Hi SS -
Lo and behold, she tells me she didn't feel a thing. W could be telling the truth or more likely lying to me to sooth my feelings about NC. Told me today that she looks back and wonders how she could have been so stupid and what could she have been thinking. Must have been frustration, loneliness, insecurity, etc...... These sound like rationalization to not have NC to me. Is that right?
That really depends. If she's saying these things to justify keeping her job and being exposed to OM (i.e., under the guise of I know now that I was wrong, and I can handle it), then yes, she's probably looking for a reason to not establish and/or maintain NC.
On the other hand, if she's just sharing her feelings regarding the affair, then it's not rationalization to not maintain NC. It's her sharing her feelings and thoughts with you, and that is a beautiful thing, even if it causes you pain right now.
Frustration, loneliness, insecurity, etc in themselves can be used as justification, but they are also statements of fact that pertain to both her frame of mind and the state of your marriage that left it vulnerable to an affair.
The point that your wife has to get to is realizing what it was that made her
choose to have an affair. Something within her character makeup enabled her to choose to have an affair, and that has nothing to do with external factors.
Just as I
chose to not meet my wife's needs, my wife
chose to have an affair. I could give a whole list of reasons why I
chose to not meet my wife's needs, but in the end they are nothing but justification for my choice to not follow God's commandments for me as the husband.
Do you see the difference?
This is where IC comes in. IC can help your wife get to the root of the problem.
She has also told me that while in the hieght of the EA she couldn't sleep, concentrate at work, or think of anything else. That when OM came to W desk [color:"red"] 3 weeks after it "ended", she lit up like a Christmas Tree[/color].
I added the emphasis to underscore why NC is so extremely important in these situations - and that includes taking extreme measures (such as quitting her job) to ensure NC is maintained. As long as contact remains, or is possible, the chances of the A re-igniting are quite high, and your chances of recovery quite low.
Do you really want to spend the rest of your life looking over your shoulder? I've done that for a year - trust me, it doesn't do
you, or your marriage, any good.
Didn't ask me what to do about it. W has been using booze to cope and I told her this morning that booze was a threat to our M and I was going to dump any I found to protect M.(also thinking full exposure to OMW after Christmas.)
I wouldn't expect her to ask you what to do about it for some time yet. She needs to quit the booze. My wife has spent the last year doing everything she could to
not think about OM or the affair, hoping it would go away. It hasn't, and it won't, until she faces it and deals with it.
She has to do this on her own. It has to come from within her.
What's the best course when WS realizes "the fog"? Plan A away? Tell her I am there for her? Tell her it will end someday? Or is all this part of the WS justifying not having NC?
Keep Plan Aing. Get your boundaries in place, tell your wife what they are, and have consequences ready if she continues to violate them.
Give her encouragement. Listen to her - even if it is painful to hear. It's important that your wife know, even if she won't acknowledge it yet, that she can share
absolutely anything without fear of you lashing back at her.
Don't minimize the affair, nor the pain it has caused you. But don't whitewash it either. Part of establishing trust and intimacy is learning to share your feelings (in a non-LB environment) with your wife. Just state them. Don't elaborate or go into long drawn out discussions, and don't expect her to address them yet. Trust and respect her enough to allow her to make her own decisions.
As for the alcoholism, there are posters on the forum that have dealt with that. MelodyLane can give you some great advice on how to deal with that.
And yes, expose to OMW as soon as you can (considering the holidays). She has a right to know what is going on in her marriage, just as you have a right to know what is going on in yours.
Unfair as it is, the burden of recovery often lies on the BS' shoulders, at least initially. Realize that the super human effort you're having to put in right now will, if your wife comes around (and it sounds like she might be), be rewarded in spades as you go down the recovery path.
It's going to be rough, and it's going to take time, and somedays you'll ask yourself why you bother. Continue to post here. If you need to vent, do it here or with a good friend or family. Keep yourself sunnyside up for your wife <img src="/ubbt/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />