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Dealing with the affair - Hern

I have been married for 13 years. We had some differences in the past but I thought it was nothing serious. A month ago I received a anonymous phone call that made me aware of the affair. I confronted my wife but she negated the whole thing. Since that day I pressure her too much that she finally told me of the affair. But she also told me that she found out that she was pregnant. I felt that every thing had died and that there is nothing to do. Two days after, she came back and indicated that She wants to work out. I want as well but it seems that every time the idea of her being in another's mans arms hurt me. I need to deal with the problem of the child. I am not for abortion, but I am scared of the legal issues that may come out. We are going to a marriage counselor and my wife indicated that every is fine but sex. She is now forcing herself to perform and I do not feel happy. Do you see a future? Any comments are welcome.

From: Bernd

My guess is everything is NOT fine except for sex. It's the tip of the iceberg, or the top (and visible) layer of the onion, but affairs happen out of a significant deterioration of a relationship, often with each partner unaware of how much emptiness and distance they are REALLY feeling. It's like having a broken leg, but only being aware of pain in your toes.

You have a future IF you are willing to go thru the very hard work of rebuilding. I'd recommend going thru the affairs postings in the Comment Forum Archives, and pay particular attention to mzet's journey so far. What he is going thru parallels a LOT of what Lynda and I went thru, and yes, we made it to something far better than we ever had before, but doing so meant a kind of commitment on my part that made all my past commitments pale in comparison.

First things first. I'd strongly suggest you get some individual counseling, because there is a lot of rage and hurt that you need to get out in a safe place, without worrying about how your wife will react to it. No matter whether you decide to leave or stay at any time during the coming days and months, you need time for yourself - alone, and/or with trusted friends or people who will help you validate your feelings, and help you sort thru all the confusion inside.

You didn't mention if you had any children. If you do, in my opinion it makes a difference in whether to split or try to work out things, because no matter which direction you take, you'll ALWAYS have some kind of relationship with her, and your children will be affected by the kind of relationship you have. That doesn't mean stay for the sake of the children. It simply means that the more both of you work out the issues that led to the affair, and heal the pain both of you are feeling right now, the more whole each of you will feel, and the safer your children will feel. It's more difficult to work out such issues apart. That, in my view, is the reality.

I went thru a 2 year period of what I call "near insanity" following the discovery of Lynda's affair. The only way I made it thru was dedicating myself to finding every source of insight and support I could. I got into individual therapy, joined a support group, picked up every book I could find on relationships, wrote constantly in a private journal, and committed myself to learning HOW I got into this mess, so that I'd understand my part in our struggles better. I wanted to have healthier relationships in the future, whether my future included Lynda as a partner or not.

Your wife's pregnancy understandably adds to your turmoil. I'd like to ask you what your spiritual or religious beliefs are? I've found that a sense of connection with the spiritual (or subconscious) part of ourselves makes a tremendous difference in our struggles to get thru any crisis.

We will all be here for you, giving our compassion, caring and support whenever you need it most. We are a family here, all struggling to find our own way thru the mazes of life and love. All of us have discovered large and small miracles in doing so, and we are more than happy to share them, and how we found them.

If you heard of a couple where the husband was a workaholic, had chronic depression and was obsessed with sex, 3 business failures (that he still owed $60,000 for), had 3 affairs, the wife had one affair, and was struggling with past abuse, rape, and family alcoholism, would you give this couple much chance of making it? That describes us. Me and Lynda. And we HAVE made it - far beyond what we ever dreamed we'd have. Hope our example gives you the hope you're looking for. You deserve happiness, and love. So does your wife.

We'll help you in any way to find it - everyone here. Take care, and try to be easy on yourself over the coming days and weeks. P.S. It was year #13 in our marriage too that things crashed. What IS it about the number 13?????

From: Hern

Thanks for the response, Bern. It is really nice to know that there is always some one to talk to. I understand that now it is just the beginning. For the past 13 years, we had been trying to have kids. The medical reason for us not to have kids is still unknown. The doctors did not find any problem. But, Just about three months, a little girl was placed in my home. She brought the happiness into the home, but at the same time, the affair was discovered. During the time, my wife discovered that she was pregnant and decided to tell me of the affair. The fact of her telling me the affair was not as painful as knowing that she is expecting a child (not mine). This made me feel like I was dead. I felt deprived of the most beautiful dream.

Currently were are going to a marriage counselor. Things look OK. But, my wife closes any communication when I try to find out what is that she feel for either of the two (myself or the other man). I try to be supportive with her pregnancy, but every time my mind goes to the state of "that is not my child" the idea kills me again. I am confused on how to deal with it. Some times I think that by just looking at the child will bring this whole issue back. The other aspect is that I am not sure that my wife is staying with me for love or just for the financial security I provide. My life with her has been so unhappy. Up to a point that she did not want to be touched nor seen naked. Now, she plays dead when she is with me. This actions make me think that I should let go. But, I do not know what is that I am afraid of for not leaving. I do not know what is that makes me stay. Maybe, I do not want to leave my adopted child (by the way the adoption is still in the process, the judge has to finalize it). I can sense the same for my wife. She does not want to give her up. I want to work it out, but I have not seen any thing on how to deal with the child that is coming. I know that there is a law "Assumed Paternity" that indicates that because the child was conceived under my marriage, the child is mine. But I also heard that the other man can latter come and sue for paternity. I want to be prepared and I just do not know where to start. How any one will deal with a child that is not his? How can I think positively when my negative mind starts to wonder? Thanks for listening.

From: mzet

" I felt that every thing had died and that there is nothing to do". The discovery of an affair is one of the most painful and unsettling experiences anyone can have. My feelings ranged from complete rage to utter desperation. I didn't eat, I vomited many times, I had suicidal thoughts, I couldn't concentrate at work for weeks, my blood pressure was 155/105. But that pain, ironically, was the opportunity I needed to begin the path of becoming a better human person. There is SOMETHING to do now, and it is something for YOURSELF.

"She wants to work out." This is a very important step on her part. She could have called it quits but she did not. This is positive.

"I want as well but it seems that every time the idea of her being in another's mans arms hurt me." I also continue to have these thoughts. They are normal. They are painful reminders that my wife's body is hers and not mine, that she is free to make choices that can hurt me and the marriage, that she can lie and deceive me. Only by accepting her freedom as one of the ultimate values was I able to begin to accept her choices, even when they hurt.

"We are going to a marriage counselor" Counseling is a very important first step if it is chosen freely. Do go to counseling by yourself also. It helped me tremendously. I was able to sort out many of my extreme feelings. Write on a journal also. Seek support (not help) from family and friends.

"and my wife indicated that every is fine but sex. She is now forcing herself to perform and I do not feel happy". I agree with Bernd: sex is only the tip of the iceberg. As painful as this will sound, an affair is a symptom of deep problems within the relationship. These will need to be explored at an appropriate time in the near future. Don't force sex. Use this time to try to reflect on the meaning of sex for yourself, why you are in such need of it and why it makes you so unhappy not having it. I used to have sex practically every day until the affair blew all of that up. I have not had sex in eight months. It is possible to back off. And it does clear up your mind and heart so you can better think and hear your own heart.

I don't know where you are living, but I suggest you consider talking with an attorney who can advise you of the legal implications of her pregnancy. I believe that there is one other guy on this forum who is dealing with the very same question and who may have some answers already.

Hang in there. This will be a very rough ride. I do believe that if you use this time wisely, you will come out a better person, regardless of what happens with your marriage. I have found that opening up to the development of my spiritual and religious side, which had been turned off for a long time, has helped me cope and in a sense embrace, day to day, with the suffering that this road gives me. Perhaps this may be a time for you to open up also. Take care.

From: Bernd

I echo what mzet said about seeing an attorney. Our mind can go around in circles trying to figure out what we can't figure out on our own.

Regarding the unborn child, here's how I look at children. Each one bears a precious soul that comes from somewhere, but not me. I may help create the "body" that gives a place for that soul to "live", but beyond that, the greatest gift I can give a child is myself, and my caring. It doesn't really matter who built the house you live in. What matters is what you do to make that house a home, and fill it with love. Being the biological father of someone taps into our strong need to achieve some kind of immortality...a part of us "lives" on in our child. But this kind of immortality is an illusion. The kind of father that REALLY lives on in his child is the one who lives in their heart, not their genes. That's the most "selfish" and best place to be.

This new child is a gift from God. He just didn't use the "wrapping paper" you expected. Hope some of these thoughts help.

From: mzet

My wife also went through a period when she was ashamed of being seen nude by me. It blew me away completely. She is slowly getting over it. But remember that there are other levels of intimacy that you both have to go through before you can even begin to think about sex. It has only been recently that we are starting to hold hands and hug, etc. It took us a looong time.

My guess is that before your wife opens up and talks openly with you, she needs to deal with a host of other issues that must bring turmoil inside of her. Don't force her to open up. That only backfires, in my experience. You do need to let go and that is soooo hard to do. Letting go does not mean leaving the house or getting a divorce, it means achieving a detachment from needing her to fulfill your need for sex or affection. It also does not mean not having those needs. It just means recognizing that your wife is not ready to meet them and to find healthy ways of having them met in other ways. You also need to give her space and that is soooo hard to do. Physical and emotional space. It took my wife eight months after the affair was discovered to really give the marriage a try. Your wife is probably still struggling with not knowing which way to go (you or her lover). She is confused. No amount of pressure from my side was effective to make her make up her mind. Remember that you are not in control of the situation anymore. You are only in partial control of yourself. That's about it.

I am not sure why I am staying. I am not sure if I do it out of strength or weakness. I am even less sure why my wife has decided to give our marriage another try. These are all mysteries. The more we think about them, the more perplexed we become. I share Bernd's notion that God gives us what we need, not what we want. Use this time to heal yourself, to become centered, to reach peace. That more than anything else will help your wife. Talk to an attorney!!!

From: Hern

Thanks Bernd and Mzet. I like the openness that you bring to this area. These are the kind of words that I needed to hear. Yes, I will consult with a lawyer and weight the options. My position in the pregnancy issue is that I am against abortions. I do not see that as a solution and thanks for the words on fatherhood. Bernd, you just armed my arsenal with a profound weapon. You are right. The father is the one who shapes the son. You made me see the world from a different perspective.

I also agree that the child is a gift of God and that something good may come out of this suffering. I am afraid because I do not the outcome, but at the same time I have hope. I think that I have found the "FRIENDS" I needed for so long (one month). I had been searching all that time.

The other issue that I am dealing right now is to bury the "MACHO" mentality of my social upbringing. I am a Spanish man with deep romantic roots, and coming from a place where women are at second. There is something inside me that is prompting me to take action. This guy knew that she was married and decided to continue. I do not know If I did the right thing, but I confronted the bastard and I do not know what kept me from killing him. I am a very passive man, but when something clicks, I loose control and I am capable of doing the most drastic thing. I want to control the temptation of harming him and so far I have done it. I do not know what will happen if I see him. If that is the case, what will you do?

From: Cuckold

Hern, I feel for you. My ex was also with child of someone else, but she did something... We have three children 9, 6, and 3. Her affair started around out 10th year of marriage. I not very quickly found that asking her why why why why got no answer and just distance between us.

I found writing, a therapist, a support group, and a friend who listen to be for hours and hours helped. I am still searching for all the answers she couldn't or wouldn't give me. I would say her staying and trying is a positive step. I would say anything you can do to heal yourself can only help.

I found trying to remind myself to let go (really forgiving) one thing she did to me at a time helped me to think of her as a human with flaws... rather than a beast when I was first told of what she had been doing all those crazy nights. Hang in there and it will workout.

From: mzet

The first thing you have to realize is that this whole mess is not about the lover. In my opinion he is immaterial. He had an opportunity and made a choice, but he wouldn't have done anything if your wife wouldn't have given him the opportunity. So this is really about you and your wife and your marriage. Get the guy out of your mind.

Besides, confronting the guy will not work!! It will not bring your wife back and it just gives your wife one more reason to convince herself what an asshole you are after all....Leave the guy alone and learn to forgive him too, just like you will have to forgive your wife if you want the marriage to work.

Ask yourself what you would have done if you would have been in his shoes. I have done that in my own case and have concluded that I would have probably done the same thing.... I have seen my wife's lover on several occasions and somehow I have been lucky enough that I have never experienced any type of jealousy. In fact, I have told him, to his amazement, that I hold nothing against him. It is a big weight off my back. All of my negative feelings are toward my wife, not her lover(s).

On top of that, you got the practical aspect of dealing with the law if you should harm him. Don't even think about it!!! Ask God to give you the strength to forgive him.

The macho man mentality is a big anchor that keeps you from listening to your inner voice and keeps you from progressing. You need to overcome that if you want the marriage to work out. Remember her body is not your body. It is hers. And don't blow up in front of your wife, regardless of what she says. Again, that only convinces her she's better off without you.

Finally, it's not that some good MAY come out of this suffering, but that ALL good comes only through suffering. And you are not supposed to know what the outcome will be. That's part of the way of Calvary. We just don't know what's ahead. Sometimes God takes us to the brink and we just don't know why. Look at Abraham. Years without any children and finally, in old age, his wife has a son and then God asks him to sacrifice the child!!! Crazy. Use this time to try to figure out what God is whispering to you. Use this time to deal with yourself rather than your wife or her lover. Calm down and take care of yourself.

From: Bernd

There's a quote - "forgive your enemies, nothing annoys them so much". Also, the best revenge is living well. When I look at the "macho men" I admire, I think of Clint Eastwood, Sean Connery, and Harrison Ford. All men remind me to pick my fights for the really worthwhile ones (when someone is trying to victimize or hurt others). All these men have a quiet strength to them, and a love of life and the most important things in life that they aren't willing to let others distract them from. I let out most of my rage and anger at Lynda's boyfriend in anger sessions in the privacy of my car, beating up on the seats. Funny, the last anger session I had, I remember finding myself laughing uncontrollably. Something registered inside. Here was a man who - with all the women available in the world - picked a woman who had to be unfaithful in order to "love" him. It reminded me of someone picking up a load of quicksand to build a house foundation. What really could I do to him, that he wasn't doing to himself already?

That helped a lot in letting go. Be easy on yourself in the forgiveness process. For me, the process begins with a desire to forgive, but I can't truly let go until I've honestly released all the anger I feel over someone else's choices. I haven't let go of all my anger toward him, but it's waaaaay down. It keeps dissipating more as I pursue my recovery and overall healing. I guess now I use that anger more as barometer, than anything else. Each time I find myself letting go a little more, it's a nice reminder that some healing has taken place. It's a selfish choice on my part. I only have so many precious seconds here on this earth. I would rather use them to find more love and happiness, than to lose some to the swamp of resentment. Swamp time robs me more than anyone else.

One final note: as much as having him as the father of the child may have been distressing to you, it's very likely that your distress is going to pale in comparison to your wife's. If you two manage to rebuild your relationship, my guess is that at some point she's going to have waves and waves of guilt and pain that she "could have done this". Right now, your distress has distracted her from being able to feel that. You may find that, as you accept this unborn child more and more, that your newfound inner peace will trigger more of those waves in your wife. She may not tell you about her turmoil, and it may show up in other ways (withdrawal, anger, depression, etc.). Be aware that - as you two work thru things - that she is going to have deluges of pain hit her from her very soul that she is going to try desperately to race away from. As this happens, she is going to lash out at the person closest to her - you. The more healing you do of your own inner pain and past, the more "centered" you'll be able to be, and more able to recognize that when she lashes out at you, she is really lashing out at herself. I just wanted to point that out.

I'm glad we are helping you. You, in your courage to reach out, are helping us just as much.

From: Hern

Thank you guys. Reading and meditating over the weekend has been a plus. I find that just by talking to some one that understands the pain, anger and frustration and then listening the comments of support is something that has no price.

The ideas of how to deal with the other has been excellent. I now understand that if I want the marriage to work, I have to heal myself first without neglecting my wife. Some times I think that I can not handle the situation any more, and others, I feel that I have the strength. How do you guys deal when your mind wonders into the unfaithful area. What is that you do to re-direct your mind and evade the painful thoughts?

I took the advise of going to a lawyer (actually 2) and they both indicated that there is something that is called "assumptive paternity". Something that makes us just the financial providers. In other words, since the child was conceived during the marriage, the father becomes the husband. The lawyer told me to look the other way. Even if I want to divorce, I could not do it since I have admitted to the affair. Interesting laws!!

I will take the advice of dealing with my rage against the other person. It added a new dimension to my anger management.

This weekend was good. I got to play in church and it felt good. People came to say hello and when they saw my wife with the adopted child they were happy and when my wife indicated she was expecting, they got so happy and the started to congratulate me. Initially it hurt me, but thinking on the things I read on Friday, specially the advice of who is best father, changed my mood. I was surprised of the feeling I got. It was peace. Thanks for listening.

From: mzet

I'm not sure that the way to deal with the pain is to evade it. You actually have to go THROUGH it, not around it. If you repress it, it will come back to bite you. You need to develop your own ways of dealing with it. But don't shy away from the pain.

What I did, and remember that this was my way of dealing with it, and continue to do (it is much easier now, by the way) is to actually embrace the pain as an offering and my gift to God. I asked God to give me the strength to take on the suffering as my sacrifice to Him. In Christian terms, I wanted to share in Christ's sacrifice by helping him carry his cross in my own way. As a Catholic, that participation is also symbolized in the Eucharist by the drops of water that are poured into the wine. The Eucharist becomes not just Jesus' sacrifice but also our own. Again, remember that I am not saying you should follow this path. I'm just sharing MY WAY.

Coupled with the above was sincere attitude of embracing God's will and completely letting go of all of my rational and human attempts to try to fix my wife or the marriage. This is extremely hard to do. It is a daily effort. I fall all the time. And it is close to impossible to do by yourself. God does it for you if you open up completely. Again, this is just my own way. I am not saying this should be yours.

Finally, what I have found is that I end up loving my wife not with my human love, but with God's love within me. In other words, It is not me loving her but God in me and through me loving her. I know it sounds crazy, but that's how I feel it works for me.

Since that has happened, I am completely at ease with whatever the outcome may be: divorce, marriage, etc. It really doesn't matter because my focus has changed from my efforts and my will to God's. And I have been able to reach a level of internal peace that I wouldn't have had, even if the affair wouldn't have happened.

Let me give you one last insight from my personal experience: I needed tons of humility to take on this path. I was an atheist before this whole mess. I was proud of it. I was proud of having what I thought was a perfect marriage and a perfect life. But the humiliation of my wife's affairs was what I needed in order to get the level of humility that I have now. I had to say: "I am powerless; it's in your hands now God", and as you can imagine, that is kind of hard to say if you are an atheist! And it has been that humility, I am convinced, that has allowed me to get to where I am now.

I am also not saying I am perfect, but I do feel I am following the right road now because I feel a million times better than I felt immediately following the discovery of the affairs and because I feel peace. Hope this helps. Take care.

From: Hern

Thanks. I am now growing to a new phase. Suddenly something struck me. I had the need to let go of the anger within me. Something good happened today. My wife called my office to let me know that she was thinking about me and that she loves me. I made me happy and hopeful. Before, I would have thought that it may be a lie, but repeating what she had said many times in my mind, I feel she is for real. Thanks for opening my eyes to see a little more further than my nose. Your words are very well appreciated. It helps to know that I am not alone.

I see that you are well ahead of me in the healing process. Some day, I hope that my experiences may help some one to lessen the impact of affairs.

From: Bernd

They will help others. Often without you realizing it, or knowing about it. God will be very aware of all of it tho. Count on that.:)

From: Robert

Mzet, What a beautiful witnessing to the love that God give us. I am still sobbing with the joy that your words have given me. Thank you.

From: Bernd

Mzet.... Did you ever in your wildest dreams think that you'd be so much help and comfort to someone else so soon into your recovery?? In the words of Lynda's and mine own inner voices.."you ain't seen nothing yet":)


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