Hi pleasebefixable,
I didn’t do a lot of lying before or after my affair, but I certainly had problems with integrity as evidenced by having an affair.
So, in that way I think I can give you what helped me get more serious about my integrity. First, think about it this way, I didn’t believe I would ever have an affair, but when things got hard in life I did the same sort of exercise you are describing.
It started with secret conversations with a man who was not my husband. I thought okay, just for now. I negotiated it and stepped right over that line to make it so. It happened as each and every boundary was crossed.
What happened during this process? Shame accumulated. I continued to add to my feelings of unworthiness because that’s what happens when you go against what you know is right.
Now in your case you have an added issue. You know that you are failing your husband, and that too accumulates things we don’t feel good about. And why are you doing this? Because you love him and want to preserve your image in his eyes. You fear one more thing to tell him will be the straw.
I think a couple things to do here:
Realize that you are doing the opposite of many of your goals, and it’s sending you further and further from where you want to go.
Trust is destroyed in an affair. You have been a remorseful woman and you already know that. But you need to put yourself more in his shoes. How would you want to see trust rebuilt? Through consistent reliability. Honesty. Vulnerability. (Did you get a chance to read rising strong?Great wisdom in here to help you get in touch with your authentic self, let the shame fall, and show up in vulnerability.) Isn’t that what you would want in his shoes?
So what you have to do here is let go of the outcome. He will divorce you for lying, he still may divorce you for the truth. Which do you feel better about? (I know neither is a great choice, but doesn’t one seem a little better over the other one for you? And even more importantly, a lot better for your husband?
That’s the key, the art of loving someone is giving them what they need when it is all feasible and this falls squarely under feasible.
The art of loving yourself is feeling good about the things you do. This isn’t making you feel good about yourself, is it? No, or you wouldn’t be looking for help.
So the next time the urge strikes, choose love. Keeping up with choosing betrayal is quicksand. It’s going to eat your chances to reconcile, it’s going to eat you up too.
Practice being the person you most want to be even when it’s scary. You will find before long, you will be proud of yourself for that.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:29 PM, Friday, June 14th]