We are about nine years out and we both think of it less and less over time. I have never tracked how long I go without thinking about it, but when it comes up, it goes right back away. And the time spent in it (other than when I come here) is very nil. It serves no purpose for me anymore. I still work on myself, but not because of the affair, but because of the self awareness that I have gained since. My husband says he doesn’t really think about it anymore either. It crosses his mind and he says "I sort of just bat it away" but he is a big proponent of stoicism and "the obstacle is the way"
But I think your thoughts serve a purpose and so your brain isn’t going to let you forget. The purpose it’s trying to find a way for you to alleviate or reconcile the cognitive dissonance.
You are seemingly comfortable in your stance that you have taken within your marriage, logically at least. But the state of your marriage is going to be a constant reminder of why things are the way they are. You have lost respect for him. So your brain is always going to be trying to reconcile the good life/good man marriage with the part of you that feels utterly alone and dissatisfied with his progress. There are great burdens in this marriage, and also still great benefits.
To me it sounds like you have found peace by focusing on the desirable benefits. But it’s not going to alleviate the feelings surrounding being married to someone you can’t feel emotionally safe with or fully respect. (You do respect some of his attributes)
I think for those of us that are happily reconciled the cognitive dissonance of staying married is not as strong over time or completely relieved. But for those members who have a ws who has not done the work, or as a couple have not deeply discussed many aspects they should have and have stuffed their feelings, or maybe even has a value system that may be more suited for divorce (not saying all must apply to you specifically or even insinuating that they do - I am being general because there are many here who share this issue) then that cognitive dissonance is going to be stronger and your brain is going to keep flagging it. Our brain deals better with simplicity. And think for the happily reconciled crowd, it’s easier to alleviate it because the marital satisfaction is great enough to overcome the CD.
But that’s my theory - the duality you live under. "This life is good enough, we are privileged , my husband is a good man, I don’t have to work or do anything I don’t want to do" versus "I still live with someone who still actively betrays me (even if it’s on a much lower level than infidelity- maybe even at a level that would have been acceptable without the infidelity) and I can’t fully trust him" and you remain in a marriage in self protection mode. And both of you feed off of the other’s self protection mode. It’s not likely to change until he makes this change first. He is going to have to become fully emotionally available, and even then it’s going to take time and consistency.
I think you probably came back because dealing with that over time is lonely and it feels good to be able to talk to people in real life who understand how you feel. You are carrying this as emotional labor and while you have done enough therapy and have enough logical control of the situation, there is part of you that isn’t onboard. You need that outlet, because you haven’t just come back you have been making posts.
The progress you made since you have been gone is evident to me though-you often speak more softly about, you have found a fair amount of marital satisfaction by focusing more on yourself (which to me is positive) and you make your personal posts in reconciliation rather than general and I don’t think that was your norm previously. That signals to me you seek feedback from a somewhat different crowd, one that may be a little more encouraging towards staying together and working it through.
[This message edited by hikingout at 5:16 PM, Monday, February 2nd]