I do envy those couples who seem so in love and respectful and would never hurt each other and will probably be together forever so I do want that. I don't want to have these feeling of wanting someone else/something else. It's tiring and unhealthy.
I can’t get sucked back in either because you need time to process what has already been said and all that will happen is frustration.
But, what you just said contradicts how you have been in your relationship with your husband this entire time.
You read it as he is wrong for you. And I don’t doubt that can be true.
But you went into this marriage saying you didn’t think you could be monogamous. You walked all over his feelings doing this with other people he didn’t want you to do.
What I have learned is this: our relationship with others is a direct reflection of our relationship with ourselves. You are a middle aged woman who has never worked on her commitment issues or her emotional intelligence. You just kind of Willy nilly believe everything you think and feel without knowing how to challenge yourself on it. This is very childlike.
So, what I will tell you about the conflict between what you say you want and what you are actually willing to do are at odds with each other.
No relationship is perfect. No person we marry is perfect. The art of marriage is to keep deepening your understanding of yourself and the other person. The feelings of bonding and commitment and satisfaction comes from working through things as they come up, making it through hard shit as a team, enjoying the good shit as a team.
You don’t want the marriage because you never invested in it. And it really could be too late for you to start, I get it. But we value what we invest in. You do not value yourself or your marriage because you don’t know what that investment is, nor do you want to make it. All you want is someone to make you feel good because you do not know how to do it for yourself.
And that is what you should be focused on. Until you make that investment no relationship will have great value to you other than when you are in the infatuation phase where you can extract all the good feelings.
I value my marriage above all else today. Because it’s been easy? No. Because I have worked on myself, and on it and the investment came through seeing the value of that work and why deep joy and connection can be derived from being 100 percent all in.
I already told you when dday hit I didn’t feel that way. I felt ambiguous about my marriage. I was definitely fence sitting. But I had enough insight to say "you know what, so have nothing to lose here by working on myself and seeing how I feel after some of this work is done. I am going to do this with integrity, because integrity is going to be an important part of who I want to become and I am going to see where it goes"
And then every day I did the things that aligned with my goals. I examined all my thoughts, and I read books and watched podcasts and I studied. I practiced learning what I wanted and I practiced asking for it. I learned how to have hard conversations.
Today, my marriage is my greatest external comfort. My greatest external security. My greatest source of external joy. But I have those things internally in spades. If it went away tomorrow I would grieve but I would be okay eventually because I have good coping, I have a moral compass, and I know what I deserve and am worthy of.
I don’t dismiss that maybe you can’t have that with your husband. I don’t know you and even if I did I couldn’t tell you what’s right for you. But I can tell you that your thinking is as faulty as a leaking bucket, your character is weak, and you are acting on teenager like whims that are going to lead you to results teens get that they have to learn from.
Change happens when the pain of being who you are is greater than the pain it will take to change. And I just don’t think you are there. Your character and vision for yourself is too weak, so you are not uncomfortable enough being where you are to acknowledge the thing you need to work on is you.
I don’t believe for a minute now that you don’t want to leave for the ap. As the time passes your anxiety is going up that you will lose the opportunity with the other man. Every day that passes your withdrawal lies to you even more. You have to be strong enough to stop the cycle so you can work on yourself, but I just don’t think you are in enough pain to do it. You are in just enough pain you want it to be easily cured by reaching for the artificial shit that you have always held on to because you are someone who values fun above all else.
I think it’s going to be years before you are ready to acknowledge that what drives you doesn’t serve you well. And that’s okay, maybe that’s your life path and there are things that have to happen and be endured until you are forced to address it. And honestly, I know people that never happened for.
For me, the reason I did so much work didn’t start with the burning desire to save my marriage. It started with the burning desire to get myself out of pain and knowing that the only true cure for it was to look deeply at myself and start making changes. That meant I had to stop looking for the cure in the poison of all the external things I was reaching for to make myself feel better temporarily.
Happiness is an inside job, Ellie. When you fix what’s broken in you the perception you would have about all this shit will change greatly.
I think what you are responding to in this thread is that we keep reminding you to stop hurting your husband and stop wanting this shitty guy who thought it was fine to poach someone else’s spouse. But true change doesn’t come from that. It comes from not wanting to keep making the same decisions and swimming in the same problems that you bring on yourself because you are tired of the pain it brings. But I think you are just going to keep reaching for life rafts thatcan help you forget the pain and get instant gratification of feeling good. That’s completely up to you. But it’s a band aid.
[This message edited by hikingout at 6:25 PM, Sunday, June 16th]