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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:
Dery · 05/04/2026 23:53

“CarlaLemarchant · Yesterday 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.”

@CarlaLemarchant has nailed it. This with bells on.

Let’s look at the bare facts as you presented them:

  • you’ve been married 24 years;
  • 15 years into the marriage, your husband entered into a 6-year relationship with a colleague because he wasn’t sure he made you happy and you weren’t having enough sex;
  • he wanted to end the relationship after a few years but was worried about the fallout that would occur for your children if he stopped fucking another woman;
  • he therefore continued for 3 more years;
  • he cared so little about you that he allowed certain family and friends to become aware of the affair mobths before you did;
  • you discovered the affair by chance;
  • he remained in touch with his affair partner for a further year;
  • 3 years later, he’s still so stressed by work that he can’t organise therapy.

I mean WTAF?

It honestly reads that you have not allowed yourself to have the feelings you should be having, because you think your anger will devour you and him. However, it feels to me like your stoicism and acceptance of the situation have turned you into a shell of yourself. Someone who is not completely here, not completely living life.

I don’t think any marriage can come back from such a horrific and extended betrayal. I don’t think any marriage should. And i speak as someone whose parents had quite frequent infidelity in their relationship but eventually divorced after 32 years of marriage and whose own marriage has had periods of being open.

You don’t need this treacherous, deceitful, pathetic, cringing manchild, OP. Time to leave him behind.

moderate · 06/04/2026 06:00

User33538216 · 05/04/2026 23:46

AI.

Natural Stupidity.

FairyMaclary · 06/04/2026 06:50

@Thewookiemustgo

Great post Wookie. Op keep a copy of Wookies post to hand. There is no shame in staying or going - this was done TO you.

You have no control over his choices, if you had he wouldn’t have done it. You cannot make someone have self respect, integrity or honesty. Bacon sandwiches every Sunday, sex every night and Cleaning his car every Saturday won’t change his values. You can’t make someone be faithful and honest. Just like you cannot make someone cheat.

I find it easier to say why I choose to be faithful. I’m faithful for me. My word matters to me. I chose to make vows in front of friends and family and my vows mattered to me. I want to like the person I see in the mirror - so I choose to be faithful. It’s not reliant on my husbands behaviour, if I am faithful because of him then I could justify poor choices because of him. Which is ridiculous. Hes not powerful enough to make me forget my values. So I am faithful for me , selfish maybe? But he is collateral damage to my choices.

And for those saying Wookie is AI she has been posting this type of post for a long time. Always helpful and considered.

FairyMaclary · 06/04/2026 07:14

Yellowshirt · 05/04/2026 23:41

I suffered the long on/off affair for 4 and a half years.
I found out about the affair originally after about 10 months whilst on a family holiday with my then 9 year old daughter.
She claimed for the next 4 years she was madley in love with me and I fell head over heels for her again.
But it was all an absolute lie and she was still sleeping with him. We split in July 2018. My biggest regret is not walking away 4 years earlier. But ultimately she was very clever. We were also entangled due to massive debts.
I never really trusted her again. But always put my daughter and her first. I even covered up domestic abuse for her.
Yes I understand I'm stupid. But hopefully I've learned some lessons.
Put yourself first. And remain vigilant if he is hiding his phone and other stuff

You really are not stupid. To trust, have belief and faith in someone is not stupid. To believe a person can change is not stupid.

You gave your wife a second shot. You were in a shit situation that you didn’t choose. You made the best decision you could with the knowledge you had. Being cheated in will potentially have caused a type of PISD and your spouse was the cause. You were caught between a rock and a hard place. You were generous. She was a liar. The shame is all hers.

I hold 100x more respect for a person that tries to work on their marriage (and gets cheated on again) than someone who makes vows and chooses to lie to the person they make a life with. Creeping around behind your spouses back is grim. To throw a second chance back in the face of your spouse and to continue grubbing around is not cool. Leave with dignity before you cheat. But cake eaters like to eat cake!

As I said upthread there’s a reason betrayal was in the final circle of hell in Dante’s Inferno - throughout history betrayal has been recognised as awful behaviour.

It’s only Hollywood, books etc that now glamorise such behaviour. But sneaking about in a society where divorce is totally legal and acceptable is unnecessary and speaks of the cheats character.

It’s not sexy - it’s lack of impulse control, attention seeking, needing external validation, it shows addictive traits, low self esteem, inability to self soothe, feeling they deserve more, playing by different rules, okay with lack of consent, prepared to risk a loved one’s mental and physical health, the fact s/he is okay with being a liar, etc etc.

Work on reframing how you feel about your choice to give a second chance.

PineConeOrDogPoo · 06/04/2026 08:04

KaleQueen · 05/04/2026 22:10

That’s AI

No it's not , she's an established poster and well versed on the subject

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:13

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?

I suppose I was trying to be measured and reflective about things without throwing it all away – things like ‘marriage graduation’ or alternative arrangements rather than arriving immediately at divorce. I different way of functioning, taking the pressure off trying to form a version 2 with high expectations, rather than a more relaxed, informal life… transitioning through stages until we were both sure we should part amicably.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:14

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?

He led her on (or the allure of her?), continually – suggesting that in time they could forge a future with each other. She asked so many times for him to come clean to me but he put off that time. I’m not sure why? The damage was done at year 2, year 3, year 4 – what was the reason to leave it that long? He’s a ‘yes’ man – trying to keep everyone happy (or so he thinks).

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:16

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.

I was angry at the start. I thought I’d been transported into a parallel universe. A sick place to find myself. I have always been a spirited person, maybe with a short (but passionate) fuse. But as time passed and I examined the gravity of it all, it’s just dulled and blunted my feelings for everything.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:18

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.

Building that foundation you speak of seems so difficult, where to begin. Even talking about what we’re trying to achieve seems like pulling teeth – superficial level. He asks me what I’m looking for, how version 2 should be shaped, how can he make me happy – but being put on the spot for a bullet list is impossible. Pretty deflating as I imagine it should come about from being curious and spending good amounts of time investigating in a greater understanding or each other. Spending time together rather than functional living. It never seems to happen, conversation is difficult when it comes to being very truthful and possibly might be shocking for each other. Therapy will be very revealing and it I feel that it will bring into focus (and cause discomfort) the subjects that need honestly tackling.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:21

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.

Only last month I come across this concept – cheating as a form of spousal abuse. Once I’d sat with this and saw how it’s mapped to my experience I realised how I’d been too accommodating around the fact that the affair had come about due to his unhappiness (overlooking my worries). That his decision was forced because he was SO unhappy! Why not be brave and be honest and tell me it was the end of the road before embarking on an affair. It’s just so far removed from how I would run my life. I sheltered the children as I didn’t want them to experience the disappointment, anger and upset that would come their way – that if I’d worked through it quietly, the resolution could come about calmly without catastrophic tidal waves. I tried to put their well-being first – our responsibly. I’m scared for my eldest to find out about what truly happened – they would be hit the roof and literally explode. They are so against anything related to cheating and infidelity that I steer away from any discussion about it in general – it makes me feel like I’m a liar and acting in a traitorous manner because I’m now not being honest and truthful mother.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:23

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?)

They were seen at a tourist spot – somewhere you’d never imagine could happen. It’s a small world. The person who saw them was a friend of his family and reported to his parents and his siblings who then raised the issue with my husband. They towed the line for several months telling him he needed to sort the situation out, but he couldn’t do it until he had summoned the courage (or waiting for a better time?) to come clean. So, although we’ve discussed it, I still feel he had to come clean only because he was found, rather than the fact that he was desperate to come clean but struggling to find the right time. He was waiting for a miracle – something to come along that would negate the reason to come clean?!

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:24

Random321 · 04/04/2026 18:05

You seem very removed from reality.
You write like you are almost numb to the truth of the situation.

Not only did he cheat on you, he can't even be bothered to try couples counselling. He doesn't give a shit.

If you are having difficult seeing the reality of his deception, betrayal, disrespect, selfishness and indifference to you, you really need counselling (on your own).

You are right, individual counselling seems the only way. I asked chatgbt why my personality and emotional state had changed so much and it indicated that trauma has blunted my emotion and left me numb. I can see it now. Sometimes I feel I’m talking about someone else’s life. It feels crazy to be so detached from the person I used to be.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:26

PyongyangKipperbang · 04/04/2026 18:08

If you mean "Can it go back to how it was?" no, it cant.

Because now you know. You can't unknow and it will always be there, no matter how hard you try to push it down. I sense that you are desperate to stay with him as he is all you know, but that marriage is gone. It ended the day you found out. Whether you can start a new marriage with him is something that only you can work out but bear in mind....

You know what he is capable of, that he sustained a lie to deceive you for six years. You know that you had no idea or suspicion as he was so good at lying to your face, although that said I can't help thinking if you did wonder at times and pushed those feelings down too. You know that he was willing to risk losing everything, you, the kids, his home, his reputation....everything for this woman. You know that she must have meant an awful lot to him for him to risk all that, even if it was only on a physical level. You know that he found it so easy to do all of this whilst looking you square in the eye. You know that he took her on dates wearing the clothes you washed and ironed.

I say none of this to be cruel, believe me. I have been in your shoes, although my ex didnt cheat for this long without being caught, but I have no doubt he would have done if he could have done.

I say it because right now you seem to just want it all not to have happened, and I am afraid that is not possible. You need to face the vile horrible facts as they are.

I know you say he says he loves you but he didnt love you when he lied to you, or when he was having sex with her or when he put a bomb under all your lives. You also say that he feels he cant deal with this right now, well that isnt his decision to make, its yours. And if he really refuses to address it then there is nothing stopping you getting counselling alone, in fact I urge you to. You need to explore your full distressing feelings and look at them properly. Why do you want your marriage to carry on? Why do you feel do upset at the thought of it ending given what he did?

I wish you all the best x

I accept what everything you say, especially from your own experience. Marriage ended on D day – it can’t (and there shouldn’t be any hope to resurrect it but trying to build foundation for a second marriage). I know it sounds impossible but I had NO inklings that an affair was happening. This is something I struggle with so much. How can I be that naïve, ignorant or maybe not emotional intelligent enough that I SHOULD have seen some signs. It points to me that I fundamentally don’t know what a fully functioning relationship should look like – not a functional arrangement only focussed on work and children responsibly (putting my needs/feelings aside). I genuinely can’t explain why I couldn’t find it acceptable for me to throw in the towel when I first found out… like I had a responsibility to stick with it and let the dust settle for clarity rather than leaving until explanation of the logical reasons for its existence would show a clear direction to take. That path is not clear enough, it’s so messy … but that’s what I hope individual therapy can give me now.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:28

bringbacksideburns · 04/04/2026 18:55

I’m sorry OP but I really don’t think you will find one person on here who would support you continuing with this man.

6 months maybe. 6 years? That is not the behaviour of a man who really loves and respects you. That’s a very long period of lying and living a double life with no thought of his kids I’d be interested to know how you found out. If he had the guts to tell you first that may have helped in his favour. If you hadn’t found out he would probably still be cheating.

You can’t trust someone again who has betrayed you consistently for so many years. You post mentions a lot about him but little about you. Your kids are old enough to handle you walking away. Put yourself first.

This sticks with me, from D day. Why did it take it to be ‘seen’ and discovered before he came clean? I asked the question directly and the response was that he hoped something would change and a miracle would happen to mean he could avoid telling me. How? Like the OW decided to quit? Like he’d spontaneously died?! Like I@D found another partner and decided to leave? I feel like there’s loads more to this than I know…

OP posts:
exhaustDAD · 06/04/2026 12:30

I'd recommend having some more self-respect and not even consider giving more chance for someone who so deeply disrespected you, your relationship, and everything you had together. This is insane. It is always better to be on your own than to be with the wrong person. What he has done cannot be undone, and the level he operated on is pretty extreme, too.

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:31

MayaPinion · 04/04/2026 19:58

I don’t think there’s any way you can come back from a six year affair authentically. It’s not a one night stand or a heady holiday fling. Six years is a long time to be deceived by the person you’re supposed to trust most in the world. If you’re determined to stay in the marriage have the issues that supposedly cause the affair been resolved? Is he getting enough sex and are you treating him like a special prince?

You are in no way to blame for the affair. If he felt he wasn’t getting enough sex or being treated well enough he should have talked to you six years ago, not stuck his penis repeatedly into a colleague. He is not the man you thought he was - your big question - that only you can answer - is do you want to continue the rest of your life with the person you now know him to be.

“to be deceived by the person you’re supposed to trust most in the world” – THIS.
It seems absolutely incomprehensible that this could happen unless someone was mentally unstable or categorically thought that our marriage wouldn’t work as we’re unsuited to each other. That would have easily given him a get out card. To not be able to project the logic and imagine what the fallout to be BEFORE starting to get serious was a superhuman hurdle to master. HOW? He’s explained that he was in such a bad place (for 6= years?) and that he failed in so many areas through bad decision making. He’s ashamed and has ongoing regrets and wants to right the wrongs. But the toolkit and skills to do it are missing – something we need to find.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:32

HHHMMM · 04/04/2026 20:03

Has he asked to be forgiven to start with?

Yes, as soon as he came clean, so many times. But I suppose not knowing, not asking the level of detail I now need is problematic. I followed some guidance in not asking for detail as it would only be damaging and a futile exercise… 3 years on, I’m not sure this works for some people, like me...

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:35

JumpinJehoshaphat · 04/04/2026 20:13

He thinks so little of you that he deceived you for years. The absolute humiliation that family and friends knew before you. I could not countenance forgiving him or trying to build a future with him.

My friend is a relationship counsellor. She has many clients trying to recover from affairs. But in private, she thinks there is no relationship worth salvaging after infidelity.

It is really sad to hear. It seems that within the group that do go to couples therapy, less than 30% actually make it (if we believe the stats I've read).

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:38

Endofyear · 04/04/2026 23:51

I'm so sorry OP, you're a better woman than me if you're willing to try and salvage the relationship. For me the hurt and betrayal would run too deep and I'm not sure I'd be able to look at him, let alone share a bed with him.

He's not even prepared to do the hard work of rebuilding and facing up to what he's done in couples counselling. He should be begging you for the opportunity to make things right, or at least try. The reason you feel lost and adrift is because you are - papering over the cracks and trying to carry on as normal isn't helping you move on. Please don't feel that his reasons (excuses) for having the affair are valid - marriages go through peaks and troughs in intimacy, especially when you have children. That is not a reason to look outside the marriage. This was a choice he made, and continued for 6 years. There is no excuse.

How can you be sure that he would never do it again? Presumably you were sure that he wouldn't before as you say you trusted him implicitly. That trust has been broken and he needs to put the work in to earn your trust again. Unless he does this, I can't see a way forward for you.

I thought maybe I could find the strength and personal growth to accept, to elevate my understanding of how things happen in life. I also believed that there must be a small % of people who cheat then understand how terrible their decision to cheat was and that the enormousness of this could make that person learn and recover and CHANGE. Never to do it again. Some people resolve never to cheat again but to be honest that they can’t carry on with a marriage when it doesn’t make them happy (rather than having a bit on the side). He says he’s one of those people… this experience never to be repeated again.
I’ve felt lost for many years. Again, I just thought it was a natural state, something that I’m inherently like. I know I think and feel deeply but I have real issues with sharing this in RL. This state is so engrained that I’m finding it hard to break that pattern, but I’m working on it – I deserve it for my own well-being.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:40

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

Thank you @PineConeOrDogPoo everything you have outlined and shared is so helpful and insightful. I know there’s so much to get through and digest but it’s all so valuable – I’m committed to read every single thing that is referenced. I know that this process will shift my mindset, in fact, I can feel it tangibly already. Gift of knowledge is power, thank you.

OP posts:
ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:43

FairyMaclary · 05/04/2026 07:41

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

I really question whether I understand what a ‘real’ relationship is meant to be. I genuinely wonder whether I’ve functioned on autopilot, slept-walked into a traditional married life including kids and all the normal marriage format without actually having the skill to connect with my inner self and choosing a path that I authentically & intentionally chose for myself (rather than aligning with societal norms?). I feel like there’s a part of my inner puzzle really missing. I worry that I don’t have the confidence to separate the strands and connecting with a certain inner knowledge that will lead me decisively. Until I feel certain I’ve reliability understood the logic and the triggers I stay in decision paralysis. Decisions make me scared. The irony of ‘better the devil you know’ sticks. So, I suppose when I thought I was a strong, fairly intelligent and more confident person – I’m now a (boring!) shell of my former self.

OP posts:
OchreRaven · 06/04/2026 12:51

I have a friend who forgave her husband for infidelity (not 6 years worth!). But the difference is he accepted that it was something in him that made him cheat- a weakness / personality flaw. They went to couples therapy and she asked all the questions about the affair she wanted to know so that she could understand what she was choosing to forgive rather than stay in denial because it was easier to process.

In your case whilst he has accepted wrong doing he’s not reflected on what it is in him that could betray someone he loved and how he was able to lie without guilt (enough to confess anyway). That’s not work you can do for him and it’s not something you can set a road map to. What you are craving is authenticity for yourself and your relationship. You need to stop worrying about everyone’s view of your life and your choices. Instead own and accept them. If you are embarrassed by your choices it’s probably because you know they don’t reflect who you are or want to be.

If he doesn’t have the emotional maturity to take the lead on therapy or working through his own issues I don’t hold out much hope that the part of him who cheated because of his need for validation has changed. Maybe he won’t cheat again because his fear of the consequences outweighs his need for attention but maybe he will. Unless you know in your heart he is a changed person from the one who did this to you, you will always worry about it.

exhaustDAD · 06/04/2026 13:03

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:43

I really question whether I understand what a ‘real’ relationship is meant to be. I genuinely wonder whether I’ve functioned on autopilot, slept-walked into a traditional married life including kids and all the normal marriage format without actually having the skill to connect with my inner self and choosing a path that I authentically & intentionally chose for myself (rather than aligning with societal norms?). I feel like there’s a part of my inner puzzle really missing. I worry that I don’t have the confidence to separate the strands and connecting with a certain inner knowledge that will lead me decisively. Until I feel certain I’ve reliability understood the logic and the triggers I stay in decision paralysis. Decisions make me scared. The irony of ‘better the devil you know’ sticks. So, I suppose when I thought I was a strong, fairly intelligent and more confident person – I’m now a (boring!) shell of my former self.

Be very careful, @ZanyRoseNewt - "Better the devil you know" is a misleading concept. Because, by virtue it is a 100% guaranteed devil. It is a done deal, you are stuck with that devil. While you can only improve your own life by taking yourself out of that setup. And give yourself some slack. Just looking at your replies it is apparent that you are an interesting person to talk to, not a simpleton. Now what you need is the realisation that staying in what you found yourself in is not healthy and nobody with self-respect should stay in it.

Alicorn1707 · 06/04/2026 13:13

What would you say to your daughter/s if they found themselves in your position?

Take him completely out of the equation, he lied to you and your children for 6 years, he deserves zero empathy nor consideration.

This is about you healing, please do not, in any way castigate yourself for not seeing, you trusted your husband of 24 years, how could he even do that to you all?

You're numb because his betrayal is huge.

I would tell your children, imo, they deserve to know who he truly is, their reaction may well give you clarity and a way forward.

Be outraged, not diminished @ZanyRoseNewt

My heart goes out to you, be brave, stay strong and kick that dog to the kerb!!!🌻

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 13:38

Update: After opening a more frank discussion today, I confirmed I was to start therapy and he indicated he would follow (when ready). To sum up his situation he says he: feels burnt out, numb, only existing & lonely. He has complete loss of libido (we've not had sex for over a year - not helped by a much needed recovery period after my medical event). That we lack a real trust in each other (I'm such a closed book, I find it difficult to open up in RL). That he feels I have resentment around his infidelity. He sees we are a friendly coparenting/cohabiting situation and not sure what the next chapter holds.

Is this a summary coming from a man that is suffering from stress, fatigue, hormonal changes (low testosterone), needing medical treatment OR is this forming a gentle let down... gradually changing the dynamic to enable a quiet decoupling?

I think it's both. It feels like there's a corner to turn - it's almost here.

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