I'm in year 7 or so... also a CSA survivor among other childhood traumas. I don't drop by SI as often as I used to, but I dropped by today and figured I'd share a short update.
Our marriage is doing well. The affair is now something that we can (and do) discuss freely and without massive triggers for either of us. At this point it's more "a part of our story" and that was many chapters ago. We've both done a lot of work on ourselves, and have accomplished a lot of personal growth. Intimacy is our last great hurdle, but if there is one thing I've learned throughout this, it is that sometimes we have to grow personally before we can grow together, and I'm still working on some things, as is she. We talk about retiring together all the time and make plans to do something we both love. We encourage each other to be our best. At this point in time, we are together 24x7 and we enjoy that, although we should get out of the house more often. Covid changed a lot of our habits and we're still working through that to some degree.
This has been a really tough year, nothing related to the marriage however. We both have worked in IT our entire careers, and like many people in the field, we both recently lost our jobs due to workforce reductions. With tens of thousands of super talented people on the market and very few jobs to be had, we've both come to the conclusion that we have to reinvent ourselves, and just the same way that we had to rebuild the marriage from scratch, we now have to rebuild our lives and careers from scratch. It is both exciting and terrifying. We're looking for retirement friendly places to live that matches our lifestyle and that is more affordable than where we are now.
On the positive side of things, my wife has been working out with a VR headset daily with an app called Supernatural. I play sometimes too, but it's mostly her right now. It's super fun and you play to a large selection of music, so she actually enjoys the workouts. It's having really positive affects on her mood, her energy levels, everything really. After the shock of losing her job wore off, she's found that she really enjoys NOT having to work with crazy hours and crazy pressure anymore. She's started crocheting again, and has been really enjoying cooking and trying out new recipes. She hates shopping and I don't enjoy cooking as much as she does, so our deal is that I shop and she cooks, and that works out well for us.
As for me, I recently started a new treatment of microdosing Ketamine in order to help my severe depression and PTSD. It's the first thing that has EVER shown me some real results. My mood has improved, my wife says my sense of humor is coming back, and I'm even starting to dream again. It's been a real game changer for me. As for work, my wife keeps telling me to go do what I love, so currently I'm working on two online games that I'm hoping will take off at least enough to help pay some bills. Again, something both exciting and terrifying. I hope it works out, not only because I need to make a living, but because it's a career path that can be mobile. That way, we can live anywhere in the world, and my income won't be affected. That would be a huge boon.
The only advice I have for the new folks is this. Getting through this takes an incredible amount of courage and determination. It takes courage because you have to be willing to take a brutally hard look at yourself and tear down all those lies and justifications you told yourself along the way. You have to be willing and able to face the ugliness of what you did, and worse yet, who that makes you. That's where the determination comes in. Once you have a healthy disgust for the person who thought it was okay to tear others lives apart, you need to decide what you are going to do about it, and then, go make the monumental effort of changing who you are into who you want to be. We can never undo what we did, but we can control every second moving forward. Live a life of honesty, integrity, authenticity... and that is who you will be. If there is to be any chance whatsoever of reconciliation, then this change needs to happen first. And it is still needed even if the marriage fails, because otherwise, this pattern will just continue to drag you down and make your life, and the lives of everyone you love, miserable. If it helps, the tl/dr; version is this - go find someone you really admire more than anyone else in the world, then go do your damnedest to be just like them.
For those of you still lost in the pain, bear in mind that shame is only useful as a motivator. Far too many WS's (myself included) end up allowing the shame to take them over. It becomes an indentity rather than a motivator. Shame is a great catalyst for change, but it is not a life sentence, and it does NOTHING for your BS and family. Shame is about YOU, just like the affair was about YOU. You conquer the shame by taking action, by making changes. Clear, conscious changes towards being a person of honesty and integrity. You get out of the shame spiral by purposely living a life that you can respect yourself for. WS's ask how they can help their BS's all the time, and the answer is simple.
1) Be 100% honest about everything and do the work you need to in order to not be defensive. If you truly accept responsibility for what you did, then there is nothing to be defensive about.
2) You help their recovery most simply by not hindering it. Evey time something happens and triggers fire, their trauma clocks reset to zero. By working on yourself and becoming someone capable of truly owning their actions, you become a safer person to be around, and it is easier for a BS to recover when they aren't constantly waiting for some other shoe to drop.
Love to everyone.