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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:
Zanatdy · 05/04/2026 09:09

I couldn’t move on from 6yrs of deceit. No matter how much I wanted.

MrsMoastyToasty · 05/04/2026 09:18

He's a weak man.

He couldn't resist temptation and keep the promise made at the altar and in front of witnesses to "forsake all others".

moderate · 05/04/2026 09:20

We love each other, but something has always felt absent, as if we never reached that deeper level that makes a relationship truly exceptional.

Then what about this marriage is actually worth saving?

Most people who marry for love have already achieved this, and the work comes in sustaining it through large changes such as having children.

In your case, you would have to get over six years of lies to even get to the point where you could start working on making your relationship as good as it should already have been, but wasn’t.

Life’s too short to spend the rest of your life on that project, IMO, for a man who clearly cares so little about you.

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 09:27

moderate · 05/04/2026 09:20

We love each other, but something has always felt absent, as if we never reached that deeper level that makes a relationship truly exceptional.

Then what about this marriage is actually worth saving?

Most people who marry for love have already achieved this, and the work comes in sustaining it through large changes such as having children.

In your case, you would have to get over six years of lies to even get to the point where you could start working on making your relationship as good as it should already have been, but wasn’t.

Life’s too short to spend the rest of your life on that project, IMO, for a man who clearly cares so little about you.

Sometimes that deeper level takes years to reach. The initial flush of love just shows the "potential". Once those hormones wear off, if the skills are not in place or learned then the relationship can and usually will stagnate. It doesn't mean it could never BE reached. But will take a lot of painful deep introspection. Needs external help. Ultimately most will give up and look for a new person.

PineConeOrDogPoo · 05/04/2026 09:37

OP, I think what you mean by a Deeper Level matches this description of "Vintage Love"

SAFETY
Being with each other is relaxing, comfortable, easy. If tension arises, it is removed rapidly and smoothly. I love the phrase that this period is the “triumph of reflection over reaction.” Reactivity becomes a source of curiosity and eventually a source of better understanding.

RELIABLE CONNECTION
The more needy one is supported and encouraged to have plenty of optional connections to people and activities outside the relationship. These connections specifically are not threatening to the “one at home.” The one at home is supported and encouraged to have plentiful amounts of peacefulness and quiet. Both sense they belong to each other and are supported in, and supportive of, each other’s needs for connection

DIVERSITY
Agreement is a thing of the past. It is replaced by a kind of mutual fascination about “who the other is now, who they were yesterday and who they are becoming.” Everything seems tentative. Disagreement becomes the norm and is often amusing. Conversation becomes a kind of taking-turns-interviewing each other. Talk runs smoothly from point to point, from understanding to understanding, from validation to validation

AUTONOMY
In vintage love, nobody is forced (directly or indirectly) – ever. But also, nobody gets to avoid making decisions either. Self-responsibility is the norm, sharing is a method, and there are lots of techniques to make sure this is maintained.

So that people in Vintage Love are not distracted by conflict, they have developed great communication skills and boundary skills. They have become deeply self-aware and kind and understanding (forgiving) to themselves. And along the way they have aggressively cooperated in removing those reactivities, those tendencies that made sense when they were children and are now interfering – wounds.

This state is achievable with work and education and skills and habit for both. With this person or with a new person.

Vintage Love

Vintage Love: What does it look like? – Al Turtle's Relationship Wisdom

https://www.alturtle.com/archives/1274

Julietta05 · 05/04/2026 09:43

There is lack of honesty from him and you still believe him without putting any boundaries to protect yourself. Job being an excuse for few years for him not to rebuild relationship and you just parked it? You need to say, I gave you time and space but I will not wait around for you for ages. Either we have theraphy now or we are done. He does not want to do it because it would uncover it all and it will never happen. Imagine now to go through it all again. You need to talk about your feelings and how it made you feel and not to pretend.

twentyeightfishinthepond · 05/04/2026 09:59

I was struck in your opening post how your DH comes across. He can’t, he wasn’t getting, he doesn’t feel able to. What is he contributing to the rebuild here? I think I would probably insist on couples therapy. Relate offer a good service.

twentyeightfishinthepond · 05/04/2026 10:10

Also if he isn’t interested, definitely do go by yourself. Actually the fact he isn’t interested and can’t prioritise it even outside work is telling of the effort he’s willing to put in-which is not much. You can’t fix a relationship on your own. You can accommodate it, despite its past/present weaknesses, whilst you prioritise other things in your life yourself, or you can move on.

Hellometime · 05/04/2026 11:11

I’m similar age and long marriage. No way could I forgive and forget a 6 year affair and all deceit.
I’d separate and build your own life. If your paths cross at weddings etc be civil.
I’d look at individual counselling for you to work on self esteem.
Your life can be whatever you choose. You hopefully have another 30 plus years left of living.

cinnamontroll · 05/04/2026 11:12

Hell fucking no. Six fucking years of betrayal. That is unacceptable and unforgivable.

seventeenofsumday · 05/04/2026 11:58

Honestly, if he had a slight scrap of decency, or respect for you as his wife, even after he betrayed you so badly he would be on his knees begging for forgiveness and showing you every day you've made the right choice in staying with him. The fact he can't even be arsed to go to counselling shows he does not give a tiny shit about you op. He knows he has got away with a 6 year affair and to top it off you aren't even bothered if he makes an effort to change after!! You really need to get strong here because he's taking the absolute piss. He had enough time for a double life for 6 years so he has time for counselling now. He's a weak man, I don't know how you can even bear to look at him tbh op.

SoSadSoSadSoSad · 05/04/2026 12:09

If you’re financially independent what on earth are you hanging around for more of this shit?

Run. Have a great life. Freedom.

FirstdatesFred · 05/04/2026 12:34

I don’t understand what you said about how he wanted to end the affair after a couple of years but couldn’t face the fall out and effect on the kids etc… I don’t get it? He could have just ended it??

I’ve not ever been in that position but like others I’m finding it really hard to understand why you are contemplating staying and have been in ‘repair’ mode.

Calabasas · 05/04/2026 13:28

What I’m struck by from you post is how your DH having committed the crime of infidelity for 6 years is also now the victim that needs protecting - a classic fall back stance & though I’m sure is true, that his work related stress & anxiety are no doubt an issue & ultimately his MH is a concern, it’s always the men who get that luxury of that fallback mode. He had the affair but now he’s vulnerable & is still kind of untouchable or accountable. It’s never women that do this. And it’s not uncommon. So the implication is the affair helped him cope with the stress of being a provider. You the wife & DC benefit from him being the provider (if he even is) & so this “need” is permissible. Now the affair is no more, his MH is an issue & he needs to be pussy footed around. So you can’t both now go to counselling bcos he’s not strong enough atm. It’s just another eg of classic male fragility & I’m so over it!!
OP you sound like a wonderful, considerate & decent person who’s been pulled in so many directions by what he’s done to you & your family. And horribly hurt & lied to. I think you deserve more. You’ve been put in another double bind where you’re being forced to live an inauthentic & unhappy (let’s be honest) life, because of his actions. That are continued, because the affair is past tense, but how you jointly both respond to it isn’t. I think you’ve done as much as any person can. I think you’ve deserve better.

outerspacepotato · 05/04/2026 14:05

Why are you staying? Is it financial? Your kids have aged out of maintenance or nearly so? It's ok to decide that financial reasons are why you're staying.

But you're lying to yourself if you think a man who admits he feels little emotional connection to you respects or loves you. He put your sexual and genitourinary health at risk for years exposing you to another woman's biological flora. He doesn't care about consent in a supposedly monogamous marriage. He doesn't care about you enough to hide a long term affair from friends and family. He can't be bothered with counseling to fix why, instead of fucking another woman, he didn't come to you about his lack of sexual and emotional connection. He's damaged you emotionally, physically, and probably financially too. I would bet he's looked at divorce and has found it's cheaper to keep you around.

If he won't do counseling, he's refusing to fix what's he's broken and is at high risk of the affair continuing or finding a new affair partner.

Enrichetta · 05/04/2026 14:18

What @Calabasas said - especially this:

you sound like a wonderful, considerate & decent person who’s been pulled in so many directions by what he’s done to you & your family. And horribly hurt & lied to. I think you deserve more. You’ve been put in another double bind where you’re being forced to live an inauthentic & unhappy (let’s be honest) life, because of his actions

The responses to your heartfelt plea for help must be hard to hear, @ZanyRoseNewt but we are on your side...... Let us help you get out of this unholy mess of a marriage

ZanyRoseNewt · 05/04/2026 17:12

I had been toying with posting here for the last few months. But I put it off, worrying that I’d be put straight about having a flawed outlook and that I was weak and acting martyrish - but I’d like to say thank you for each of you sharing your thoughts, offering guidance and giving me a much needed sense check of my reality. It’s been a positive and thought provoking experience – my eyes are wide open. I did wonder whether getting older may have pegged back my spirit, my confidence in myself, but this experience has helped a lot – it will be one of my touchstones to a reality check when I feel low. Thank you for reading my post, it’s appreciated.

OP posts:
Whatsnextforbea · 05/04/2026 17:14

ZanyRoseNewt · 05/04/2026 17:12

I had been toying with posting here for the last few months. But I put it off, worrying that I’d be put straight about having a flawed outlook and that I was weak and acting martyrish - but I’d like to say thank you for each of you sharing your thoughts, offering guidance and giving me a much needed sense check of my reality. It’s been a positive and thought provoking experience – my eyes are wide open. I did wonder whether getting older may have pegged back my spirit, my confidence in myself, but this experience has helped a lot – it will be one of my touchstones to a reality check when I feel low. Thank you for reading my post, it’s appreciated.

That’s great

but are you actually going to do anything?

ZanyRoseNewt · 05/04/2026 17:29

Whatsnextforbea · 05/04/2026 17:14

That’s great

but are you actually going to do anything?

I had an initial consultation with a couple therapist this week. She indicated that whilst my husband does not feel comfortable to start therapy at this time, I should start my own individual therapy. There is no doubt this is the best route for me, it feels right. Today I emailed her to request starting sessions for myself - this will sharpen his focus and appreciate there will be a need for him to join this process... or fully explain why he can't.

OP posts:
Random321 · 05/04/2026 17:32

She's recommending solo sessions in the hope it will allow you to recognise what everyone here is saying.

Askmehowiknow2021 · 05/04/2026 17:33

ZanyRoseNewt · 05/04/2026 17:12

I had been toying with posting here for the last few months. But I put it off, worrying that I’d be put straight about having a flawed outlook and that I was weak and acting martyrish - but I’d like to say thank you for each of you sharing your thoughts, offering guidance and giving me a much needed sense check of my reality. It’s been a positive and thought provoking experience – my eyes are wide open. I did wonder whether getting older may have pegged back my spirit, my confidence in myself, but this experience has helped a lot – it will be one of my touchstones to a reality check when I feel low. Thank you for reading my post, it’s appreciated.

I’m sorry op, but that is a big old word salad to explain why you aren’t actually going to hold the fuckers feet to the flames?
I have been where you are (admittedly my idiots husbands transgression was no where near as long or as serious) but him taking accountability, doing the difficult work to actually understand and admit how he could be such a vile shithead? THAT is what enabled me to stay. If he hadn’t done that, I know I couldn’t have stayed married. Because I wasn’t accepting one iota of responsibility for his shit choices, not one single bit. All of the responsibility lies with him, it’s a shit stain on his character, not mine.
Have you looked at the Surviving Infidelity website? A lot of good info on there for people in your situation.

Whatsnextforbea · 05/04/2026 17:37

ZanyRoseNewt · 05/04/2026 17:29

I had an initial consultation with a couple therapist this week. She indicated that whilst my husband does not feel comfortable to start therapy at this time, I should start my own individual therapy. There is no doubt this is the best route for me, it feels right. Today I emailed her to request starting sessions for myself - this will sharpen his focus and appreciate there will be a need for him to join this process... or fully explain why he can't.

So…. Therapy

Meanwhile this limps on. Everyone unhappy, you and your kids

ZanyRoseNewt · 05/04/2026 17:39

"He put your sexual and genitourinary health at risk for years exposing you to another woman's biological flora."

This is a huge issue for me. It absolutely disgusts me. He knows how strongly I feel about my health and having no chance to protect myself from this risk was devastatingly upsetting. I don't understand on any level how this could have been squared off in his mind.

OP posts:
Askmehowiknow2021 · 05/04/2026 17:39

Whatsnextforbea · 05/04/2026 17:37

So…. Therapy

Meanwhile this limps on. Everyone unhappy, you and your kids

Disagree. Therapy will be a good thing for op to gain some clarity.

Whatsnextforbea · 05/04/2026 17:40

Askmehowiknow2021 · 05/04/2026 17:39

Disagree. Therapy will be a good thing for op to gain some clarity.

Just more procrastination and delay.

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