A baby puts immense stress on a relationship. You go from dealing with an adult partner to dealing with a creature that will die if you don't attend to it AND a former adult who may revert to childhood behaviors. As a new father, I got only the leftovers from my exhausted W, and those leftovers were not very satisfying - and I was exhausted, too, because I couldn't no hear our son's cries. I adjusted, but it took time, and that time wasn't very pleasant.
Your partner has cheated and thereby demonstrated that he does not cope well in a partnership. He can change - but will he?
*****
I think part of me wants to reconcile with him but I’m self conscious on all the judgement from others.
To R, you need to make a free choice, IMO. My reco is to use IC to free yourself from preconceptions and the influence of others. Use IC to choose your values and to make choices that feel best to you.
And part of me feels I might be stunting my personal growth by staying and accepting that dishonesty.
To R, you have to accept the honesty that has already been dumped on you; after all, you can't change the past.
But you have to deal honesty with the present and future for your own well-being, and your partner has to become honest and stay honest for R to work well for you.
But is the grass really greener on the otherwise. Any future partner will likely also cheat given the stats so maybe I’m better off watering this grass to its fullest potential.
The best numbers I've seen for the US say that under 30% of men report cheating in a committed relationship. So the likelihood is that a future partner is likely not to cheat.
But that doesn't matter. We don't know the true prevalence of cheating.
Right now and for the coming months - maybe stretching to years - your choices are pretty much limited to 1) stay with your WSo, and 2) leave and be alone, perhaps for a long time.
My reco is to answer for yourself questions like:
What do I have to do to make R work?
Is my WSo a good candidate for R?
Wat are my requirements for R?
What do I have to do to make splitting work well for me?
What can I do to make life alone as fulfilling as it can be (and it can be very fulfilling)?
Do I want to be a single mom?
If I do want to be a single mom, who do I want to be the sperm donor - WSo or someone else? (remember, if your WSo is the father, you can't get him out of your life, and getting him out of your life may be required for many reasons).
ETA:
....how did you know that was right choice for you?
It was only after we were well into doing the work of R that I felt confident I had made the right choice. That was about 2 years from d-day. I committed to R when I thought R would work and when I was convinced it was what I wanted.
Issues arose during R, and we resolved them together - and still wanted to stay together. That was my criterion for success.
It's hard to put into words....
[This message edited by SI Staff at 5:00 PM, Thursday, May 2nd]