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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:
PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 06:03

Also get lots of support for you

Survivinginfidelity.com
Affairrecovery.com
Sam's Healing Podcast

You always have the option to leave but your Healing can be worked on relatively independently in parallel.

This will take many years to heal from whether or not ypu stay together.

A useful article to start you on how marriages get to this point:

What's going on with marriage- here's a map

Affairs appear on here as a Choice Point - Leave, Stsy and Resign Yourself to shit, or Both Work on It are your options.
Critically even if You start working on yourself stuff, your partner will eventually have to move off his position

Work on building back Self Esteem.

Lots to read. Get listening and reading.

Map of Relationships: listen to or read the whole story – Al Turtle's Relationship Wisdom

https://www.alturtle.com/archives/801

moderate · 05/04/2026 06:45

You say:

The level of deceit and exceptional skills for lying was something I’d never have believed would exist in him.

but also:

I’m sure that he would never embark on another affair whilst married to me.

How’s that then?

Whatsnextforbea · 05/04/2026 07:18

All the comments are sadly wasted.

@ZanyRoseNewt won’t take the leap. You have sucked it up unhappily for 3 years for the sake of your children and you don’t want to spoil the outward image of your “happy family”.

Very likely your children are acutely aware of how unhappy both their parents are anyway.

Enrichetta · 05/04/2026 07:28

So…

He fucked another woman for 6 - SIX!!! - years.
He wanted to dump her after two years but didn’t…. Yes, right…
He made little attempt to hide the affair - other than from you…. - since colleagues and friends knew about it.
Quite apart from anything else, it didn’t bother him that he was humiliating you.
You found out 3 years ago but he only ceased contact 2 years ago - are you saying you stood by while he slowly unwound from the affair?
He has too much going on to attend counselling sessions with you. Which tells you loud and clearly how much value he places on his relationship with you, his wife.

And yet here you are, trying to persuade yourself that this relationship could be ‘exceptional’ (!!!?????), all the while pretzeling yourself to somehow keep this dead marriage together.

Look, I know this sounds awful, like I’m kicking you while you’re down, but isn’t it about time you faced the reality of your situation. You are better than this, you deserve better….. you do not need to put up with this shit!

SoSadSoSadSoSad · 05/04/2026 07:35

Do not take on responsibility at all for his huge betrayal. No way.

If there are problems in a marriage then talking or leaving is the way to go. Not this level of betrayal. This is horrific. There is absolutely no justification for any of this at all.

Jfc.

I really don’t see how one can move past this. Six years. Six years of active, calculated cold deceit. And you say you don’t think he would do it again? Why do you say that? Of course he could and would and would also make sure you felt the blame.

Where is your anger? No, your rage? How dare he risk your physical and emotional well being for the sake of his cock? And your family.

SoSadSoSadSoSad · 05/04/2026 07:38

And your close friends and family knew before you did? And they colluded with your scum husband? You have to ditch them too.

And yes, I would try and keep things stable as possible for the DCs but they are old enough to know the truth. Their father lobbed grenades into their family. Not you. Him.

By staying with this absolute creep of a man you are showing your children how to be a total victim.

Please get out of this toxic situation. Then you can bloom. Honestly.

I have been there. It’s so hard. But I cannot imagine being the person I was three years ago. It was pitiful. No longer.

CanAnybodyFindMe · 05/04/2026 07:39

This is written so much from the perspective of the husband that I can’t stop myself from wondering if it was, in fact, written by the husband.

FairyMaclary · 05/04/2026 07:41

What’s making you stay op?
What’s your real worry?

Pinkbananaa · 05/04/2026 07:48

This is just world salad op to cover up the fact your dh went out and pursude another relationship over a six year span. I doubt she was the first and I suspect she wont be the last op. I suspect your denial. I hope you get your inner rage and kick the little shit out.

PermanentTemporary · 05/04/2026 07:48

Given the number of people who are unfaithful, yes marriages can survive affairs if both people want them to.

Id say go to therapy yourself because the key question here is whether you want to be married to this man, knowing what you know. It’s not 1930 or even 1980, marriages also end every day. You are free to choose your future.

I chose integrative therapy for myself but tbh I think the thing that matters is the quality of the therapist. Ask around for recommendations (and maybe be honest about why you’re asking).

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 07:52

I agree with others posters OP. The "marriage" has been "over" for years. Marriages without Safety are just "arrangements". The question is now are you both prepared to do the work needed to turn this "arrangement" into a real marriage since it probably started with you being in love at some point. Which is what I understand by what you mean by "it could be exceptional".

In general the affairing partner has a lot of work to do on addictive behaviours learned as numbing out/coping mechanisms and if you don't see him engaging with facing these then there is indeed little hope for creating a second marriage (with the same person). An Ultimatum from you amd therapy for you will help shift things. Focus on you.

SoSadSoSadSoSad · 05/04/2026 08:02

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 05:39

OP

Yes marriages do and can recover.

Read my experiences and tips below on what to do here from another thread. I have personal experience and a much better marriage. Most don't take this path. Everyone has to decide for themselves obviously.

What to do

Only if one person is prepared to eat the shit sandwich for the rest of their lives.

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 08:06

SoSadSoSadSoSad · 05/04/2026 08:02

Only if one person is prepared to eat the shit sandwich for the rest of their lives.

Grief of the lost "first" relationship needs to be processed but it's not necessarily a "rest of the life shit sandwich". It depends on the amount of work done by the affairing partner to become someone new.

Epicuriouss · 05/04/2026 08:12

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 05:39

OP

Yes marriages do and can recover.

Read my experiences and tips below on what to do here from another thread. I have personal experience and a much better marriage. Most don't take this path. Everyone has to decide for themselves obviously.

What to do

But the OP can’t repair a marriage alone. That takes two, and this douchebag has been too busy for counselling for the last three years.

Dragracer · 05/04/2026 08:15

Jesus's this is just sad. Nothing triggered a "need" for an affair. You're acting as though this is something that has happened to the pair of you. This is some thing he has done to you.

And for three years he's just been too busy to do anything to even attempt to fix things? Three years and you still believe he actually gives a shit?

He lied to you and fucked someone else behind your back for AT LEAST six years.

In what universe would you believe he's stopped?

You speak as though you're somehow above all this messiness tbh, I think you're just sticking your head in the sand and focusing on your marriages image to everyone else.

No there is nothing at all that would make me stay after DH had a 6 year affair.

And he didn't tell you. You found out.

Villanellesproudmum · 05/04/2026 08:22

My friend went through similar and they kept the marriage going for quite a few years, the worst part for her was she said it was the betrayal by the man she considered her best friend alongside being her husband. It ate away and eventually they separated and are now divorced.

He has moved on with someone else and she hasn’t yet recovered and wants to meet someone but her confidence isn’t there yet.

Three years is a long time to keep trying. How long do you see yourself being here if the current feelings remain.

WerzMyHedAt · 05/04/2026 08:33

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.

Yes exactly.
But also, so typical.

I would leave and enjoy having a peaceful mind instead

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 08:35

Epicuriouss · 05/04/2026 08:12

But the OP can’t repair a marriage alone. That takes two, and this douchebag has been too busy for counselling for the last three years.

Obviously no she can't do this alone. But on the other hand she doesn't control what he does either.

She indicates she still wants him (this is her choice and noone else can make it). He is still coming home every day to her, so for him it sounds like he gave up on his marriage (lack of sex and other things) but not completely.

My suggestion is she focuses entirely on herself for the moment. Get curious about what SHE wants. Listen, read, diary, talk. Put herself first and improve her communication skills (OP - learn Mirroring) and learn to be able to hear the full truth from him and from herself. OP has clearly been blind for some time.

This is a multi year process. It can lead to either reconciliation or a definitive end to the "arrangement" (it's not a marriage right now) and a restart of life.

At some point (preferably quite soon) she will need to give him an ultimatum to move his backside.

Seelybe · 05/04/2026 08:47

@ZanyRoseNewt I'm going to offer a slightly different point of view from LTB which in no way condones his extended unacceptable behaviour.
At that phase of your lives (9 years ago) life was probably consumed for you both by the grind of 4 children and stressful work (as it sounds as though you have a career too). Mid life crisis overwhelm may have made him more receptive to the outlet of an affair. Although long, he didn't leave which suggests it was not ultimately what he wanted.
You are in a different phase now. Your children are much older/adults and life now and going forward looks very different.
Can you draw a line under what's gone before and effectively start again as a couple rather than solely as parents and providers? Otherwise you are probably better to think about starting again on your own maybe once your youngest leaves school.

category12 · 05/04/2026 08:57

I don't think him not leaving means much.

He might not have left because of the benefits of family life, household, children and finances, not because he loves OP or wants the marriage to work.

If he's refused relationship counselling etc and is just letting OP spin her wheels, it doesn't sound like he is there for her.

Purplerubberducky · 05/04/2026 09:00

No. Wtf ?

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 09:04

category12 · 05/04/2026 08:57

I don't think him not leaving means much.

He might not have left because of the benefits of family life, household, children and finances, not because he loves OP or wants the marriage to work.

If he's refused relationship counselling etc and is just letting OP spin her wheels, it doesn't sound like he is there for her.

This is what she has got to be able to see from him and the best way to go about it is to focus on herself, building up her own self esteem and options, improving her own skills and let him see he is going to lose something valuable. If that doesn't kick start him into action at least when she leaves she is in a better position to rebuild alone.

ThePoetsWife · 05/04/2026 09:05

I am sorry but there’s no way bark really - the narrative he’s painting is just awful, it’s all me me me and everything is your fault.

He is a selfish arrogant bastard to have put you and his family second to his selfish needs for six bloody years - he’s not a decent father or husband and has massively failed.

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 09:07

A lot of posters are focusing on the title. Obviously the answer is no because you are not going to recover what is lost. You have a choice to build something new or not. What you have now is a convenient living arrangement but not a marriage.

BernardButlersBra · 05/04/2026 09:09

Well, that’s super convenient that he’s “not well enough to tackle it at the moment”. It’s ALL about him isn’t it? You need to find your self esteem and leave him. He doesn’t sound that sorry and doesn’t appear to have done many steps to repair or change things