KitchenDepth5551 ( member #83934) posted at 11:20 PM on Wednesday, May 13th, 2026
Your husband wanted stability with you and to get these unhealthy needs met with her.
Sure. I can understand the concept intellectually. It's foreign from my thinking and from the husband I knew and how I imagined he thought. It's difficult to fully comprehend and take it all in and form a complete picture of him and the marriage. It doesn't conform with what he said or how he acted otherwise. I've spoken to him at length, read on surviving infidelity and other adultery sites, and I now have a type of overall comprehension or story. When I was asking questions that may have sounded the same over and over, but were slightly different; I don't feel like I was grilling or testing my WS. I was trying to understand how they felt and thought at that point. Who are they? Who were they then? It probably does feel exhausting to a WS.
The further their thought processes and ideas are from yours, the less you can identify. I had a friend whose husband used sex workers. She said anytime she thought of it, there were more questions. If I had a spouse who invited an affair partner to our wedding, I'm sure I would find myself going through multiple layers of questions. We are fortunate to have people like you here to help.
hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 11:42 PM on Wednesday, May 13th, 2026
I have gained more from this site than I could have given. I still do get a lot.
The many questions make complete sense to me. I didn’t get as tired of answering them once I started to catch on to just how catastrophic what I did was. I will say that my husband didn’t ask me as many questions as I did of him. I still ask questions because despite who I am and what I have done, I too had this very pristine image of him in my mind. I can not get it to fit either even though I also intellectually understand a lot of it. In some ways it made me realize this pedestal I had him on was just another part of my own brains circus mirrors.
But I will always miss that version of him too. So some of it you can be closer to understanding but it doesn’t negate the loss. I just do not ever really go there because it is weird to talk about that as if I hadn’t done it first.
I am sorry if this was a thread jack, I will bow out to keep focus on the main question now.
WS and BS - Reconciled
Mine 2017
His 2020
OhItsYou ( member #84125) posted at 11:57 PM on Wednesday, May 13th, 2026
Grammy,
You have a lot going for you here. Obviously not the situation, but your reaction and your thought process surrounding it. You’re not smoking hopium. You’re doing your best to see things as they actually are, not telling yourself lies to make yourself feel better. That puts you way ahead of most people.
I’m sure you’ve read a bunch. Maybe even years back in the just found out forum. If you haven’t, there are great history lessons there. Plenty of years long stories that serve as a warning of what not to do.
The biggest lesson, which I think you already grasp, is what my first paragraph was about. If you try to twist the story around "maybe she just temporarily went off the deep end" "I think she was manipulated!" "It wasn’t entirely her fault, I could have been better" and so on, is just the worst thing you could do to yourself. Us men especially, we want to take on the burden and fix things! Cause that’s what we’re good at. Not here. They have to fix themselves along with making things right with the BS.
Remain skeptical.
Hippo16 ( member #52440) posted at 2:06 PM on Thursday, May 14th, 2026
Reflecting on title of your thread and something you posted:
MONDAY she asked to come back and that she really wanted to make it work. I threw out my wedding ring, her dress, and all the pictures. GONE FOREVER. I agreed to allow her to remain and we talked calmly and affectionately, she jumped my bones that night and slept soundly, I however didn't sleep or eat and curled into the couch to stare at the wall and cry alone.
Some people relate to others in ways the "other" is not used to or aware - or is not acknowledging.
My take (from experience) - well, title of this thread is why she is what she is.
Maybe she has some shred of or a sort of morality such that she thinks she should not move on out of your life. Or, basic indecision and also no other rock to jump to while crossing the stream. (of life)
Then, some people just don't have whatever it takes to really cotton to someone.
Plan for your relationship to remain iffy or worse and what will you do when you realize no change?
There's no troubled marriage that can't be made worse with adultery."For a person with integrity, there is no possibility of being unhappy enough in your marriage to have an affair, but not unhappy enough to ask for divorce."
sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 3:32 PM on Thursday, May 14th, 2026
I'd be more concerned about a person who stays faithful out of fear of getting caught. Just as a person who feels need for external validation is at risk of cheating, so is someone who fears (external) calumny is at risk.
IMO, the WS who is worth the risk of R is te person who has decided to change from cheater to good partner. The person whose gut says 'I'm not going to (re)start cheating now' is the good bet for R.
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
d-day - 12/22/2010 Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.