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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:
Alicorn1707 · 06/04/2026 14:06

there is a third possibility to your update @ZanyRoseNewt

he doesn't want to "uncouple" he sees the way you are currently coping as a sign that you are prepared to bumble along in a friendly manner (as he sees it)

and that suits him just fine, no consequences, no challenging his betrayal and it's all swept under the carpet!!

He takes zero ownership!! He is not a victim here @ZanyRoseNewt

eta; what do you want?

So many excuses from him, you should be steering how your life looks going forward, you set the pace.

For the moment, he has lost all his privileges by his despicable deceit.

99bottlesofkombucha · 06/04/2026 14:12

Ah op just tell him to get the fuck out of your house until he can make therapy a priority and find the guts and time to actually talk and think about how you feel. He ‘feels you resent his infidelity’? I think he’s lucky you didn’t burn the house down around him for that, and you need to stop finding the right careful words that don’t go too far and tell him not what you think but how you feel - i rather think it must go something like this You had the absolute nerve to say you think I resent your infidelity. OF COURSE I FUCKING RESENT IT YOU WERE A SHITBAG WJO FUCKING BETRAYED EVERYTHING ABOUT OUR LIFE FOR YEARS!! You are a cheating shitbag since you never volunteered to come clean and you still haven’t managed to acknowledge you made choices and they were shit choices that betrayed me and your children. Do you know how many days there are in a year? 365. Every day FOR 365 DAYS YOU WOKE UP AND THOUGHT IM GOING TO KEEP CHEATING ON MY WIFE AND THEN YOU DID IT AGAIN FOR ANOTHER 365 DAYS AND ANOTHER AND ANOTHER AND ANOTHER AND IF I THREW 5 lots of 365 darts at you I don’t think it would hurt as much as you’ve hurt me. I hate that I’m protecting you from our childrens judgement. I hate that you’ve made a huge chunk of my life and our family a lie. I’m going to therapy to decide if I hate you, and you’re all just ‘I was stressed and you weren’t caring enough and I didn’t know how to end it so I kept fucking her and I went to stay but I’m still too fucking pathetic to book therapy because you know, I’m stressed and I always have to look after me first… and I wish you could hear how pathetic and selfish you are, but I’m this close to telling the dc and everyone we know so I guess you might hear it from them. Let me know if you grow a heart or a conscience or maybe even a fucking spine, I have nothing else to say to you.

SoSadSoSadSoSad · 06/04/2026 14:21

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.

Stop focussing on him. He’s such self indulgent pampered prince, isn’t he?

Kick him out. Let him feel the cold wind of not having you around.

He absolutely will betray you again. Becuse so far he’s not felt any consequences at all.

Itz such a predictable tale.

Calabasas · 06/04/2026 14:25

Outraged reading his take on things on your behalf @ZanyRoseNewt! HE’s burnt out, tired etc etc what about YOU?
You have RESENTMENT about the infidelity!! This one’s a classic gaslighter. Blame you for your emotions to deflect from the objectively unfair & cruel wrongdoings on his part.

No - I blew up our lives & our family. I hurt you beyond measure. I want to make amends. Subtly still blaming you & you’re “not being able to open up” for him having the affair IMO.

Is there any fear on your part OP of being the one to leave him ie fear of what his or your own family will say or think? Or shame? Apart from the obvious reluctance to admit one’s marriage has failed & the hurt & pain of all of that etc etc

Is his (male) fragility & MH issues known about by wider friends & family? Is any of that playing into any fears of separating - as you’ll be seen as the one abandoning him & hurting him when he’s most down?

It’s so complex though & you mustn’t blame yourself for trying to fix & hope & overcome things - esp for the children, family & society. We have so many expectations placed on us, are so stretched to carry all the loads, that I think your description of living more by what is required & expected of you, by the literal treadmill of life & obligations - will resonate with a lot of us. Where is the time to carve out & even identify what your true needs & desires are?

He by contrast seems very in tune with what his feelings about things are. But then does he have the luxury in which to be able to do that? How is the division of labour & running the family shared out or does he get the usual special male privileges (because he’s the provider) that enables him to indulge these?

StripedVase · 06/04/2026 14:34

you are still all about his feels!
Did you confirm that of course you have resentment?? Did he ask you anything about how you are or what you want?
There is indeed a corner to turn... I hope you turn it.

CraftyYankee · 06/04/2026 14:48

How you have not smacked him across the face for his self absorption is beyond me.

(I'm not advocating DV, just saying that I don't think I could restrain myself in the face of his self centered twattery)

Fleetbug · 06/04/2026 14:53

Im not sure if any one else has suggested the brutally funny Chumplady website to you? The poor FW is having a sadz! How he has suffered! He tragically lied to you and your children every day for six years and is so hurt that you are still “resentful”! Can’t you feel his pain ? He’s just not ready for therapy or anything that involves looking at his actual actions and conscious decisions for six years. No! Let’s talk instead about his suffering and how mean and resentful you are!
Oh no OP can’t you see you lack real trust in each other! By which he means how horrible of you not to trust him! So he’s not going to trust you either… because you did things just as bad….
So you lied cheated and betrayed him ??? For six years????

Do have a look at Chumplady OP if only to see the thousands of others who have gone through your pain.

Weeelokthen · 06/04/2026 14:56

Your done!! It is over. Unrecoverable. Why would you want it to be anything other than over?
Sorry to be so blunt op ❤

Askmehowiknow2021 · 06/04/2026 15:18

He “feels you have resentment around his infidelity”???? NO SHIT SHERLOCK!!!
This entitled, over indulged, man baby has been thinking about himself and only himself for far too long. Resentment? He’s lucky you aren’t wearing his balls as earrings!!
What planet, exactly, is he currently on, where he believes he can shag someone else for 6 YEARS, lie, cheat and deceive his wife…then just expect her to say….”oh dear, never mind, you must have been….stressed”???
The man is deluded. I suggest you turn this corner yourself. Without him.

Substance · 06/04/2026 15:22

"Do have a look at Chumplady OP if only to see the thousands of others who have gone through your pain." Yes, @Fleetbug's advice is excellent. Get thee to Chumplady.com!!!!

I was in a very similar situation to you, with all the shock and horror when the multi-year deception was discovered in a very long marriage. Strangely, DH came off appearing to be the poor sad sausage. He cheated on me for four years, and yet owing to me being the one to ask for a separation (later divorce), taking the step of telling our kids (with his approval first) and moving out of the family home, he saw himself as the good guy! He also had an illness which made him feel doubly self-pitying. Many of our friends and family absorbed this sorry-for-himself routine. Even our children feel sorry for poor Dad despite him now living with his affair partner. It's maddening! But living well is the best revenge....

ginasevern · 06/04/2026 15:24

@ZanyRoseNewt "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?"

No, it sounds like a man that got caught with his pants down and had to tell you before someone else did. It also sounds like a man that was happily shagging someone else for 6 whole years and equally happy lying to your face. And it sounds like a man that's shitting himself about divorce and giving you 50% of everything he owns including his pension and leaving behind a lot of on tap home comforts. In the meantime he's shifting the dynamic and blaming you, because men always do. He was so "unhappy" that he forced himself to shag a mistress for 6 years - poor bloody sod. My heart bleeds. And he thinks you're harbouring some kind of resentment! How on earth did he get that silly notion? C'mon OP, you're worth more than this.

DivorcedButHappyNow · 06/04/2026 15:31

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.

Jeez. He’s really got no shame. Still making it all about him. And wanting you to be the grown up and make the decisions. You just sound such a wonderful person that deserves to be cherished! I wish you could see that without this poor excuse for a man so much good lies ahead. You truly deserve to experience what you deserve. A real relationship !!! (I speak as someone who was also betrayed and found love - in my 50’s. It’s like night and day).

Anyway I came on to see how you were doing and ask if you’d considered going on a retreat with other women who have been betrayed. A friend went on this one recently but there are many. Including abroad. It gave her a secret support group amongst other things.

https://www.theheartbreakhotel.co.uk/impactstories

Dery · 06/04/2026 15:50

Just seen your update, OP. Honestly, how can you stand him? How can you bear to be near him? How can you bear to share a home with him?

I’ve already posted upthread and am sorry to come back again but honestly you write like you don’t exist except in relation to him. And he’s such a nasty, deceitful, selfish, morally corrupt manchild.

It’s almost like you’re so numb that you’re not an actual person any more. It’s really sad and slightly scary to read. As you say, you’re so traumatised that even 3 years on you’re still numb. I think it’s because you’ve supressed your natural fury.

You will remain lost to yourself until you stop with the detached psycho-babble about him. He has nothing to offer you. There is no retrieving a relationship from this level of destruction. You will never be able to trust a word he says.

Counselling will hopefully help you. And some kind of physical activity to start your rightful fury moving through your body. Maybe kick-boxing.

Then you can start finding your way back to yourself. And your DCs will get their mum back instead of the shell you currently are.

PineConeOrDogPoo · 06/04/2026 15:56

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:40

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.

You are welcome.

A few things I will add after reading your most recent posts.

Your H is an Addict. He was addicted to the attention and did all he could for it NOT to end. Including justifying his own huge shame. Addicts will literally throw anyone under the bus to get their fix IN the moment. He has a LOT of unpacking to do about this addiction. He needs to be listening to Ask The Unfaithful on Spotify on every single drive to work from tomorrow on.

Secondly it is absolutely impossible for you to have anything to do with what he did. Yes you were not the perfect partner. But this is NOTHING to do with it. This is to do with him reliving - and protecting himself with - dysfunctional Childhood coping mechanisms instead of telling you or anyone else what was happening. He needs to make a HUGE shift.

It is time for you to focus on YOU. You are doing him a favour by not pulling away completely.

Concentrate mainly on your own Self Care AND spend some time learning good communication skills - For YOU. No more sweeping anything under the carpet.

Learn Mirroring. This is the best talk I can send you on the subject:
Learning Mirroring

https://www.alturtle.com/Audio/ThinkTankAug1.mp3

Random321 · 06/04/2026 16:05

You have children.

Imagine if one of your daughters was in a relationship like this, what would you say to her? Would you respect a man who treated her like this?

Or if one of your sons treated his furthrr wife like this? Would you be proud of him?

Surely, you would want better for your children? Why not want better for yourself?

Counselling needs to be a priority for you. You've buried so many emotions for so long, you are numb and detached.

Lugol · 06/04/2026 16:11

I haven't RTFT OP but when my XDH had an affair and finally confessed I went through absolute hell like you have been doing.
I turned myself inside out trying to be better in some way and pathetically trying to be the woman I thought he would love again before his affair.

This was all before MN, and I didn't have any support nor a good friend who could help me see that all I was doing was destroying myself for someone who wasn't who I thought he was. I was pretzelling myself to be who I thought he wanted while he did sweet fuck all to make anything better.
Just lame, pathetic excuses for what a selfish cunt he was.

Eventually after throwing everything at it and discovering it was still going on I realised that sometimes when something is broken it can't be put back together again, no matter how much cellotape or glue you throw at it.

Once it's broken it's broken.

This is broken.

Focus on you, focus on being kind to yourself and knowing you've done everything you can to fix it but you can't fix what someone else broke.

Just focus on you. You can do this. You have a whole, marvellous, wonderful, exciting life out there. Make your plans, write your lists, start saving for your future. You can absolutely do this. xx

PineConeOrDogPoo · 06/04/2026 16:11

OP
You should also join these two forums

For you;
Support for Betrayed

For your H - and for you to see people actually working hard on themselves:
Support for Waywards

PineConeOrDogPoo · 06/04/2026 16:35

I think you should both also listen to all 7 of these interviews as many times as needed until it all sinks in

Interview Series on The Biological Dream

And Read these articles (4 parts) about Feelings

Feelings and Emotions

PineConeOrDogPoo · 06/04/2026 16:37

By the time you're finished with all that material you'll be well equipped for your next Relationship - whether with your current H ( effectively now 'Ex') or any future partner.

Mix56 · 06/04/2026 16:43

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:18

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.

He has the audacity to ask you to provide a solution, like a manual for him to follow.
Sorry, he has had SIX year affair & you are supposed to be grateful & fix it.
Nope, not in any universe. He is not Gods gift to women, he is a lying, cheating, morally corrupt predator.
Walk away, head high. The kids will discover that’s his problem to solve.
Fuck him & the horse he road in on.

Dumbledore167 · 06/04/2026 16:53

Yeah it’s time to call it.
Staying together seems to be a more painful option long term for both of you than the alternative of divorce. Nothing in his actions (or even words) suggest he’s that arsed, which will continue to rob you of your self respect every day.
Take it back - the kids will understand, even if that’s eventually.

Dery · 06/04/2026 17:17

@Dumbledore167 has nailed it. He’s robbing you of any remaining self respect that you have. Honestly, i don’t know how anyone could be encouraging you to find a way back to the marriage in this case. This wasn’t a drunken one-night stand. This wasn’t even a short affair. This was 6 years of him fucking another woman and telling her he would be leaving you for her. Friends and family knew. He maintained contact with her for 1 year after discovery. Even with a degree of latitude, there surely have to be degrees of treachery from which recovery is impossible.

It’s like he erased you in every meaningful way. I know i keep saying it but you are a numb shell of yourself because of this man and the degree of his treachery. This is the kind of emotional and psychological injury which can translate into serious physical illness if you don’t get these emotions out and free yourself from him. And you won’t find yourself again until you’re free of him.

pouletvous · 06/04/2026 19:30

He started that affair when your youngest was only 10

those kids deserve to know the truth

RawBloomers · 06/04/2026 19:31

ZanyRoseNewt · 06/04/2026 12:18

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.

Perhaps what I should have lead with is that, first and foremost, what it takes to rebuild is for both partners to want to and to prioritise it. Your DH is not.

He asks you for a list so he can a) decide if it's worth it to him and b) gives him an out if his half hearted efforts don't make you feel good. Then it's "your fault" because he's done everything you asked (even though he will have stuck to the letter and not the spirit).

More than anything else though, HE ISN'T TRYING. Years of being
"too stressed" by work to go to therapy or, by the sounds of it, do anything at all to address the hurt he's caused. Staying in touch with the other woman. Telling you he senses you resent him for the affair! Why hasn't he changed jobs if his current one means he has no room to rebuild his marriage?

He has spent years prioritising himself at your expense and it doesn't look like he has any intention of changing that.

You sound like a woman who is loyal and understands relationships take work. But you cannot make a good marriage by yourself.

Cushionsplease · 06/04/2026 20:01

I suspect a big part of why you stayed with him is you don’t want to spoil the external image of the happy family.

When in reality… the people who you should truly care about what they think are your children - and they will know the truth.