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Reconciliation :
16 months post DD - moral dilemma

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 Evio (original poster member #85720) posted at 10:12 AM on Sunday, April 19th, 2026

I'm 16 months post DD and whilst I can definitely say I am healing in myself, I still feel so many conflicting feelings about my husband. I have done so much self healing - I do EMDR, attend a Buddhist sanga, go yoga, meditate, go out in nature, throw myself into my work and the pain in my heart in slowly, slowly healing. However, I can be having a lovely family day and then, boom!, my brain reminds me 'this man cuddling you in the sofa cheated on you whilst pregnant and continued for two years then hid it for a further 12!' and my mind fills with a mix of indignation, anger and disgust'.

This happens even more if I've had a bad day, or I'm stressed. Like yesterday I went to visit a friend in a mental health facility and found it so upsetting. Later that evening, I found myself pulling away from my husband's comfort and bracing myself when he cuddled me in bed.

My brain screams for me to leave in these moments as I find myself filed with disdain at being married to a person capable of this BUT at the same time...I love him, I know he is remorseful and has changed and I have so much compassion and empathy for the man I love who screwed his and his families lives up and has to live with that knowledge forever. I wish I could undo that for him even if we weren't together...I hate that he has to live with that level of regret.

I just don't know if these feelings will ever change. It's like I can get over the pain but not the moral dilemma. I don't think it helps that I have childhood trauma and may be neurodivergent. I just feel like whether I stay or leave my marriage, this moral dilemma will haunt me.

Any advice welcome, particularly from those who have experienced this.

[This message edited by Evio at 10:13 AM, Sunday, April 19th]

Me: BW 43 Him: WH 47
DD:16.01.25
2 Year PA/Sexting 13 years ago
Reconciling

"The darkest nights make the brightest stars" 🌌 ✨

posts: 238   ·   registered: Jan. 22nd, 2025
id 8893654
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The1stWife ( Guide #58832) posted at 12:21 PM on Sunday, April 19th, 2026

I understand how you feel and it happened to me for a few years after Dday.

What worked for me was reminding myself that he’s not the same cheating lying jerk he was — he’s different now. I can see it. I recognize the effort being made.

It also helped that I financially protected myself. That took much of the stress out of the situation as well.

Survived two affairs and brink of Divorce. Happily reconciled. 12 years out from Dday. Reconciliation takes two committed people to be successful.

posts: 15449   ·   registered: May. 19th, 2017
id 8893655
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 Evio (original poster member #85720) posted at 12:32 PM on Sunday, April 19th, 2026

Thank you for you reply 1stwife...Did you tell him how you felt when you felt conflicted? My problem is, unlike my husband, I have always been an open book and I process my thoughts out loud. This means everytime the doubt and disgust kicks in I tell him my thoughts and he understandably is feeling defeated by this.
The recent example of feeling emotionally fragile following my friends mental health crisis and then dwelling in the affair has led him to feel he unfairly takes the brunt of anyone else's problems as it will always come back to him.

I really struggle with being too honest to the point I cannot even lie if I'm late for work. Should I be keeping some of these though to myself and processing them by reminding myself his not that man anymore?

As for financial independence...all out money is tied up in a big house but we would have enough to split if we sold it and neither of us be desdetute.

Me: BW 43 Him: WH 47
DD:16.01.25
2 Year PA/Sexting 13 years ago
Reconciling

"The darkest nights make the brightest stars" 🌌 ✨

posts: 238   ·   registered: Jan. 22nd, 2025
id 8893656
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WoodThrush2 ( member #85057) posted at 2:12 PM on Sunday, April 19th, 2026

Hi Evio,

I want to suggest something that I really think will help you. You may not want to do it, but based on my experience, I am convinced it helps.

Every time you have these triggers, you need to talk to him about it in detail. Tell him the exact struggles and pains you are having. Identify and discuss the root injuries. And yes, he will need to respond...each and every time.

This is how you heal. This is how he makes amends. This is how those utterly horrible thoughts eventually lose their overwhelming power.

And yes ....you will have to talk about the same thing over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over.....etc. It is bizarre, but that is how it works for some reason.

[This message edited by WoodThrush2 at 2:12 PM, Sunday, April 19th]

posts: 317   ·   registered: Jul. 29th, 2024   ·   location: New York
id 8893659
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Oldwounds ( member #54486) posted at 3:32 PM on Sunday, April 19th, 2026

It sounds like your brain is still in protection mode.

Especially in the early days of having good days, my mind kept guard, constant reminder that this was the person who caused all this pain.

Overthinking can slow healing, and I am a world champion overthinker — but I worked on that too, and really worked on focusing my thoughts on the present versus lingering in the past.

Honestly, the circular pattern of good days and trauma reminders sound normal (and yeah, it is no fun).

For me, after a while, I started to see more of my wife in the present day, then her worst days, it just took far longer than I wanted.

Married 36+ years, together 41+ years
Two awesome adult sons.
Dday 6/16 4-year LTA Survived.
M Restored
"It is better to conquer our grief than to deceive it." — Seneca

posts: 5092   ·   registered: Aug. 4th, 2016   ·   location: Home.
id 8893661
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sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 5:48 PM on Sunday, April 19th, 2026

First, the back and forth lasts a lot longer than anyone wants it to. WRT behavior, I was on board for R from d-day on, but anger at the unjustness of the situation reared its head again and again.

To R, you've got to accept that this is just another area of life in which justness and R are incompatible. We can have one or the other, but not both, and certainly not both simultaneously.

Have faith in yourself to come down on one side or the other in due time.

*****

I'm usually on the side of sharing feelings, but with this, at a year and a half out, not so much, maybe. If you think it's too early to hold back expressing anger, you might be right. If you can tell your H that you're having trouble with your decision, that may help you more than expressing anger.

Do you see your problem as your own to solve? I do. I think this problem that you describe is a 'simple' matter of choosing one path or another - justice vs desire to stay together. I understand that you are a victim of your H's infidelity, as all BSes are, but the fact is that we have to deal with the feelings of being betrayed, and at some point we need to decide to let the feelings go in order to heal. Is this the time for you? Maybe - you're raising this issue, and that may mean you are ready. OTOH, maybe you're not ready yet.

If you still the issue as anger, disgust, desire to hurt your WS - all of which are normal up to a point - what's the positive outcome of sharing that? If you don't see a positive outcome, hold it in until you do. If you do see a positive outcome, go for it.

Whatever you do, do your best to put fear aside. If fear is telling you not say what you want to say, it's probably best to say it. If fear is telling you to say something, it's probably best not to say it.

*****

Bottom line: I guess I think you are at a crossroad, and I think it's the justice vs. desire to rebuild with one's WS.

Whichever way you turn, I believe you'll get to similar crossroads in the future. You have to make a choice now, but you'll be faced with the same choice - justice vs desire - again and again in the future.

It's burdensome, to be sure. It's also means you'll have many opportunities to make good choices for yourself, even if you blow one or 2 of those opportunities along the way.

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.

posts: 31852   ·   registered: Feb. 18th, 2011   ·   location: Illinois
id 8893663
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