WaterLillies, so sorry you're struggling with infidelity, but glad you found SI. Please keep posting! You'll get great support here. Folks may not always say what you hope to hear, but most comments do come from a place of caring.
First = please know you will get through this! THERE IS HOPE for YOU - you will be okay. Bear with me while I talk about myself for a sec. We'll get back around to you I promise. I was about the same age when I left a 4 year (3 years living together) relationship with a cheater boyfriend, not my first boyfriend but my first true love. Ohhhhhboy, I too thought he was "the one". He also seemed kind, he was intelligent and handsome. He had a great sense of humor and lots of ambition. When he turned out to be a serial betrayer I left him to keep my sanity, even though he hoped to keep me around. I didn't want to be one of many girlfriends while he broadened his "experience" i.e., sought ego stroking and new person energy from other women while I provided a safe and comfortable fall back position to operate from. Basically, I didn't want to dance the pick me dance after we made a monogamous commitment to each other. It broke my heart to leave him and go no-contact, but I knew that because I loved him so much leaving was the only way to save myself.
After that huge life disappointment I too swore I'd never let myself fall in love again because the betrayal was so painful. It took at least a couple of years to heal, but eventually I did heal..... part of healing was actively attempting to fix my picker, so slowly I warmed up to the idea of dating and trying out new relationships. Focused on myself, developed some exciting career opportunities. Long story short, I not only survived, I thrived!
By The Way, that cheater boyfriend I was so in love with......after we broke up he went on to have a few successive live-in girlfriends and eventually married/divorced.... twice.Bet he cheated on all of them, too. Each new girlfriend/wife stayed the same age (28 to 30ish) while he, poor guy, kept aging. He has 3 kids from different mothers and at 66 years old is now the gray haired parent of a kindergartener. So glad I didn't stick around for more punishment!
I'm always sad to read posts saying that "s/he was my person" like there is nobody else better out there for them. Because I do not believe that there is one person for one person. There are millions of people out there that you have not met or will not meet if you're with this guy, and let's face it, you're not even married.
Agreed! To supplement SackOfSorry's wise sentiment, there's a gazillion people out there who WANT a monogamous, honest and mutually enriching relationship. One thought - he's been your only relationship - perhaps you're not ready to let go because this relationship is what you know. Don't settle for the devil you know because the unknown feels uncertain! The world is truly your oyster. Yes, you are young! Plenty of time to learn and grow from this experience and make a new life. And thankfully, there's no kids or marriage to untangle. In hindsight, I recognize I dodged a bullet by discovering First True Love's serial cheating before we married, had kids or bought property together. Hope you'll eventually have a similar realization - stumbling into his hidden sexual basement before further entanglements is a blessing in disguise.
That part of the affair doesn’t really affect me since it’s digital but I’m sad that he talked to other women when all I wanted was for him to talk to me.
Have to chime in on this comment- hope this feedback doesn't feel harsh . How do you figure that digital cheating isn't cheating? That his digital wooing and pursuit of other women "doesn't really affect" you? That secretly chatting up gals on dating apps (did they exchange pix??) somehow isn't an egregious breach of trust in a monogamous partnership? I propose that it is a betrayal- that it did affect you. Digital emotional cheating is like a massive black hole floating in outer space - you can't see it but it's out there sucking up his emotional energy, attention and those small day to day interactions that should have been yours. They got the sparkles - you got the "what's the plan for dinner?" conversation. Ask me how I know.......
WaterLillies, your therapist made a perceptive observation - sounds like you are lonely - because you are isolated and alone - literally. No family, no friends to lean on in real life, no one to help get you through this nightmare. Sounds like your only IRL relationships right now are with the therapist and your betraying partner. It's natural to seek solace and comfort from our partners - it's just so darned confusing when the person we turn to for reassurance and connection is the same person who harmed us and could brutally betray us again. It's okay to reach out to a trusted friend or family member (or two or three) for support. You're not alone. Sharing with just one friend, someone who has your back, even if it's only over the phone or Zoom could be a big help. Don't isolate yourself to protect his image, or because YOU feel guilt or shame about his choice to buy sex workers - his choice to view women as a commodity to be bought and sold for his ego fortification and pleasure.
Any way to go back home for an extended visit with friends and family = to be with people who love you?. You could use your tribe around you right now. Even if you choose to not tell them what's going on, just being with friends and family could make a big difference to your well being. If he's serious about the relationship he can work on himself alone while you work on you by connecting with friends and family.
Which brings me to the crux of my stranger on the internet response to your situation = if you're committed to "making things better" the best way to help him is to let this be HIS journey. Everyone's experience is different. InMyExperience, to become a functioning human he must take responsibility for his shitty, harmful maladaptive behaviors. He must understand that treating you poorly has consequences; including you leaving. And he must focus on changing his selfish mindset - to remediate his thinking so the nightmare of infidelity doesn't happen again. Seems that separating yourself from HIS entitlement/emotional abuse (yes, hiding a double life from a monogamous romantic partner is emotional abuse), and stepping away to focus on YOUR healing from his abuse while he focuses on his rehabilitation - separately - could be wise - for both of you.
It’s hard for me to be mad at him, I know he’s struggling with a past of sexual abuse as a child, an alcoholic dad and he obviously struggles with himself because he feels ugly , not enough and not wanted by me somehow.
We understand the urge to "make things better". Many of us betrayed feel compelled to try and fix things in one way or another. We roll up our sleeves and try to fix what we didn’t break and what we can’t possibly fix. Because the problem is in the cheater - not in the marriage, not in us. HE is the only one who can fix himself. A hard truth, it's really difficult to fix an embedded, repeated pattern of lying and self-entitlement. And, InMyOpinion he won't be a safe partner,,,,,,,,or parent...... until he digs deep into his history of childhood abuse. He'll have hard and long work ahead if he wants to make meaningful and lasting change - and he must pursue that long, hard work because he wants to change for HIMSELF. Not because he's trying to save face or save the relationship. Gotta say, dragging his feet on counseling and STI testing, keeping his phone and tablet away from you doesn't bode well. And it feels like he's hoping that if he "says" he wants to love bomb you with presents and love letters, says he's sorry often enough and claims "he'd like to make a donation to a women's charity (!)" that these words will somehow help him rug sweep his shitty choices. And please don't hope he's "probably thinking" how you'd think if you were in his shoes. That's a rookie mistake. He's thinking like a cheater! Remember, words are easy. Actions are hard! Pay close attention to what he DOES not what he SAYS. This is key. He sounds like a guy who can talk a good game, not someone who's "trying really hard."
WaterLillies, also please be aware, right now it probably feels safer to view him as the victim - that his abusive childhood etc. caused him to behave as he did. Gently, IMO those are excuses for him that you’re making while you try to see the best in him and try to convince yourself he will change. It is tragic that he was abused as a child, but not all abused children grow up to abuse as adults - adults who in turn perpetuate the cycle of abuse on others. Or in a nutshell, viewing him as the victim feels safer than acknowledging that his serial cheating was a choice. That he CHOSE to betray and lie. That he got something out of it. That he felt entitled to live a double life that's been going on for years. He also felt entitled to spend lots of $$ on sex workers and multiple dating apps; he felt entitled to treat those sex workers as a commodity. YOU are the victim here - not him. Yes it hurts. But, it's so important to realistically see our partners with wide open eyes so we can make logical decisions about what comes next - and put our own wellbeing first for a change. Hoping the best for you.
[This message edited by BoundaryBuilder at 12:35 AM, Friday, March 20th]