I'll take a stab at this.
I know I have residual pain. For me healing is a cycle of letting, say, 90% of the pain go, and then 90% of the remaining pain, and 90% of the pain that still remains, as long as I live ... but there's always some pain left. I experience myself as having only a little residual pain, and I think I reached that state 3.5-4 years out from d-day.
But you've had 2 d-days more than 10 years apart. Perhaps you couldn't heal because your gut told you there was more that your W was hiding. If everything is now out in the open, maybe you will heal now.
OTOH, I don't know how much pain I carry around in absolute terms. I do know that I have a very high tolerance for some types of pain. Maybe, in absolute terms, my pain and yours are about the same.
We each experience life through our own filters. Maybe the filters are some combination of emotional, intellectual, and perceptual. Maybe they're all just chemical. I don't know, and I don't think we can know. But it does make sense to me that each of us decides, in some way, how to respond to each stimulus, and we don't all respond the same way. There's no shame in that.
(Infidelity isn't the only trauma I've experienced, and I suspect that it's not the only trauma anyone experiences - we all go through traumatic experiences in our lives. My bet is that we all have deep-seated residual pain from all of them.)
*****
Remember, too, that shame is felt internally. IMO, it's imposed internally, too, even though one's culture tells one what to feel ashamed about.
SI doctrine is that we can all heal from being betrayed, and the rule of thumb is 2-5 years. If it takes someone much longer than that, the person may feel shame, but that's not the only possible response - the person could also feel fine being an outlier or decide that the heuristic is wrong. The best response, probably, is simply to allow oneself to take the time one needs.
*****
My sense is that SI's message is that one can heal if one does the necessary work. I could be wrong about that. It's easy to drop the qualifier in one's head, bt one still has to work to heal.
My bet is that anyone who comes here and talks about being stuck with infidelity-related pain is almost aware of an obstacle. I'm OK with a categorical statement to the effect that getting that obstacle out of the way will help that person heal.
*****
I believe human beings are born with the ability to process pain out of our bodies, although we may never develop or may lose knowledge of techniques. Some of us are born or develop conditions in which physical pain is chronic, and chronic physical pain affects one's whole life. In any case, pain is a feeling, a bodily sensation.
Releasing emotional pain is different from releasing physical pain, IMO. We may not be able to figure out how to release emotional pain on our own; I sure couldn't. But I think essentially all of us can learn with the right help.
If one becomes aware of pain, IMO the pain is ready to be processed out of one's body. One can choose to do the processing or send it back to be stored.
There's no shame in taking time or needing help for releasing pain. IMO, it always takes longer than one wants it to take.
The key is, I think, nurturing oneself away from shame. We are not supposed to feel pain, and shame helps us suppress the pain we feel. But suppressing takes energy that could available for other, more beneficial endeavors. IMO, the quickest way through pain is to feel it, which releases it.
It's not easy, but it's doable, and it's worthwhile. That's a short sentence for a LOT of work, some of which never ends. There's a lot of pain (and joy, and anger, and fear...) in life, and one can't stop processing.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 7:02 PM, Monday, February 28th]