is the 1969 movie, "Winning" with Paul Newman. Almost a must see for couples working on getting through the initial stages of trying to recover from an affair... I think... especially for men... but, you probable should see it first and see if you can find it, and if you can cope with your BS seeing it in your presence. Well, that , and the movie "Fireproof".