rstewart,
I was a deployed husband. Overseas 10 mos mixed with coed troops. Here are a couple of points -
1) It is a two-way street. I saw many soldiers over there remain faithful to have their spouses cheat on them while they were deployed. (Both male and female).
2) Good soldier does not necessarily mean good man (or woman for that matter) and the behavior of some of my fellow soldiers while deployed was deplorable.
3) None of them, and let me make this clear, NONE OF THEM
HAD to. It is a choice they make. Using a deployement as an excuse for bad behavior (not saying yours did, just making a statement) is a cop out. Why should a deployment be any different than any OTHER (difficult) circumstance? It's not. Frankly, especially in the reserves because of the lack of support network associated with proximity to a military base, it can be damn tough on the spouse left behind as well. Especially if family isn't around, etc.
On to the advice....
You asked:
I'm planning on moving home at the first of the month. However, I just found out today that I'm pregnant. That scares me because what if he is not going to be fully committed the way he says he will?? What happens if he gets recalled again and I'm stuck at home to have a baby by myself and raise two other small children?
These are valid fears. But fear tends to lead to weakness. And poor decisions.
To the first question, I would ask - if he is not fully comitted, what are your options? Is partially comitted better than no husband? What do you think your chances are of finding ANOTHER man fully comitted to someone whose kids are not his?
I do not say this to remove hope, but to give it. Your fear of his committment is just fear. His committment is not in your control. All you can do is be the best YOU that you can be. If you do that, it will aid his committment. If you are a wishy-washy wreck, it will only make it worse.
Is it unfair that the burden is yours? Sure it is. Welcome to the real world. But the fact that YOU need to be the best YOU that YOU can be does not change with your circumstances.
Your second question: What happens if he gets recalled again? Well. You do your best.
This fearful line of thinking will just cause you to lose focus. Here is what comes next...
... what if he cheats again...
... what if he finds someone else...
... what if he dies...
All out of your control. Keep an eye on your fear. It is a real good early warning system. But use it, do not be ruled by it.
Two more things:
1) You may not have asked it directly, but I am going to answer it for you anyway. Q: When is it OK to quit (on the marriage)? A: When you can look yourself deep in the eye and with 100% assurance say that you did your best to make the marriage work. Remember, you may or may not have to spend the rest of your life with him. But you WILL have to spend the rest of your life with you. So be a person you can enjoy spending the rest of your life with. Understand??
2) His choice to have an affair was his alone. Don't you shoulder that burden. It is NOT YOURS. You may have made mistakes. You may have been able to do things better. All that means is that you are human, just like the rest of us. There are PLENTY of us. In fact EVERYONE of us who could say their spouse "needs improvement" in some area or another. And there are plenty who KEEP THE COVENANT ANYWAY. Got it? You are NOT defective. His choice. His burden.
NCWalker