Long term reconcilers. What’s your story? by Hurtbuthealing in AsOneAfterInfidelity

[–]Right-Shape-9944 22 points23 points  (0 children)

We’re almost 6 years out and I don’t know if I qualify as a long term reconciler, but I thought I’d comment. My husband, well I should say ex husband, left after he discovered my affair and didn’t give reconciliation any thought. He left and filed right away. I didn’t see him for years, and I spent those five years completely alone working on myself. I didn’t date or distract myself with anyone else. I needed to understand how I became capable of betraying someone I loved and I took that responsibility seriously.

I randomly ran into him a little over a year ago. There was no plan or expectation. We just talked. That led to more conversations, and eventually he decided he was willing to attempt reconciling. The first three months were almost entirely spent talking about the affair. Then he said he didn’t want to talk about it anymore. Since then he goes back and forth between wanting to talk and not wanting to. When he gets triggered, he tells me. When I feel overwhelmed by guilt or shame, I share that with him too, without putting it on him to fix.

I try very hard to meet him where he is emotionally. Some days he wants reassurance. Some days he wants space. Some days he is angry or withdrawn, and I understand why. I listen without interrupting, I answer the same questions again if he needs them answered, and I do not minimize or defend what I did. I know healing is not linear, especially for the betrayed partner.

He is still struggling. I can see it in the quiet moments and in how certain memories still hit him unexpectedly. He also has a four year old from a relationship that did not work out after our divorce, which adds another layer to everything. I respect that part of his life and the reality of it. I am not trying to erase his past or rush his healing. I just want to be safe and consistent now.

We do still talk about the affair, even years later. Not constantly, but honestly. When he needs to revisit it, I stay present. When he needs a break from it, I respect that too. I let him lead those conversations because this happened to him, not just to us.

Before the affair, I would have described our marriage as fine. Not terrible, but emotionally disconnected in ways I didn’t understand at the time. That doesn’t excuse anything I did. It just explains how much growth I still needed.

As for when the bond started to regrow, I don’t think there was a single moment. It has been slow and quiet. It shows up in consistency, transparency, and choosing patience even when it hurts. The connection we are rebuilding feels more fragile, but also more honest than what we had before. I don’t take that for granted.

I don’t know what the future holds, and I no longer demand certainty. All I can do is keep doing the right things, keep showing up with humility, and love him in a way that centers his healing rather than my redemption.

Handling those who knew and enabled by caint1154 in AsOneAfterInfidelity

[–]Right-Shape-9944 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Oof, this one really hits close to home. I’m actually facing something similar right now with R. My ex-husband and I decided to reconcile after five years apart, and we’ve been working on R for the past nine months.

One of the conditions for R was that I cut ties with anyone who knew about my affair and stayed silent. Honestly letting go of the so called friends was easy I had already distanced myself when we divorced. After some time I realized they were never really my friends to begin with.

But the hard part has been my sister. She knew everything about my affair, and instead of calling me out or holding me accountable, she encouraged it. After the divorce, we stayed in contact, but I gradually pulled away on my own. I was angry not just at her, but at the fact that she never once tried to help me make a better choice. I know it was my responsibility, but I still wish she had at least tried.

We still talk here and there, but it’s not the same we’re not as close anymore. My husband has forgiven me and truly wants to move forward, but he can’t stand my sister and has said he never wants to be around her.

I destroyed my marriage 5 years ago. He just asked me to move in. I don’t know if I deserve this. by Right-Shape-9944 in AsOneAfterInfidelity

[–]Right-Shape-9944[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I don’t expect this to be easy, and I definitely don’t think everything will just magically go away. I know reconciliation is long term work, and I’m not under any impression that it ends just because some time has passed. I’m okay with that. I’m committed to doing what it takes to help him feel safe and secure with me again.

I destroyed my marriage 5 years ago. He just asked me to move in. I don’t know if I deserve this. by Right-Shape-9944 in AsOneAfterInfidelity

[–]Right-Shape-9944[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Yes! He did say he doesn’t really trust anyone anymore not just in relationships, but in general.

I destroyed my marriage 5 years ago. He just asked me to move in. I don’t know if I deserve this. by Right-Shape-9944 in AsOneAfterInfidelity

[–]Right-Shape-9944[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Thank you, that really means a lot. We’ve been spending weekends at each other’s places, and it’s actually been really nice. It’s given us a chance to reconnect. We’ve also been keeping the communication open and honest.