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Newest Member: formerlywayward

Wayward Side :
Disclosure / Hell / Worlds Shattered

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 feelingverylow (original poster new member #85981) posted at 7:19 PM on Sunday, September 7th, 2025

I have an accurate ideal of hell as I cannot imagine anything worse than what I have done. I disclosed everything to my wife and her world is shattered. She was totally blindsided. One of the themes in our discussion was how she must have been so naive when the mistake she made was trusting someone totally unworthy of her trust.

I have a therapy appointment and my therapists had previously indicated that my wife could attend with or in lieu of me. We are going to attend together.

I am still shellshocked and my wife is 100x more so. She deserves so much better than what I have done. Her world is shattered and as she said we have been living different marriages for the last 24 years (four-year affair and 20 years of lying).

If you are religious, please pray for my wife that she can start to find a path to heal.

posts: 26   ·   registered: Mar. 19th, 2025
id 8876858
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ImaChump ( member #83126) posted at 8:52 PM on Sunday, September 7th, 2025

I read this sub-forum off and on since D-Day to try and better understand the Wayward mind. I have followed your story silently but with dread for your pending disclosure. I feel mostly for your wife as I can empathize with her. But I feel for you as well. Doing the right thing is hard. Despite the pain (and possible regret) you are feeling, this is the right thing. You may not think so now, your wife may not think so but it was.

I saw your post on the thread for "those who found out years later". I figure prominently there. My wife had multiple affairs for the first 20 years of our marriage, hid them for 18 more and disclosed through lying and trickle truth 3 years ago.

For me, the cheating is a HUGE strike 1. But I have to weigh the relatively "good" marriage we had in the intervening years. BUT, those are now tainted because of the lying. Strike 2. I offered my wife the gift of Reconciliation. I had hoped we could overcome the affairs, the lies, all of it. But it was going to be HARD. I felt she had stolen nearly 40 years of my life.

Shame, selfishness and an inability to do the necessary work doomed us. Strike 3. We won’t divorce for many reasons I won’t get into here. We won’t ever reconcile either. We’re in that limbo between the two where a lot of people (unfortunately) land.

The saddest part of all, is my wife has brain cancer. Due to all of this, I don’t "feel the way I should" about that (hopefully, that makes sense) She thinks it’s retribution for the way she lived. I don’t believe that but sometimes "karma always evens the score" sneaks into my mind. For lack of a better term, I am "dribbling out the clock".

I don’t say all this to make you feel any more shitty than you already do. Just to warn you that as hard as yesterday was, it will only get harder from here. What you do from here on out and how you show up and support your wife will determine how your relationship and lives will go. Don’t mess this part up!

I will pray for your wife. And you too.

Me: BH (62)

Her: WW (62)

D-Days: 6/27/22, 7/24-26/22

posts: 226   ·   registered: Mar. 25th, 2023   ·   location: Eastern USA
id 8876868
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ff4152 ( member #55404) posted at 10:48 PM on Sunday, September 7th, 2025

This is a perfect example of why I think confessing is so cruel after all this time. This "gift" will result in endless heartache and mind movies for your wife for many years to come. Do you think your wife is better off now that she knows?

Good luck to you both.

Me -FWS

posts: 2146   ·   registered: Sep. 30th, 2016
id 8876873
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Trumansworld ( member #84431) posted at 12:20 AM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

FVL

I'm proud of you. You are stepping up not to unburden yourself (because it doesn't) but to finally give your wife the respect she deserves. That is love. The fact that she is going to your next appt is good.

I struggle every day with the thought that we were living in two very different truths. His was real and mine was made up. It's not easy. I feel like such a fool. This is one of the hardest things to wrap my mind around.

How my H treats me and deals with the fallout is tantamount to our R. His confession definitely changes everything from now on, but it doesn't need to kill it.

I am praying for you and your wife. God bless.

BW 63WH 65DD 12/01/2023M 43Together 48

posts: 105   ·   registered: Jan. 31st, 2024   ·   location: Washington
id 8876880
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Unhinged ( member #47977) posted at 4:12 AM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

I applaud your courage. I hope you have as much patience and resilience.

Keep in mind, the A may have been 20 years ago, but for her it might as well have been yesterday.

Married 2005
D-Day April, 2015
Divorced May, 2022

"The Universe is not short on wake-up calls. We're just quick to hit the snooze button." -Brene Brown

posts: 6849   ·   registered: May. 21st, 2015   ·   location: Colorado
id 8876892
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 feelingverylow (original poster new member #85981) posted at 4:28 AM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

I struggle to think of anything as destructive as infidelity to all parties. My wife is destroyed by my terrible choices. I cannot forgive myself for my choices. How do we not see this before we make the choices. Is there any other way infidelity will end other than complete heartbreak, utter devastation and ruin. How could I every think any thing was worth this pain especially the illusion of whatever escape from the hole inside me that the affair was.

I would give all that I have to not have destroyed the person I love the most. The pain she feels is so undeserved. Even if we can find a path to reconcile she will live with this pain for the rest of her life. Everything feels so dark right now. I feel as if this is hell on earth and the torment is facing the consequences of my choices.

I feel so broken, but beyond just me being broken. Now my damaged self has wide scale collateral damage.

I am hurting and I want to feel the hurt because I deserve it. If only me taking more pain would alleviate some of hers I would take all of it. Seeing her suffer because of me is pain beyond words.

I am looking for support as things seem so dark.

[This message edited by feelingverylow at 4:30 AM, Monday, September 8th]

posts: 26   ·   registered: Mar. 19th, 2025
id 8876894
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InkHulk ( member #80400) posted at 4:46 AM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

Prayers for you and her.

Even if we can find a path to reconcile she will live with this pain for the rest of her life.

Thankfully, this part is not true. The anguish she is feeling right now is not permanent. It is awful and it lasts longer than anyone would like, but it is not for life. You can be honest and humble in order to shorten and lessen her pain.

I pray you are true to your words of doing all you can to help her. She needs it.

People are more important than the relationships they are in.

posts: 2687   ·   registered: Jun. 28th, 2022
id 8876895
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Stillconfused2022 ( member #82457) posted at 5:09 AM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

I am offering support. We have been where you are as a couple. My husband told me 3 years ago about the cheating 8 years prior. I still can’t say the word "A" even though probably thats what it was. He had trickle truthed for 8 years with a lovely but untrue story of his secretary coming on to him and him turning it down. There has been widespread damage, settlement agreements, recent letters from lawyers all of which is nothing next to the pain, particularly at that moment of impact 3 years ago. But we are much much better. The relationship is better. But, as you allude to in your posting the relationship is not really the issue at that moment when you had to inflict this blow. Her pain is the main thing you are worried about which speaks to your humanity and compassion. The pain for me is astronomically less severe now. I feel much much better and have for a long time now. I have days I don’t think much about it which previously seemed absolutely impossible.. It did take a long time. I truly don’t blame my husband for the full blow b/c obviously that was not what was intended. Callous disregard, yes, but intentional harm no and obviously minimal awareness of the magnitude of the harm he was causing.

You had no way of knowing what the right thing to do was in this situation (the weather it is best to tell someone years later situation). It is unknowable. You have tried to do the right thing at great expense to yourself. Yes, right now your wife is the true victim. But, you can offer her much help with her healing.

I am so sorry you are going through this right now. I think my husband was severely traumatized by telling me this. It is so hard to watch your spouse suffer. My husband would frequently just shut down, other times he did much better. It probably makes sense that someone who had an A would not have great tools for this situation, and really even someone with great tools would be overwhelmed. Please be kind to yourself and offer yourself grace. She will have to mourn and grieve and rage. It is a lot to absorb. I did pray for your wife this morning and now I will say a prayer for you too, though I’m not religious.

[This message edited by Stillconfused2022 at 5:31 AM, Monday, September 8th]

posts: 506   ·   registered: Nov. 27th, 2022   ·   location: Northeast
id 8876896
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Oldwounds ( member #54486) posted at 5:11 AM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

Even if we can find a path to reconcile she will live with this pain for the rest of her life.

My wife didn’t confess her A until 18-years after it ended. She planned to take the secret to her grave.

I much prefer to have the hard truth than pretend nothing bad ever happened.

Reconciliation is extremely hard, because both people have to really want to rebuild the relationship.

The shock and pain absolutely take 3-5 years to recover — but it is possible.

It’s been over nine years now since dday, and I am grateful for the work we’ve done to get our relationship healed and worthy of us both.

Words of encouragement may sound hollow at this early stage, and yet, we all find a way through, regardless of the different paths we take.

Your wife will have five billion questions, answer them all, no matter how many times she asks the same thing.

First way back to trust is being as honest as possible from today forward.

I have some emotional scars, like all of us, but I’m at peace. I certainly don’t live in pain everyday, it just took longer than I wanted to process it all.

Married 36+ years, together 41+ years
Two awesome adult sons.
Dday 6/16 4-year LTA Survived.
M Restored
"It is better to conquer our grief than to deceive it." — Seneca

posts: 4935   ·   registered: Aug. 4th, 2016   ·   location: Home.
id 8876897
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SkipThumelue ( member #82934) posted at 12:30 PM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

FVL,

I wish I had had the courage to do what you just did. My (former) cowardly avoidant personality kept me selfishly dragging my feet while my therapist was pushing me hard to self-disclose. While I was hemming and hawing, a former EAP decided to write my BW an anonymous letter. It went exactly as you can imagine it did.

My BW has stated that two things allowed her to give me a chance at R: the fact that I was already in IC and the fact that I confessed and timelined everything on D-Day and in the days immediately after. We are now over 6 years past DD and mostly healed.

Everything ahead for you now is actions, not words. Be there for her. Take every bullet. Answer all the questions, even the ones she asks a thousand times. Follow through on your promises. Avoid any grand declarations. Keep doing the work regardless of the outcome, even if she decides that she is done. That last point was the hardest but most crucial one I had to accept.

I'm praying for both of you and wish you both healing and peace as you navigate this storm.

WH

DD: 5/2019

Reconciling and extremely grateful.

I do not accept PMs.

"The truth is like a lion. You don't have to defend it. Let it loose. It will defend itself." - St. Augustine

posts: 154   ·   registered: Feb. 24th, 2023
id 8876908
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DobleTraicion ( member #78414) posted at 12:41 PM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

I have an accurate ideal of hell as I cannot imagine anything worse than what I have done. I disclosed everything to my wife and her world is shattered. She was totally blindsided. One of the themes in our discussion was how she must have been so naive when the mistake she made was trusting someone totally unworthy of her trust.

I have a therapy appointment and my therapists had previously indicated that my wife could attend with or in lieu of me. We are going to attend together.

I am still shellshocked and my wife is 100x more so. She deserves so much better than what I have done. Her world is shattered and as she said we have been living different marriages for the last 24 years (four-year affair and 20 years of lying).

If you are religious, please pray for my wife that she can start to find a path to heal.

I told you that I would be praying for her on the 6th and I did.

There are a number of things that I affirm as to you.

I affirm the fact that you followed through and did tell her. You could have continued to deceive her by ommission but you chose disclosure and integrity. She deserved and continues to deserves the truth.

I affirm that you came back here and posted. You could have exited and stayed mute. You chose to continue to reach out here for further disclosure and support. This is a big step.

I affirm the fact that youve received and are continuing to receive therapy and are now including her to participate (I would encourage her to find her own therapist as this will need to be a completely safe space for her but this is still a positive).

I affirm.the continued 100% ownership by you. No obfuscating. No blameshifting. No gaslighting. You have completely owned the betrayal and the integrity void that led you to it. All you can do is continue to do so and be there for her as much as she lets you.

You certainly do not need my affirmation, but you may need to hear it.

Now the fall out. Much of her initial reaction is completely understandable and expected. In the midst of her cascade of pain, there are positive signs. She could have simply packed and left. She may still but for now, she is there. She has agreed to accompany you to therapy. This is also positive. Whatever she needs to do to heal little by little, I hope she gets it. Rage, vent, weep. All of it. My prayer for her, however, is that she doesnt shut down. Doesnt hold it all in. I did that for a ling time and it prolonged my hurt and pain for a long long time.

A word of caution. Try with all of your might to not wallow in your own pain, guilt and shame. Youve had a lot of time to equip yourself, now its time to implement those tools. Read "How To Help Your Spouse Heal" again. Read it and notate it.

This truly is a new day for you. Painful and sorrowful yes, but now free of the betrayal-born-deceit that has weighed you down for decades.

Strength to you.

Healing, peace and strength to your Wife.

[This message edited by DobleTraicion at 2:11 PM, Monday, September 8th]

"You'd figure that in modern times, people wouldn't feel the need to get married if they didn't agree with the agenda"

~ lascarx

posts: 519   ·   registered: Mar. 2nd, 2021   ·   location: South
id 8876911
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Pippin ( member #66219) posted at 1:33 PM on Monday, September 8th, 2025

feelingverylow, I signed in today to check in on you. I'm glad that you went through with disclosure. I was praying for you and your wife daily since you started posting.

You are no longer a man who cheats (though you may still need to actively reject wandering thoughts). You are no longer a man who lies through omission (though you may still have to pray about that daily and come clean when you find yourself tempted to lie or hide). But you are mired in shame, and that is not what God intends for you, it is not good for you and it is not good for your wife. I imagine it's hard for the Spirit to be roommates with the amount of shame you carry. You need to do something about that, in the same way that you did something to stop cheating and did something to stop lying. Shame is like death*. It keeps you focused on yourself and stuck. It is toxic. The problem is, we deserve it! We deserve it! That's what keeps us in its grip. We can rationalize, justify, bargain, and it comes crashing through. Shame wants you to pay, pay, pay, a little every day, a little death every day, and it's never paid off. It is not from God. What is from God is JUSTICE. Restoration. A healed person, healed relationships, and a healed world.

You have to actively fight the shame. It doesn't just go away on its own. Do you have ways that you do this already? Have you worked on what to do when a wave of shame hits? I imagine the thoughts as flaming arrows and put up the shields of faith (Ephesians 6 I'm sure you know). I call a friend to pray with me. I think about how I feel toward my own children when they are struggling, and I imagine Jesus reassuring me. Then I am restored enough to get up and be good to others.

I'll keep praying for you and your wife.

*I'm paraphrasing a lot from Maia here

Him: Shadowfax1

Reconciled for 6 years

Dona nobis pacem

posts: 1079   ·   registered: Sep. 18th, 2018
id 8876914
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