Hello-
I just read through the rest of the thread in interested in how things are progressing.
I have heard from many ws over the years who have been a victim of CSA. I do not know if this applies to your wife or not. But, a lot have felt that they basically reinacted aspects of that degradation through their affair.
You have shared some vulnerability. I will extend some of mine in the case it helps you reframe some of this into a feeling that is possibly a little less helpless feeling.
CSA is something that teaches us early on to "be a good girl and go along with things". Its very confusing that even after experiencing the abuse we go back and spend more time with our abusers. It’s something that created deep shame in me.
You see people who abuse children tend to choose us based on our deep need for attention and validation. Our home life is known to them. They know the buttons to push and feel like they can control the situation because they know to give us what we lack. They give us those basic needs of attention and to us it becomes worth it. Add to the fact that our bodies respond to it sometimes and it creates a lot of confusion over our participation, separating us from feelings of victimization.
When we grow up, we survivors often mix up the sexual favors with a cost of admission. Personally, this resulted in promiscuity as a teenager to get boys to like me. It never worked of course it created scenarios in allowing myself to be used and I grew out of that eventually, but very close to the time I got married.
This probably in some ways helped my marriage because I felt like he needed it, and I needed to provide it. At times early in our marriage I was pretty performative as well. As I matured, I really forgot that era. I remember when my therapist asked me if this had happened months into my therapy. I sat for a second and said "well yeah, but what does that have to do with any of this?"
However, going into my affair, there was a lot of my behavior that was that of the desperate young women I had been. I was using my sexuality to get the payoff that I really wanted. In my marriage I felt needed, but often questioned if I was loved and cherished. This was not because of a malfunctioning husband, this was because of the shame I carried that I could never quite internalize that I was worthy of his love.
So what did I do? I believed I could make this man I was having an affair with cherish me. His premise was the old cliche, his marriage was fine in most aspects but was virtually sexless.
I am a smart woman but when desperation is your momentum, you are willing to believe about anything.
In many ways I had reverted back to the period before I had married or matured and I think I truly believed that he would be so bowled over by all that I was willing to do that he would cherish me.
This is really hard for me to say because the layers of wrongness, the outcomes this yielded , and the idiocy and lack of reality I was living under. Even though this man really made it as clear as the nose on my face.
I share it for one reason- you maybe angry this happened to her. The man may or may not aware of lack of consent. But likely the reason she went back for more is that it was a learned behavior. And because she was likely just trading for what she ultimately hoped she would ultimately get, whatever it was she was seeking.
That is on her of course. But perhaps the framing I have provided will help you have that conversation with her. I come back to some of your pain is from bottling it up from her. I think you are a very protective husband and that protection extends to holding it in as to not upset her. You are trading your mental health for hers. This is a bad idea when both of you can work towards better mental health instead of burying all this.
I also want to assure you that some of the things she needs to face to be able to reconcile it within herself will require things being brought up for her to answer to. I feel that after her affair, some of your intimacy has split. You are not sharing significant parts of your internal world, probably telling yourself it won’t help, but it keeps the two of you separate Ina way that needs to be repaired. She may or may not be aware of this as it could be something she is also doing.
Bringing the dark into the light is part of the process. She should be able to explain this to herself- she needs to realize why she would continue on with someone who essentially sexually assaulted her because there are protections she needs to be able to trust herself with.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:04 PM, Friday, June 13th]