Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Grief and growth and my promise to you


I sometimes wonder what I have to contribute to this conversation around infidelity when I am so far past it. Sure, I still remember those awful days when I felt both pinned beneath my pain but simultaneously cut loose from the physical world. I would drift between wishing I could just go to sleep and not wake up and wishing I didn't have to go to bed because there would be nothing, at 3 a.m., to distract me from my terror.

But while I remember those days, I no longer feel them. In some ways, it's like it happened to someone else. And I suppose it did. Me but a different me. 

Still, I will come across a comment or a story or an image (like the one above) and think, yes, yes, that's what it was like. That's what happened to me, too.

I'm occasionally asked how I got over (through, I tell them, through, not over) my husband's infidelity. And I have my answer: therapy, my mother (until she died six months post D-Day), running, crying, my pets, a couple of good friends. But there is also this answer: time. It is not magic but it can feel like alchemy. Time alone will not disappear pain but time + therapy + feeling your feelings = healing.

I'm posting this image (credit for this, too) because it so perfectly depicts what really happens. My pain, my grief around what I lost when I learned of my husband's betrayals, didn't shrink. Not at all. But my life grew. My world expanded. I was able to keep space for my grief but not let it eclipse everything else. At first, that seemed impossible. I was certain that I would never ever feel joy again. My pain, my grief, consumed me and cast a shadow over everything else. Even when I felt a tinge of happiness, it was quickly swallowed by sadness. And so I resigned myself to a half-life. One lived without joy.

But I had a moment when I could see that something was shifting. It might not have been the first moment but it was the first that I really took notice. I was walking my dog. It was winter and it had snowed. The sun was out and the snow sparkled, as if sprinkled with fairy dust. It felt like magic and I smiled to myself. I could see the beauty. I could feel that something different was possible. And that's where change happens right? When we can imagine it. When we can open ourselves to believing that what we feel right now isn't the end of the story.

It can feel complicated to talk about grief in regards to infidelity. After all, our husband didn't die. We haven't lost a child. Rather, infidelity grief is complicated grief. But it is, nonetheless, grief.

And so I can tell you this: Your life will grow around it. Your grief will not disappear though you will, as I did, come to place where it isn't raw like a fresh wound but rather leathery, like a scar. 

And I can also make this promise: You are bigger than this pain. Your life is bigger than this pain. You, too, will get through this. Not over but through. And though your grief won't necessarily shrink, your life will grow around it until your grief is not a boulder but a pebble that reminds you of your strength and your courage and your refusal to give up on yourself. 

17 comments:

  1. I can concur! I'm just starting to feel that it happened to someone else too. It still hurts. I get triggered from time to time but today I realized that I went a whole day without thinking about it. I feel the shifting you are talking about. My husband's affair lasted 5 years and I was aware of it but was gaslighted into not trusting my intuition and some very obvious signs. His affair cost us everything. His career was ruined, thus our income disappeared. I lost almost all of my friends, some had been friends for decades. I had to quit my job because between that and a host of physical problems, probably brought on by stress, I just grew tired and had trouble focusing. Our name, which had been highly respected in our community became a joke. We were not welcomed and shunned by people and places that should have reached out to us to help. Our kids were devastated even though they are all grown and they also suffered in the community just because they were related to my husband. Several counselors and pastors all told me it was a hopeless situation and to cut my losses and start over but I didn't. It's been difficult but through prayer and hard work, we are still together, making new memories, having fun together and putting our marriage together the way I wished it had been all along.

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  2. So well said. Thank you for the encouragement. I'm almost two years post D-Day but still come here often to read your posts. I still think about it every day, but you are right..it's not as raw. And I've finally accepted and believe that it was never about me. It was him and his decision and it's not my shame. But it's taken almost two years to truly believe and feel that. Thank you for your blog. It helps so many!

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  3. Thank you for these beautiful words. I too feel this same way. When I reflect (no more wallowing in my misery) it almost feels as if I was a whole different person at the time. Did I deserve what my husband did to me? HELL TO THE NO, but my God did it make me a stronger woman. I may have added insecurities now but I know my worth and what I am capable of accomplishing. I got through it like you said, not over it.

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  4. It has been a few years for me, as well, and time salved the pain. I resolved to be a happy single, then found new, unimagined love and remarried. Still estranged from children lied to, but I know they have to eventually come to terms themselves. She betrayed me and became my enemy. I still pray for her, but don't blog about it anymore. Peace to you. https://pray4mae.wordpress.com/

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  5. So true. My husband's long term affair with a much younger woman in a foreign country incurred a grief I thought I would never be able to get through. It's been 6 years, and I still have tough days but I now know, ( thank you Elle ) it was never about me. We are still together. I have read copiously about infidelity, spent hours in therapy and prayer, cried an ocean, kept a daily journal and confided in my sister. This betrayal has devastated me but it has also changed how I think about myself. When I first discovered the affair, and saw years and years of photos of my husband with his beautiful young Asian mistress, it shattered my self worth. I went through 18 months of gaslighting and continued contact with the OW before I finally declared I'd had enough. Best thing I ever did. That marriage is over. Like Anonymous, November 23, I now have the marriage partner I have always wanted - my husband is kinder, more loving and respectful. I deserve no less. I am much stronger. I know I will be fine with or without my husband. And he knows that too! Yes, the grief is still there, but much as I would never have believed it 6 years ago, my life HAS 'grown around it'. Great post, Elle!

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  6. It has been a year. I hope for the day when I can say I have moved through this. But must admit, I am nowhere near that point. Thank you for posting this. It helps.

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    1. Dear just me....I remember when I made it to the one-year mark from D-Day....it felt like a long-time coming....I kept my focus on moving through the pain/disaster/shock instead of trying to 'get over it'....the only way forward, is through....so I worked and worked at it....I just passed the two-year mark and was in a much better headspace than from year one...I have been recently knocked back, just discovering I have a latent STD from my wasband...*sigh* he has ruined my perfect health forever...but I will move through this too, somehow...throughout our marriage he chose his secret life and image-management over my safety and well-being...no-one ever gets to do that again with me...so keep your focus on you, and your recovery and well-being, and good mental health...step by step, moment by moment, day by day you and all of us are moving through this...it can feel like crawling through barbed wire...but keep moving....

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    2. Thanks Zinderella, {Love the name} I have recently realized that alot of the work I have done over the past year was not for me. Having nowhere to go and no job, I have been struggling just to put one foot in front of the other. I really do need to make myself a priority. I was never taught self-care. I am wallowing , so sorry. Crawling through glass and barbed wire in solidarity. Please take care of your self. and thanks again.

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  7. I hope, as your telling, that my life also grow around all this pain and rage that I’m still feeling after three years. There’s not been one day that I have go to bed and not thinking about the betrayal, It still taking my sleep away, Still true that it fades with time but I wonder when it will just go away of my mind! I think I need a break from my thoughts. It’s not that my husband haven’t repented from what he did, but my anger, disappointment, pain still there. I still hating the OW( I recognized that you need two to tango ) and that it won’t change anything but still anyhow. I would never be able to understand the reasons for the betrayal and I’m trying to make peace with that.
    Still asking myself if staying is hurting me more that if I had left . I do love my husband and we still working on this but is really hard to overve and sometimes I just want to quit ( only if it could take the pain away )

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    1. It sounds like maybe you are ruminating and this is your go-to thought pattern, so it's like a habitual practice for you. I used to be in that place, too, even though the affair and that part of our marriage is far far behind us. It's a way of accidentally living in the past and just wreaks havoc on our present and our future (and our healing!). Google things on how to stop ruminating or how to interrupt ruminating. If you put that in to practice, I know you will find relief! Our thoughts create our feelings and that leads us to certain actions - the good news is that we can see our own thinking and decide to think differently. You can do this!

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    2. It may take two to tango, But it only takes one to mess up the steps.

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    3. Lilivette, how are you doing now? I left the December 27th comment and I was just thinking about you and if you've looked at any ruminating info? Still rooting for your own individual healing.

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  8. I just found out two weeks back is still raw I still cry When I think about it I wanna call quits but I also do love him ,the pain is unbearable,the betrayal the lies,I can't even fake a smile cause the sadness just automatically comes back when I try to be happy,I feel like part of me is dead,can't even explain how I feel ��

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  9. Yes! This perfectly describes the "process" of healing and moving through the pain and heartbreak of infidelity. Some think staying is weakness, insecurity, etc., but it is not. It takes incredible strength to stay, to try to heal the relationship, just as it takes strength to leave. There is no one right, just what is right for you. It's hard. My husband had changed during the affair--the stress and guilt of a double life, ultimately feeling trapped and miserable, but afraid to end it for fear of being outed by the AP--took their toll, but it wasn't huge change that drew huge red flags. I thought it was work stress, tried to get him to open up to me, to talk, but of course he couldn't/wouldn't. About 9 mos after dday I was so very close to being done. I was going to file the divorce at the end of summer if there wasn't change. Therapy and some time apart gave him the clarity he needed about what he really wanted and what he was about to lose, what he truly valued, that he had lost sight of how great we really were. In the end, I love my husband dearly, and he has become a better version of the man I fell in love with and married. He took complete responsibility, is remorseful and regretful, and has done all the right things after he fully processed through therapy. Our bond, which had always been strong, was tested, but it is stronger than ever & we are on the way to better than ever. That's why I did not file for divorce, that's why, despite some hard moments still, I have not left. It's a journey, one that continues for my husband and myself, and one that none of us would have chosen. Thank you, Elle, and hugs to all who are on this journey.

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  10. I am exactly one month & week from the day that I found out about my husband's affairs. I still cry every night and it is still hard to hold any food down without getting sick, and sleep is impossible. I swear the second I lay down, my mind just questions everything and the pics and text messages from the affair replay in my head.. The plus side is I went from thinking I couldn't survive this pain to still being here a month later. I cry less now and have been going to therapy for 3 weeks which helps tremendously. My husband has admitted to being a sex addict & is getting help with his addiction along with our marriage therapy. I love my husband with everything and we were always that happy couple that was very much in love. I ask myself every day how this could happen to us, to people that were so madly in love. The questions are still constantly flowing through my head but I am learning that his affairs had nothing to do with his love for me. I am still in the process of deciding if we are going to rebuild what we once shared or if I'm going to walk away. He has been out of the house since I found out (kicked him out) and I still question if I will ever trust him again. He was never someone to put passwords on his phone and never showed signs of cheating. Once I found out, it was lie after lie. His reasoning was that he didn't want to hurt me with the truth & he didn't want to see my cry. However that made me hurt more because on top of the affairs, I can no longer believe what he tells me.

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  11. For me it’s been a year since the last betrayal and 5 or 6 years since the one before. After the first one (that I know about) it went on for 11 months. I stayed in the marriage. We even renewed our vows and he made all kinds of promises to never do it again. Then a year ago he did it again and that broke me. I can’t seem to make any progress with it. I’m so hurt and angry that I don’t know if I can stay. It’s a 26 year marriage and the thought of divorce is exhausting but this daily sickness I feel is awful. I appreciate reading your stores and for this site.

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  12. This post is so encouraging. It makes me feel so seen. I have repeatedly decided to stay with my husband. I know I “deserve” better, but that’s the crazy thing about love. You see someone for who they can be and even the deepest darkest pain can’t cover over the life and memories that you cherish. I am also thankful to have a husband who sees me in this time as written above. I can see good parts of life growing around the dark days and grief and I hope it continues to go in that direction. Sending love to you all in this battle.

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