Infidelity doesn’t have a lot of positive spins to it — but it does offer a chance to reset everything or as much as you need to reset for yourself.
7.5 years later, I’m far happier with me than I’ve ever been.
My personal growth started with being very, very selfish. For me, being at a rock bottom emotionally (anger and sadness), I drew the map for my way out. It started with the little things, like working out when and where I wanted, reading when and where I wanted, listening to music, reaching out to friends and family — all the little stuff that got me through the day to day.
Once I got my feet back underneath me, I decided what I wanted. I decided I would only stay married if my boundaries were enforced and the relationship was going to rebuild into something far better than before.
My favorite part is I don’t play games any more, I don’t wear masks anymore. The world sees me as me everyday, unfiltered, without any care what anyone thinks about me. My ego being destroyed by the rejection of infidelity turned into a powerful thing. Outside validation isn’t required, and that makes life very straight forward.
All that and I’m not a tower of bitterness at all, it is just nice approaching existence with my well being at the heart of each day.
It also makes me better at giving and being vulnerable, I just know when to say when.
My wife respects the renewed inner strength, and my boundaries — which allows that personal growth to continue as we keep building back toward each other.
Balance in any relationship is the work, and we’re getting better at that (the taking care of self and team building).
If your WS isn’t supportive of your focus on you — then yes, maybe a separation is a tool you want to use. It all comes down to knowing what you want and a healthy partner will want the healthiest version of you.