TD -
I just wish I understood the state and condition of my W's heart. I know she wants to do the right thing, but I also know she doesn't think she can handle a continuation of the misery she felt leading up to the A.
Again, speaking from my personal experience, I think you have a pretty accurate grasp of where your wife is at.
MP came back for 2 reasons:
1. Our kids (DS 11 and DD 3).
2. To work on our marriage.
She did not come back for me, at least not directly. She really had no reason to - until a few weeks ago, just prior to her trip, I had given her no reason to.
She sees the changes in me...she acknowledges that I have done pretty much a 180, and at lightning speed. Actually, all I really did was submit myself to God, and He's done the rest.
I also know that it will take time for her to accept these changs in me long enough to begin to feel even remotely comfortable trusting me again, enough to open up to me and be vulnerable.
Do you suppose that, even though she won't SAY that she loves me, and is certain that she doesn't FEEL any love for me, that perhaps the fact that she's willing to work on things now means that there really is some love hidden underneath the feelings that are apparent to her?
I am no psychologist, but I believe that when a WS decides to come back and work on the marriage, even if he/she feels absolutely nothing for the other spouse, that there is some love remaining. It's just buried under a ton of crap, hurt, pain, anger, etc.
I tend to write a lot in analogies. Picture your wife's heart as lump of coal.
You know that there is diamond in that coal, just waiting to shine through. In fact, I'm willing to bet that you have seen that diamond (otherwise why would you have married her?).
The recovery process is where that coal will be changed into a diamond. It's probably safe to say that this process will have that effect on both of you, and when it is completed, the brilliance of both your diamonds, shining together as one, will eclipse the sun.
My wife's feeling vary from day to day. She has told me, many times, that she loves me. And there are some days when she won't say that. It is hard to not hear that from her, but I accept it as a reflection of how she is feeling at that given moment. In fact, I have asked her not to tell me "I love you" unless she means it and feels it.
I know that, for MP, she has a lot of anger, bitterness and hurt that it took the A to finally and fully wake me up to the issues in our marriage. She had raised many of them with me repeatedly, and I did not act on them.
Nothing justifies an affair. I believe that you know that. I know my wife knows that as well. But the past is the past. We cannot change it. We can (and certainly
should) learn from it. My focus right now is on today, the here and now. What can I do today to make things better, and therefore make the future even better? That's a question I ask myself repeatedly.
Perhaps I'm just grasping for hope too desparately. I can continue to go on like this as long as I need to, I think, but it sure would be nice to dip into the cool waters of an oasis of affection from her on this long road of recovery.
I think it is natural to grasp for hope when we are faced with the very real prospect of losing something we value so highly, especially when we do not have full control over the situation. If the situation is something that we have caused (in part or in whole), it makes it even worse. I can think of few things in life worse than spending your remaining days kicking yourself for what you did wrong that resulted in pain - both to yourself and to someone you love.
For me, I have to walk a very fine line, between being firm in what I want, and appearing "needy" (in a childish, clingy way). I am fortunate that my wife is willing to let me express my feelings to her, and that she is also willing to let me make mistakes along my path to becoming a better person.
From my own very limited experience in recovery, and from the countless threads I've read here, and the advice people here (and elsewhere) have given me, I think that the BS has the bigger load to carry, at least at first. In some ways, we have to hold our pain inside (or find an outlet other than our spouse to release our feelings), while simultaneously projecting strength and love to guide our spouse back to us.
It's not an easy job, and some days will be worse than others. Hold on to the positives that you see from your wife. More importantly,
tell her the positives you see. Encourage her, praise her. If she does something that hurts you, let her know that as well, but in a kind, non-threatening manner.
I would highly encourage you to pick up "Power Of A Praying Husband" by Stormie Omartian. She has several other books out, including "Power Of A Praying Wife", which my wife has read recently. We both wish we'd had these at the start of our marriage (4-1/2 years ago).
Out of everything that I have done in the last month, my wife has consistently told me that the biggest one, the one that has meant the most to her, is my constant praying - for her, over her and with her. She has told me that it is having an effect, and I have seen this to be true.
Luke 1:37 says "For nothing is impossible with God" (or words to that effect). That is so very true. I have seen what my efforts on my own have accomplished (or not), and I have seen what God has done when I've let Him take control. I much prefer the results He gets.
I'm sure I have more to say, but I'm drawing a blank right now and need to get back to work. I will leave you with this tidbit from my personal experience.
Back in early December, before the second trip was even planned, my wife told me she wanted me to fight for her. Being a man, my initial thought was I can do that. I'll keep anyone who threatens our marriage away from her anyway I can (within reason).
It wasn't until this weekend that I finally understood what she was really asking. She doesn't want me to go out and slay the Goliaths. She wants me to become the man she thought she was marrying, the man God has been calling me to be...fight to be that man, become that man. Become the man she wants. And it is a fight. To become that man, I have to die to myself. On many levels, many times.
Stay the course, TD. Continue to trust in God. Seek His will. Give
everything to Him, and then do the things He asks of you. There are countless stories (here and elsewhere) of God restoring marriages that nobody thought could be saved, even the couple involved. Pray for your wife. Pray with her, if she'll let you (even if she won't join in with you).
It is not God's will that
any marriage should fail. Yes, it does take two to make a marriage, and you cannot make the other person save the marriage. Do all that you can, even when you're not sure it's having an effect. Let God take care of the rest.
Ok...I've rambled enough for now. Fair warning...I'm the kind of person who can be very quiet until I get to know someone....then you'll wonder how to get me to shut up <img src="/ubbt/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />