I wrote the 'graphs below and then realized I could summarize it this way:
My W entered her A out of co-dependence. She committed to getting authentic and showing me that she wanted me, not just a relatively comfortable life, and she followed through on those commitments. That made me think R would work. For recovery, see below.
My W - fWW - was a therapist. She was in an unhealthy relationship with a client for 18 months or so, a really sick relationship (she gave up boundary after boundary during this period) for a year, and a PA for 22 weeks, IIRC.
She says she saw that she was risking her life (little sleep, not eating, making mistakes while driving) during the night of 12/21/10-12/22/10 and decided she to clean up her life starting then. She wasn't going to tell me, but part of her epiphany was deciding to be honest. We were fooling around the morning of 12/22, and she freaked out. I asked, 'What does that mean for us?' She told me she'd been having sex with her client. I was devastated.
My response was to start a period of pretty intense interrogation that lasted ... I don't remember how long it lasted. I used every method I could find to test her veracity, and I never saw anything that came close to being untrue. She was defensive often, but she answered my questions even then.
I don't know if she breached confidentiality in her answers, but I didn't care about the client; I just cared about what my W did, thought, and felt and how she justified her A. That she was open about.
So honesty in answering questions was a big clue that R would work.
She got us in to see her therapist - call her T - on d-day. I had no trust for T at first, but she very quickly gained my trust by confronting my W. (W lied to T as well as to me.) T acted as MC for over a year. I think she confronted my W on 90-95% of the issues, and my W sat an took the confrontations. W signed a release that allowed T to talk to me about her sessions and progress and called for T to call me if W withdrew the release or revealed another A.
Taking confrontations and applying them, however slowly, was confirmation that W was honest.
T said W was working on core issues rather than the A itself, which made sense to me, but T worked hard to confirm for me that W said in her IC sessions the same things she said in and out of MC sessions - that she wanted to R.
The congruence between what W said to me and to T confirmed W's honesty.
One of the things I did during the 1st 3 months was come up with my requirements for R. W accepted most of them and negotiated in good faith about the things she was uncomfortable about. Her asserting herself said to me I was dealing with a real person and not some sort of automaton who wanted to take the easy way out.
The fact that my W had requirements for a rebuilt M said to me that she was really invested in making something pleasurable.
I've always believed that 'yes' isn't worth much unless one can also say 'no.' The fact that we could say 'no' to each other was very important. We were together out of desire, not out of need. (Of course, we usually said 'yes'.)
*****
WRT recovery, I put myself through several bouts of therapy with some very effective therapists during my life, so I was in very good shape before my W's A. The A took something out of me, but I was in good emotional shape on d-day.
The main thing I got from therapy was that self-talk is crucial. The 2nd most important thing was that I was imperfect. The 3rd: responsible for myself and my feelings. I guess the 4th was that the Drama Triangle is a trap that is also a constant threat and that staying out of DTs makes life a lot better than going into them. The 5th was that feelings rule. The 6th was not to conflate thought and feelings.
Shortly after d-day, I talked with a therapist I worked with in the '70s. She quoted other therapists as saying something like, 'R requires 3 healings. You heal you. Your W heals herself. Together, if you want to, you heal your M.'
I found that to be immensely empowering. It told me I could heal even if I didn't R.
SI told me I was not alone. SIers in my cohort told me I was thinking and feeling about what they were feeling and thinking. SIers with more experience gave me an idea of where I was headed.
Combining what I got from therapy with what I got from SI and from my actual experience helped me heal.
*****
You didn't ask for advice, exactly, but here's mine:
Separate your healing from R - they really are 2 different processes.
Your healing is a matter of processing your feelings out of your body. I can let a lot of anger go easily, but grief and fear I have to feel. I have to let them flow through my body. YMMV. Shame ... I handle shame with self-talk, far from perfectly. Part of me is comfortable that my W shamed herself, not me. But I have shared my W's A with only 2 people who aren't bound by confidentiality, and those 2 are former therapists. Anyway, as a therapist, my bet is that you have ways of processing feelings.
I learned in therapy that 'I feel...' is powerful. We had numerous incidents in which I found myself across a room from my W saying and showing, 'I'm furious that you did this!' I got rid of a lot of anger that way.
Dumping an unremorsedful WS is probably the best course of action.
What gets me, though, is that my W says she didn't begin to feel remorse for 5 months. She acted remorseful. She was honest. She was transparent. She used IC to get healthier emotionally. She didn't gaslight, minimize, or trickle information out. But she said it took her 5 months to begin to see that she had just another A; previously, she saw herself as saving her client's life (because the client threatened to kill herself unless my W put out).
Also, other people have R'ed successfully with WSes who took a while to become remorseful.
Have you read the 'Beyond Regret and Remorse' thread? https://survivinginfidelity.com/topics/324250/things-that-every-ws-needs-to-know/? If not, read them - they'll allow you to compare what your WS is doing with waht people who R think, with a lot of good reasons, they should be doing.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 5:25 PM, Saturday, February 24th]