Please let me know if I am posting too much, I am just venting today as I am in a hard place so it is just my current thoughts.
I recently wrote about why I stayed faithful. I wrote about character, our children, my vows, and the fact that pain was never permission for me to create more pain.
But there is another side to that choice that doesn't sound nearly as noble.
Staying faithful did not mean I was happy. It didn’t mean I felt loved, desired, appreciated, or even noticed. It didn’t mean I was somehow less lonely than she was. It just meant I carried my loneliness differently, I carried it quietly. And quiet pain is incredibly easy to ignore.
There are no deleted messages proving how unwanted I felt. There are no hotel receipts documenting the nights I lay beside my wife feeling completely alone. There are no secret meetings showing how desperately I wanted to feel like more than a provider, a problem-solver, a chauffeur, and a coparent. There is no paper trail for the conversations I tried to start, the rejection I swallowed, or the number of times I convinced myself that this was just a hard season and things would get better.
There is only the fact that I stayed.
I went to work, I paid the bills, I raised our kids, I fixed what broke. I carried the responsibilities because that was what I believed a husband and father was supposed to do. I kept showing up even when it felt like nobody was showing up for me.
That is what faithful spouses do. We don’t always leave, and we don’t betray anyone but ourselves. Sometimes we just absorb everything. We absorb the silence, the lack of intimacy, the creeping feeling that everyone else’s needs matter more than our own. We make excuses for the distance because we love the person creating it. We become patient, then more patient, and eventually so patient that nobody notices we are slowly disappearing.
Because I kept functioning, everyone assumed I was fine. Because I didn’t create chaos, my loneliness never became an emergency. Because I remained dependable, my pain was mistaken for strength.
And then I discovered that while I was carrying the marriage, she had been stepping outside it.
That is the hardest thing to accept. While I was denying myself an escape, she was granting herself one. While I was protecting our family from my pain, she was using her pain to justify risking it. While I was telling myself that marriage means enduring loneliness without destroying everything around you, she was creating a second life where none of the responsibilities followed her.
Then, after discovery, I was still expected to understand. I had to understand her loneliness. Her unmet needs, her coping mechanisms, her childhood, her desire for validation. Her ability to compartmentalize, her fear and her shame.
I have spent more time trying to understand why my wife betrayed me than anyone ever spent asking what it took for me not to betray her.
My faithfulness didn’t happen because my needs were being met. It happened despite the fact that they were starved. I was lonely too. I felt unwanted too. I wanted to be touched, desired, and chosen. I wanted someone to look at me and see something more than a tool that fixes things and pays bills. I tried to talk and tell.
There were times when attention from another woman would have felt incredible. There were times when being admired would have filled something in me that had been empty for years. I had opportunities. I had the same easy access to phones, messages, secrecy, and validation that everyone else has.
But I understood that feeling deprived did not give me the right to become deceptive.
So I brought my pain home. I tried to talk. I tried to explain that I was lonely, that the intimacy was dead, and that our marriage had become transactional. I didn't always say it perfectly. Sometimes my frustration sounded like anger, sometimes I withdrew because I was tired of saying the same things to a brick wall. But I brought the problem into the marriage. I didn't take it outside and build a second one.
Faithfulness didn’t prevent me from being hurt. It prevented me from becoming someone I would hate, and I am so glad I made the choices I did. It allowed me to look at our children and know I hadn't gambled their stability for a temporary feeling. It allowed me to look in the mirror and know I hadn't forced my wife to question whether the years she lived beside me were even real.
But it didn’t protect me from the cost of carrying it all alone.
Parts of me became hard during those years. There are needs I just stopped expressing because being disappointed repeatedly teaches you to stop asking. There were times I accepted absolutely nothing because admitting how hungry I was felt more humiliating than pretending I was full. That wasn't strength. It was survival.
I am proud that I stayed faithful. I am proud that loneliness didn’t break my values, that rejection didn’t become my excuse, and that opportunity didn’t become my permission. But I am done pretending it didn’t cost me anything. It cost me everything I have and more.
It cost me pieces of my confidence, not in my self but others. It cost me years of swallowing things I should have screamed. It cost me the belief that if you love someone completely, they will naturally protect you in return. It cost me the certainty that the person sleeping next to me was carrying the same marriage I was.
Then discovery handed me even more to carry. The images. The questions. The humiliation. The ruined memories. The responsibility of keeping our children steady while I could barely keep myself standing.
I stayed faithful because I refused to make my pain someone else’s wound. She didn't make that same choice.
I don’t regret keeping my word. I don’t regret protecting my children from choices that would destroy their sense of safety. I don’t regret remaining faithful, even to someone who wasn't being faithful to me. What I regret is how long I believed that being dependable meant I was supposed to live without being cared for. I regret how much of myself I allowed to die while trying to keep the marriage alive.
Being faithful shouldn't require you to vanish. Love shouldn't mean starving quietly so everyone else can stay comfortable.
My integrity protected my family from my choices. It did not protect me from hers.
And even knowing what it cost me, I would still choose faithfulness again. Not because she deserved it, and not because the marriage was always worthy of the sacrifice.
But because I deserved to remain the man I believed myself to be.
I don’t regret protecting her. I regret that the person I protected didn’t protect me.