Hi TIF
Always good to hear an update from you. I think you remember me and the kind of questions I ask and apologize in advance if as usual they are too probing. But I do care about you and want to ensure you have a happy life together with your wife for the decades to come.
Thanks Stevesn, and honestly, I think these types of questions are quite helpful (as many of your questions have been throughout my journey).
I know you are conversing mostly here about your feelings towards new BS's in crisis. But I want to focus a few minutes on this:
My marriage issues are generally run of the mill issues you get as you reach your 40s.
Of course every relationship, whether it has been touched by infidelity or not will have these issues to work thru. But what I'd like to understand and ensure, is that your life and relationship with your wife has not reverted back to 2019 interactions.
Do you feel it is different now than back then? Is the environment surrounding your marriage no longer conducive to her looking for emotion and romance outside your relationship?
So much has changed in general, that I do feel different than I did back then. I have worked on my own flaws in terms of maybe being too emotionally cold or distant, and she of course has done a lot of work to get rid of her own block of sharing her pain with me which was a key breakthrough in our R. So I think we have a number of tools for both of us where (I'm not accepting blame or shifting it to me) I don't hold emotional distance and she doesn't think of making that decision again when she feels I don't see her or understand what she is feeling.
In the past you wrote about the requirements and boundaries you set down in order to stay and she eventually agreed to them. But has she taken ownership of these things and run with them? Has she let them slide over the years? It took a long while to remove the AP from her life even after she claimed they were no longer in a relationship. How does she view that period now and does she see how harmful it was to you? Does she care.
She has taken complete ownership at this point. When she brings it up, she apologizes and said it was an awful thing for her to do. It doesn't come up often though. She has no broken NC and has not continued her friendship with AP's friend. When she does anything (girls trip, work party, you pick) that might be a potential trigger, she brings it up directly and makes extra sure I'm OK with it. That's why I often talk about the importance of transference of vigilance. This is a consistent behavior she has shown for years now.
She views her infidelity negatively now. She doesn't pine for AP. She is contrite.
And going forward have you put communication checkpoints into place to discuss all this and ensure that neither of you is showing behavior that could be harmful to the other?
Going along the "more run of the mill" issues, we are good at communicating and still use the Gottman tools for addressing our issues. We turn toward each other and do not build up secret resentments.
And finally, how do you and she relate to the friends and relatives that had their own infidelity exposed by you. Are they all grateful to you for what you did? Resentful? Do the women who cheated look back on what they did fondly or with great humility and distaste?
I don't know if I posted the latest story. My wife's friend (yet another) had a ONS, and my wife convinced her to tell her husband. The only one that I'm in regular contact with is grateful. I don't know how SIL feels, but I don't think she is resentful. None of them have ex-communicated me or my wife. They are all still married, but not all of them have really "reconciled". R is sometimes for Rugsweeping, but that isn't my battle to fight.
My goal here is to ensure that rug sweeping is not the basis of your good feelings. I want you to be secure in your relationship and hope she can get to that point too.
This is an interesting turn of phrase, because I feel *safe* in my relationship, but I have sort of given up on my relationship being *secure*. I'm always prepared for divorce. So I don't have to rely on my M remaining solvent to be secure in life.
Of course as always you can tell me to pound salt. But I'm hoping you realize after 5 years here that these types of exercises in self analysis with your spouse can ensure authenticity in what you have built together.
I'm a firm believer in the work never ending from either partner in order to truly reconcile and rebuild and that takes great desire from both to do that together.
I guess this might be a different strokes thing. I do agree reconciliation is a constant ongoing process. And that at any given moment you have to want it to work to make it work. I'm OK with understanding that this desire could fail at any moment on either side of the relationship. I understand that living with this type of uncertainty isn't for everyone but it works in Marriage 2.0 for me.