Evio, not completely agree, though I can see that if you coparent your kids it would be much harder to cut off your ex completely, so oblivion would not come as naturally.
I had people in my life who I was very close, family members really, so akin to a partner (that’s what partnership is, creating a new family. That’s what infidelity is, destroying the family you two created and sacrificing it to create a family with their affair partner).
Few of these people have done something really bad, still not as bad as infidelity but a betrayal of loved ones nevertheless.
They are gone, irrelevant, I know of one who died and he is technically my godfather. Never shed a tear.
Don’t hate him, don’t feel anything, is just a a stranger like we never met. Same goes for the other family member faded into oblivion.
I spent a larger part of my life with them than with my wayward really, and I loved them very much.
Betrayal is betrayal, there was no regret from their side, they are gone.
I met them in public few times, emotion elicited= zero.
You have love, real one so it is hard to believe the person who only pretended to love you can fade from your life.
But they do when you leave. You feel like that because your attachment is not broken (their is) you are a healthy person, so their presence in your life reminds you of why you love them and overrides all the evil things they did to you ( healthy people can’t really imagine their beloved ones to feel nothing or very little for them, but our waywards demonstrated that is exactly the case, because they can’t even love themselves).
Similar to Stockholm syndrome and narcissistic relationships, the victim feels empathy and a sense of belonging with the abuser.
And we are victims of a nasty abuse and sticking with our abusers after all.
Is way harder to feel nothing, impossible to forget as long as we keep them around, your nervous system cannot fathom it because it is outside it’s familiarity, it looks impossible (bu isn’t).
Want to test it? Take a few weeks off from your wayward husband, a vacation or a sabbatical month. No contact at all, no phones, no emails, nothing.
Just live your life with all your people but him.
I am willing to eat around the 3 weeks mark you could begin to realize he is not in your thoughts as much if at all and life is really going on just fine.
You might be even feeling better and renewed, and that is possibly something you unconsciously sense, and subconsciously fear to find out, because once you feel that, all changes and you might have to face something you’d rather avoid to accept right now.
That is valid for unremorseful waywards, I don’t know if this works with remorseful waywards, for sure distance doesn’t detach you from someone you love, but it is the best cure to erase someone who abused you mentally, emotionally and sexually: a cheater ticks all those boxes, so it works to get over them.
[This message edited by BackfromtheStorm at 4:03 PM, Tuesday, May 5th]