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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Can a marriage recover after a long affair and years of limbo?

196 replies

ZanyRoseNewt · 04/04/2026 16:47

I’m 52, married 24 years with four children (16–23). After discovering my husband’s six-year affair with a work colleague three years ago, revealed through a chance discovery, we’ve been in repair phase trying to find a way to build a new chapter together.

A lack of emotional connection (not enough sex for him and not feeling that he makes me happy) was the driver for the affair. He said he had wanted to end the affair after a couple of years but felt unable to face the fallout, especially the effect on our children. The revelation floored me; I had no idea he was leading a double life and the scale of the deception has been hard to process. The level of deceit and exceptional skills for lying was something I’d never have believed would exist in him. I trusted him implicitly.

I also discovered that many of his family members and close friends knew about the affair months before I did. I’ve tried to contain the fallout, telling only a couple of trusted friends and shielding our children but it’s left me feeling inauthentic, like I’m observing a life I never chose (and the worry that at some point the truth will be out and everyone will then know, which could be worse). Until now I have suppressed questions and truth seeking, carrying on stoically, while internally trying to process and eventually make peace with what’s happened.

Our marriage has always been respectful, considerate and steady, with typical ups and downs but nothing major. But now I’m reflecting on our relationship and what may have been missing, seeing everything in perspective, analysing how our relationship was stacked up and triggering the need for this affair.

Now, I feel stuck, unsure how to shape our future. We love each other, but something has always felt absent, as if we never reached that deeper level that makes a relationship truly exceptional. But relationships are not like Disney movies in reality – they need work, I appreciate this relationship could be fantastic if we worked hard. But how is this realistically done? If that isn’t possible, should we just accept this is the best level we can achieve? People have much harder, difficult and painful lives than what we currently have. We should feel grateful for the chance to repair and appreciate the family unit we have?

He’s been dealing with significant work-related stress and anxiety for several years, so we haven’t yet started regular therapy as he doesn’t feel he’s well enough to tackle this right now. Keeping the job and providing for the family is his priority. For now, we’re coasting, focused on keeping the family running smoothly, which we do well. I am absolutely certain that any contact with the affair partner ended 2 years ago and I’m sure that he would never embark on another affair whilst married to me.

Eighteen months after discovering the affair, I had a serious medical event and was lucky to survive. It sharpened my sense that I need to honour my life and purpose. With my parents gone and no family beyond my husband’s, the weight of this journey feels huge.

I’m financially independent and believe I have the strength to build a new life if needed. But I feel lost, unable to move forward with clarity or decide which direction to take. Living in this limbo is exhausting, ground hog day never ending.

How do I find the lucidity and confidence to shape the second half of my life? Is counselling (which type?) the answer using it to honestly confront what needs work for couples therapy to brutally expose the areas to work on or appreciate that we should respectfully decouple or fashion a different type of marriage?

For those who’ve been through something similar, I’d really value learning what skills, frameworks, philosophies, or (radical) constructive approaches that have helped you. I don’t want to walk away based solely on the magnitude of the infidelity without first exploring whether the relationship can be meaningfully rebuilt and reshaped.

Thank you for reading.

OP posts:
CakeJumper · 04/04/2026 16:54

“the scale of the deception has been hard to process. The level of deceit and exceptional skills for lying was something I’d never have believed would exist in him. I trusted him implicitly.”

Do you think that there’s any chance you could ever get past this, even considering counselling? Six years of deception for most people would be unforgivable. You sound articulate, sensible and intelligent enough to plough a brave new path on your own, whatever it looks like, surely it’s better than remaining married to a man capable of such a gross act of betrayal.

PembeGreyfurt · 04/04/2026 16:55

To be honest, probably not.

rainbowstardrops · 04/04/2026 17:00

If my husband had deceived me like this for six years, he’d be out of the door.
That’s a committed deception.

CharlotteSometimeslikesanafternoonnap · 04/04/2026 17:01

Why on earth - HOW on earth - could you forgive a THREE YEAR affair. 3 months would be a deal breaker, 3 years is a relationship. She'll have known all about you, they'll have discussed the kids, he'll have talked about his parents, his job, his hopes and dreams. And it's your fault because you didn't have sex enough and make him feel special.
Take your dignity and do not give this man a reward for his appalling behaviour. Your marriage is dirty now and no matter what he says or does, it always will be.

StripedVase · 04/04/2026 17:07

I think you need to find your anger a bit, you seem very willing to privilege his POV and feelings - whether he was getting enough sex, whether he felt he made you happy, his work stress - rather than your own. I think if you are able to fund therapy it should be for you alone in the first instance, to figure out where you are in all of this and what you really want. You are very much the wronged party. Look after yourself. He did!!
And FWIW no I'd never forgive this.

Twattergy · 04/04/2026 17:11

I'd suggest counselling for you alone is what will help to 'unstick' you. You seem very self aware. I'd imagine you know deep down what route you want/need to take you just need to surface that more and validate it. Talking therapy will help give that thinking/processing space and time.

Hhhwgroadk · 04/04/2026 17:11

They have had/have a very meaningful relationship. You have been totally excluded from his life over that time. He is still in a relationship with her even if they have physically parted. All friends that knew are theirs now and you have been wiped from their lives and replaced.

Do not in any way think that your marriage exists, it does not and hasn't since they started sharing secrets, conversations, pillow talk etc.

Stop the "pick me" dance. Move on from this sham marriage, pick up your self respect and make him history. See a solicitor on Tuesday and start YOUR new life.

Whatsnextforbea · 04/04/2026 17:13

Doubt it.

Surprised you’ve lasted as long as you have tbh . You gave it a damn good shot (3 years!) and it hasn’t worked. End it.

Whatsnextforbea · 04/04/2026 17:15

6 years wasn’t a fling

It was a deep and enduring relationship

and only came to an end because you discovered it

BreakingBroken · 04/04/2026 17:15

He was seriously disrespectful to you and the family for years, lying and wooing another woman with family time and money.
Great that both of you are being polite.
Will you ever truly believe him? The sex excuse is simply too easy, and carries a lot of baggage.
I get the safety and consistency part of the relationship but I’m not sure you could do more than maintain a platonic friendship. Is that what you want?

Hhhwgroadk · 04/04/2026 17:16

Your marriage has not been respectful, steady, considerate. I don't mean to be cruel but what planet do these descriptions come from?

Easterbunnyishotandcross · 04/04/2026 17:17

A man in our neighbourhood had 3 to ow.. The dw still forgave him.
Raise your bar op.

Gall10 · 04/04/2026 17:21

Never forgive, never forget… make his life fucking hell, just like he’s made yours hell.

Whatsnextforbea · 04/04/2026 17:21

Gall10 · 04/04/2026 17:21

Never forgive, never forget… make his life fucking hell, just like he’s made yours hell.

Or

divorce and carve out a happy independent life?

CanAnybodyFindMe · 04/04/2026 17:22

He said he had wanted to end the affair after a couple of years but felt unable to face the fallout, especially the effect on our children.

What does this mean? He had to keep having the affair for another four years for the sake of the children?

Catcatcatcatcat · 04/04/2026 17:23

You can’t trust this man. The relationship is over. 💐

susiedaisy1912 · 04/04/2026 17:23

You don’t have a marriage worth saving in my opinion. Have some self respect and end it.

Chatsbots · 04/04/2026 17:24

I'm also not sure you have to work at a marriage. Sure, you have to communicate & respect each other but generally, when I read someone is working on their marriage, it means they are doing all the heavy lifting & the other person isn't that interested.

You don't sound happy. Too much water under the bridge & if you stay now, it's more a sunk costs thing.

Not to mention you don't have a clear idea of who knew about the affair & they never told you, so who do you trust?

CarlaLemarchant · 04/04/2026 17:28

You sound so disconnected from what he has done to you. So much of your OP sounds like therapy speak. Why aren’t you more angry with him? He is lucky you have stayed with him after a 6 year affair that all of his friends and family knew about! He’s humiliated you, he’s an awful person. I’m furious for you.

Leave him and give yourself a fresh start.

jay55 · 04/04/2026 17:30

Why is he dictating any of the timelines at this point? He’s not ready to deal, fuck that, what kind of piece of shit centres himself after putting you through this?

Stop thinking of anyone but yourself and put the steps in place to get the new life you deserve without this arsehole.

RawBloomers · 04/04/2026 17:30

I think it's very difficult to rebuild from that, OP. Though also appreciate that stepping away from what you have is not guaranteed to be good either.

You say "I appreciate this relationship could be fantastic if we worked hard." So I think this is where you need to start. Why do you think it could be exceptional? What works well between the two of you?

The biggest issue you have is him. What is he doing to change the things so that if he comes up against challenges in the future, his response isn't to have an affair and deceive you for years. What is he doing to build his character so that he doesn't continue an affair he supposedly doesn't want because he can't face the fall out? What is he doing to communicate his needs and to make sure he is open to fulfilling your needs?

You also could use some therapy for yourself - space to discuss what you have discovered. The way you describe your marriage at the moment, given the deception you uncovered, seems like you aren't being that candid with yourself and I think until you can really let yourself see the state of it, it will be hard to rebuild a solid foundation. You need to discuss the deception and trust issues and work out how you feel about them and what you need to rebuild trust.

FatCatPyjamas · 04/04/2026 17:30

"He’s been dealing with significant work-related stress and anxiety for several years, so we haven’t yet started regular therapy as he doesn’t feel he’s well enough to tackle this right now. Keeping the job and providing for the family is his priority."

I don't really understand why both you and he are centering his needs. What about yours?

He was able to pour significant mental and emotional energy into another relationship AND into keeping secrets from you. It takes a lot of energy living a double life. Now that he's not doing that, he should have plenty of reserves available for fixing your relationship and helping you recover from his betrayal. The fact that he hasn't deemed that his top priority makes me wonder just how invested in the marriage he really is. I also wonder why you've been willing to accept this uncomfortable limbo state for so long.

outerspacepotato · 04/04/2026 17:31

He's too stressed for counseling? Fuck that noise. He was cool having a 6 year affair behind your back. He can handle counseling. He is giving you bullshit excuses.

I think shielding your kids is not a good decision. They're old enough to handle the truth. If you hide this from them, it hides the biggest reason why you're having marital problems. Plus, you don't need any more secrets in your life.

He had a long term relationship that family and friends covered, it's time to air out what's been festering in your life for years. That also indicates that those people that knew aren't really friends and don't have your welfare in mind.

If it was me, I'd be getting things ready for a divorce and doing individual therapy because I see cheating as a form of spousal abuse and I don't stick around for that.

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 04/04/2026 17:34

To be honest I wouldn't believe a single word that came out of his mouth - from the reasons for the affair to the reasons he didn't end it immediately. It all seems very much the sort of thing that you might have expected him to say. 'Not enough sex...' hmmmm.... It sounds to me as though he is saying what he thinks you want to hear. An affair that goes on for that long has moved considerably past 'just for sex'.

And I think he's still lying, because it's currently serving him so well. Only you can know if you can repair the marriage (and that's a plural 'you', he has to put the work in and not just 'go to therapy' like that's a magic bullet), but I would consider something absolutely fundamental to be too broken to fix.

JWhipple · 04/04/2026 17:39

He had significant work stress

Yet had the time, energy and mental space to have a six year affair.

If you can be independent do it. He's not only deceived you but made a conscious decision to continue doing so over a prolonged period. Can you be sure if he wouldn't again?

How did the other people find out?

And was this the reason you were finally made aware of the affair? (Did they tell you? Did he panic and decide to tell you himself?)