I can't figure out how to quote so I will try to address some questions.
1. I don't know that moving to the midwest would help. I WFH but my job's territory is in the west and IDK how that would play. Obviously I'm the breadwinner so I need to prioritize my job. For sure he would be able to find a job in the midwest. Up until now he has really not wanted to move. I mean, I'm not thrilled about moving either. We refinanced during a great time and it's painful to think about giving all that up, although of course with CA being as crazy as it is, we have a ton of equity.
2. I am well aware everything is on my terms now. I have known people who were cheated on and some stayed, some left, and those who left were like, "When you know, you know." I hate how I am feeling right now. He is my best friend. Those feelings didn't just evaporate last week. I am angry, hurt and betrayed. I am shocked. I am wondering if I can get past this or if I WANT to. I am thinking I'm 42, it would suck to start over, but should I start over NOW and not drag it out for years and years? It is a very confusing place in my head.
3. My financial friend had said being that I'm in the worst place right now, she recommended trying to be sincere in working things out, but a few months down the line requesting a post-nup to exclude rental properties and my retirement. Because I have no chill, I have a few times brought up to my husband I could lose these things in the divorce process, and he has said he would NEVER try to take them from me. I believe he is being sincere, now, but of course things change if papers are ever filed.
4. I am going to insist my husband find a therapist. He recently found one and did not like her. I have a therapist right now and I like her but I am going to look for one with more trauma experience that can hopefully help me be a bit more tactical or thoughtful in how I process all this.
5. We do not have any children. I know that does make this simpler. It's part of why I'm like, "I SHOULD JUST FUCKING LEAVE," every 15 minutes. My husband has asked if I want him to leave, and I don't. Partially because I have a lot of questions to ask him, and why should he get off the hook in feeling the terrible emotions I am experiencing?
6. He hasn't written a no contact letter, however I have access to everything now. His email, his phone, her number, her address. I did my homework. I considered calling her husband but at the end of the day I have my own emotional situation to deal with and I don't want some dude knocking on our door. I may mail him anonymously at some point but I can't deal right now.
7. He has shown a great deal of remorse and answered all my questions without anger or getting defensive. I am just having so much trouble accepting he hid this successfully for so long. There were a couple of red flags I ignored, because I believed in my heart he would never do such a thing. That's the part I don't know if I can or want to get over.
8. His illness had brought on a great deal of complications. Post-COVID he experienced lots of allergy symptoms and we had to change his/our diet entirely. He started experiencing brain fog. He got laid off in 2021 and immediately found another job but was struggling with computer tasks - even simple things like writing emails, filling out a time card, etc. We started to set some appointments and see some specialists (all of which cost a great deal of time and money). I saw in on one interview with him (it was a video interview and I was out of frame) and I was astounded by his lack of ability to quickly answer questions / pivot. He has struggled with job applications, which are absolutely bonkers now. If you apply to a simple retail job, you need to not only get in the application, but take a skills test, etc. So he has been trying, and been on interviews, but has not gotten job offers even at places like Home Depot, Best Buy, Target, etc. His resume is an issue, the gap of employment is an issue, and now his age is an issue. He is feeling better from his low but still not where he was cognitively and the scans we have ordered came back negative for dementia, etc. I have spent HOURS researching, posting in Facebook groups, going to doctor's appointments, etc. I know this period of time has been very, very hard for him. Most men define themselves by their careers and he's no exception. So in short, yes, I do think we should apply to SSDI because he certainly cannot seem to get work at his previous income/skill level, and for basic jobs, he is being looked at as overqualified.
Thank you all for your responses, I am going to go through the resources and will continue to post. I really appreciate the support.