I think how she chooses to address and handle her mother will make or break you reconciliation attempt. I do not think you should give her ANY guidance. You need to see what she is going to do (not say) and what she is going to prioritize ON HER OWN.
I agree that it doesn't make any sense that she would be so callously horrific and then change her mind and be in love with you weeks later. Only time will tell and you are very accommodating in even considering giving her any time.
I'm not giving her guidance on what to do, just telling her how I feel (both in our personal discussions and in MC). I don't know that I'm expecting one specific response from her though--thus far she's been very distant with her mom. Her mom has constantly been trying to talk with her and even offering to come down to stay with us to help the kids (she's currently oblivious to my hatred for her). My wife has rebuffed her at all points as she wants to work through her eventual response in IC.
I sympathize with her situation though. She participated in developing a horrible relationship with her mother that had no boundaries, then she leaned on her mother as an enabler during the worst period of her life. I can only assume my wife rightfully feels selfish judging her mother when her own actions were far worse. She also knows her mom likely doesn't have many more lucid years left (as I've mentioned, she's in the early stages of dementia and her mother died with Alzheimers).
It's all very sad and I'm angry with my wife for destroying these relationships along with destroying everything else.
Armchair psycho-analyst talk,but here goes. . .
She has Daddy issues. When she was having an A she was rebelling against her archetype of the main male influence in her life.
She regufuses to clear the air with her Dad so later in life she tried to "get back," at the main male influence in her life (you). Her vitriol was meant for her father not you.
Something she should explore with a better trained p_doc.
Yea, it's very obvious that's exactly what's happening. The amount of hate I've seen come out about her father since DDay has really taken me off guard. So often she'll bring him into a conversation that I feel he has absolutely no part of--like she's pointing out how obviously awful he is because of X and I'm just confused at the line she's drawing.
Also interestingly, two things were clear in the texts with her mom:
1. Her mother has deep-seated resentment for her father and was projecting her marriage onto my marriage and her husband onto me. My wife would make up lies about me and her mom would relate back to her personal experience--it was this cycle of emotional stupidity that made me cringe. My wife has always felt bad for her mom because of how she was treated by her father; always siding with her over him. It's in line with her financial infidelity too--her mom never felt like she could spend money because it was "his" money, not hers; so my wife had that resentment in the back of her mind our entire marriage, spending behind my back because she was justified to spend "her" money however she wanted. It all ties back to her taking her mother's anger about her marriage out on our marriage.
2. During the affair, in January, my wife brought up an old memory she had to me. She was 18 and with her then-bf at a subway stop waiting for father to come pick her up--normally her mom would get her, but that night, it was her dad. She was making out with her bf heavily, his hands squeezing her butt, etc., when her father arrived. He lost his shit and grounded her for her public display. My wife told me this story--out of the blue--and I said, well, it seems like you could have chosen to be more respectful knowing your dad would be there at any moment--also, you have no idea what had happened to him that day; perhaps he entered into the situation in a bad mood. She thought my position was crazy. That night she brought the conversation up with her mom (who had no recollection of the story)--my wife wrote this:
"Omg so [BH] and I were just talking about how I was making out with that boy at the subway stop when I was in high school and dad grounded me and [BH] agrees with dad...I'm like he was my boyfriend at the time...and I was 18! I mean cut from the same cloth, like what?! Like he told me that is awful. His hands were maybe on my ass but that's it. I was 18! Again, maybe this is why we have issues. :pondering emoji:"
It's interesting on a few levels. For one, the constant exaggeration to make her point more agreeable--I never said what she did was "awful," I just provided her perspective from her dad. But it's also her desire to make me and her dad out to be the same person--projecting his treatment of her mom onto my treatment of her. But it was all fantasy--she was exaggerating things I did in her mind and then looking to her mother to enable her viewpoint; and her mother was doing it because of all her own resentments toward her husband (and men in general).
I see how fucked up they both are so clearly now and I can't imagine untwisting the fuckery ingrained in her head.
She was humiliated for you. I don't have to tell you that someone who actually wrote those messages would not feel embarrassed for you. They would be full of remose and ask what they could do to help you understand it better.
It is a prime example of her deflecting blame for your hurt feelings. Sorry, but she is nowhere near remorse or even accepting responsibility. Her words were cruel, spiteful and intended to create humor at your expense. Ask her how it would feel for you to talk to other people about her like that? Ask her if you had written down the things she is insecure about and any terrible secrets she has told you. Then you gave that list to a rekstive she has to interact with on a regulsr basis. Further then they agree with you about all her faults. As long as you are play acting tell her to imagine it was one of her kids. Again, the pointbof this is to get her to understand how badly this has hurt you.
If I were you I would begin to detach and stop being an emotional support to her while she is not doing the same for you. No more lopsidedness. Equals or not?
Look. I am happily reconciled today, but it took years to get here. In hindsight, we both had answers to find, but they always weren't with each other.
I think you need a business trip or an excursion to think through what you really want out of life. No contact with your W for a week. Right now you need a break from your #1 trigger, your W. There is such a thing as A fatigue and burnout.
Well, she was trying to help me understand it better, but the answers are really shallow. She thought the marriage with me was over--regardless of if things worked out with AP--and was burning my name down everywhere she could to justify her affair and the view on her when she eventually left me. Now that she so desperately wants to stay with me, she is horribly ashamed for what she did and said and recognizes how humiliating it must be for me (I took that as a good sign of empathy honestly).
And I did ask her how it would feel if I had conversations like that with my father. She laughed--genuinely--because the thought of two people as good-hearted and moral as me and my father having such absurd conversations wasn't based in any reality she could imagine.
As for the time away, I struggle with that. I took the week away from her in early April and ultimately it didn't accomplish much for me--I returned to all the same problems I left. As I've said, I have a high pain tolerance. I'll stand in this fire as long as I can tolerate it--either the fire will die out and I'll R or I'll get to hot and bail. But I'm not really interested in stepping out of the fire for a week only tyo step right back in--I want to get it over with.
That said, she has a four-day business trip coming in less than a month, so that will be a built in break. We're also planning a family vacation in a few weeks--that will be surreal I'm sure.
[This message edited by Drstrangelove at 7:08 PM, Tuesday, May 24th]