As far as the marriage, I am not sure that we need to go back to marriage counseling just yet. Our marriage counselor was pretty good at marriage counseling (generally), just bad at dealing with infidelity.
I don't trust much that my wife says these days (for obvious reasons), but I do trust that she wants to make this marriage work. For now, polite reminders are probably the best approach. My concern is that I have asked her to make some small changes in the past and it has never stuck.
Part of the problem is her FOO. Her mother is highly narcissistic and believes that women can do no wrong. Ergo, if there is a problem with a marriage, it's the husband's fault. For now, I am just pointing out the hypocrisy of some of her views.
Another part of the problem is our marriage counselor's views on infidelity. I have talked about this elsewhere but the MC was very much of the opinion that the infidelity is the responsibility of both spouses. I have tried and tried to convince her otherwise.
Yesterday, ChamomileTea wrote something that I thought was really good, so I sent it to my wife. I don't know if it had an impact on her, but this is what I sent:
There is an antiquated model that is still popular with many therapists. It's all about whether or not one's Emotional Needs are being met within the relationship.
Let me tell you what happens when you buy into that though...
In 2004, I caught my husband involving himself in online emotional affairs with cybersexing, sexts, and phoning. So, I saw an attorney while he was at work, called him on the phone and told him he needed to come home so we could talk. He pretty much knew he was busted and made it home in record time, where I basically presented my evidence and told him I was going to file immediately for divorce. He gave me crocodile tears, we went to marriage counseling for awhile, and I started learning all I could about infidelity. Of course, this "Emotional Needs" model was the first thing I ran into. And being the compassionate empathizer I am... I bought in heavily and started doing the "pick me dance" like a pro.
Things went pretty well for a few years, and then, unbeknownst to me, my husband started looking for women online again. By 2014, he was finding them. And this time, in person.
I've come to believe that cheating is about one's character and how that person deals with their perceived problems. We've all got issues in our relationships, needs unmet or ignored from time to time, built up resentments over unresolved grievances. But... not all of us cheat.
The more compelling piece of evidence to put the "Emotional Needs" argument to rest though... is the RISK involved. My husband risked the loss of his marriage, his family, his reputation, his livelihood, his retirement, and even his own health. He could've been killed. He didn't really KNOW any of those people. All he had to base his actions on was a few week's worth of internet messages and phone calls. He could've been mugged and shot by some criminal who had reeled him in. But he risked everything... for some strange ass.
That's not about the marriage. It's not about "Emotional Needs" or getting told 'not tonight dear' one too many times. It's about thrill-seeking and adrenaline. It's about nursed resentments and internal disappointments and anger turned inward.
Yes. We make mistakes in marriage. But NOTHING we've done will make a person risk everything they've ever worked for or held dear. Nothing we've done will make them engage in behaviors that are alien to their own internal values. Nothing we've done will make them turn their anger inward. The first person an adulterer lies to is himself.
It's okay to talk about unmet needs in the context of marriage counseling. When we're talking about how the relationship is working on a day-to-day basis, the need for healthy companionship, communication, and sexual attention are all valid concerns. At that point, we're addressing the contentment and satisfaction we're deriving from a relationship we've invested in. We're putting this much in, what are we getting back? Marriage is a transaction in this regard, so we've each got our 50% to put into it and get out of it.
But it is NOT okay for a counselor to blame us as if we were somehow responsible for our spouse's internal coping mechanisms or for their inability to be self-fruitful in terms of happiness. We are NOT our spouse's keeper in those areas. Every person must be complete within themselves.
So, if you're running into this model when dealing with infidelity issues, reject it, and move on. If you're talking about marital satisfaction, fine, "unmet needs" can be on the table. But if we're talking about adultery and our spouse's risk of all that was valuable to him... that's about him not being complete within himself.
It's okay to interview several therapists and it's okay for a therapist to challenge your views. But it's NOT okay for one to blame you for your cheating husband's choice to commit adultery.