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Infidelity and Emotional Abuse

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Shereejo

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I’m new to this so I’m not exactly how this works, but I will give it a shot.

I discovered last July my husband of over 18 years was having an affair with a much younger co-worker and was actually making extensive plans to leave me and our two girls before changing his mind. 11 months later I still cannot sleep more than a few hours a night, go days without eating, and suffer from triggers at every turn. It seems like I’m riding a rollercoaster never knowing how I’m going to feel and feel like I have absolutely no control over my emotions once I’m triggered. I’ve tried counseling and several medications and nothing has helped. This trauma is just one of the traumatic events that I have experienced in my life. I was just wondering if there was anyone else that has experienced a similar situation and could give some insight and advice.
 
I’ve suffered sexual, severe physical and emotional abuse. My sister and I were injured in a drunk driving hit and run that turned out to my my grandfather. My father died in a car accident when I was 11. My mother disappeared into a bottle for over three years, so being I was the oldest daughter, I took on that roll for my two younger siblings. Two therapists have told me that my current symptoms of nightmares, trouble sleeping and eating, obsessive thoughts, anxiety, panic attacks, emotional outburst of extreme anger and fits of sobbing are all signs of PTSD. My current diagnosis is severe anxiety and massive depressive disorder to which I am currently taking Trazodone and Trintellix. Everywhere I go I cannot avoid seeing something that triggers crippling obsessive thoughts of my husbands affair. I’m only trying to get help so that I can be a good mother for my girls and I only have to go on what my therapists have told me. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and EMDR attempts have all failed. I don’t want to give up on hope so I’m grasping at straws at this point.
 
Do you feel safe in this house and relationship?
You cannot really find snow in a fire so I am wondering are you financially independent from your husband? or can you be independent from him while he supports you and the children? I am sorry maybe I am too direct but it feels like you are not triggered as much as you are truly trying to hold on a robe and slipping because you are still with your husband when the relationship is over one way or another, regardless he is staying on?
 
I do feel physically safe in my home. Past physical abuse occurred in my teens and early 20’s. I do operate my own bookkeeping business from home but it’s not enough to support myself and my girls at the moment. He wanted me to be a stay at home mother so I gave up my accounting career to do so, and I’m very happy I did. I do feel like I love my husband very much and that is why I was so blind sided by his affair. He always told me, and still does, that he thinks I’m the perfect wife and mother. I have been given multiple techniques to cope, which have helped some, but the triggers I try to avoid at all cost still send me over the edge. The obsessive thoughts and no ability to trust him at all are what I’m struggling with the most. I’ve isolated myself completely from his family as they did to me in return. I live hours away from my family and have basically isolated myself from going to see them because I’m terrified he will cheat on my again. I left for a few days to be with my youngest sister for the birth of her first child and he went straight to this persons apartment after he claimed it was over. Sorry about all the details, all my mind does is race, and it’s hard to organize sometimes.
 
Do you think he’d go to couples therapy with you? It sounds like there’s a strong foundation to build on, and having been together so long, he probably has good insight into what helps you stabilise, and what destabilises you.

Seems to me that might help rebuild some of that trust. It would also be approaching your current state as “this is our problem”, rather than “this is my problem”.

Definitely don’t give up on things like cbt and emdr - stabilising first is usually necessary for therapies like that to be effective:)
 
We have tried couples counseling but it always ended in a bashing session. The Four Horseman could have been written about us to a tee. He is going to a counselor as well. He has been told he is a classic narcissist incapable of empathy and he has agreed 100%. It was just my hope that reaching out to anyone on here that has experienced this and could give me some insight and hope it will be better someday. Thank you for all your kind responses and suggestions.
 
I do feel physically safe in my home. Past physical abuse occurred in my teens and early 20’s. I do operate my own bookkeeping business from home but it’s not enough to support myself and my girls at the moment. He wanted me to be a stay at home mother so I gave up my accounting career to do so, and I’m very happy I did. I do feel like I love my husband very much and that is why I was so blind sided by his affair. He always told me, and still does, that he thinks I’m the perfect wife and mother. I have been given multiple techniques to cope, which have helped some, but the triggers I try to avoid at all cost still send me over the edge. The obsessive thoughts and no ability to trust him at all are what I’m struggling with the most. I’ve isolated myself completely from his family as they did to me in return. I live hours away from my family and have basically isolated myself from going to see them because I’m terrified he will cheat on my again. I left for a few days to be with my youngest sister for the birth of her first child and he went straight to this persons apartment after he claimed it was over. Sorry about all the details, all my mind does is race, and it’s hard to organize sometimes.
Betrayal is a powerful thing. You thought you had an unbreakable thing and he stomped all over that more than once. He's proven himself untrustworthy over and over. Can you stay with a family member for a while until you can get yourself on your feet and thinking clearly?
 
I am not sure the partner causing the stress is the right person to seek shelter at this time. I think first you need to acknowledge your feelings anger, betrayal and denial and that should relax some of the resistance to the reality you found yourself. The four horsemen in relationship is toxic no matter how long you were together. Find a supportive therapist asap for your sake and your family.
 
It would devastate my girls if we left him. My youngest is autistic and is very ridged in her routines. My oldest is transgender and experiencing a whole other level of coping and understanding. Our situation has so many layers I couldn’t begin to count them. I’m just trying to survive and heal myself in order to make sure everyone is healthy and happy.
 
It would devastate my girls if we left him. My youngest is autistic and is very ridged in her routines. My oldest is transgender and experiencing a whole other level of coping and understanding. Our situation has so many layers I couldn’t begin to count them. I’m just trying to survive and heal myself in order to make sure everyone is healthy and happy.

Hello Shereejo,

I am so sorry you are experiencing all of this.

People can exhibit some narcissistic traits but not necessarily have narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). There is a ‘spectrum’ when they do. I would talk to your therapist a bit more about it to gain more awareness of what she thinks you may be dealing with.

If your husband is truly a narcissist then the likelihood of you having a stable, loving, relationship based on trust and respect is extremely low (I am being generous here) to nil. Complete lack of empathy, manipulation, emotional abuse, physical abuse, financial abuse, cheating, devaluation and discard, etc. are all commonplace with narcs.

This is also something that typically occurs early in development and he would have shown other signs beyond cheating over the course of your relationship.

In the beginning they act ‘perfect’. It is usually a very fast and intense experience. You feel like you have one massive connection and you will never feel about another human being how you feel about them. Literally they do everything they can to ensnare you (‘love bombing’) and then slowly their true colours come out - once you have fallen for them.

For me the most obvious one that I noted was gaslighting. Gaslighting is a form of persistent manipulation and brainwashing that causes the victim to doubt her or himself, and to ultimately lose one’s own sense of perception, identity, and self-worth. A gaslighter’s statements and accusations are often based on deliberate falsehoods and calculated marginalization. You basically feel like you are going crazy.

People that have been in relationships with narcs can develop PTSD (even if they have not suffered abuse or had other traumatic experiences prior to their relationship). It really is that destructive. Either way I have found this website to be extremely helpful for me.

To be clear, I am not a therapist and am only going from my own experience (and a lot of reading/research/my own therapy), but separating yourself from someone like this is extremely difficult and extremely painful. They are like an addiction (especially if you are an empath or codependent). Their behaviour will turn on a dime. One moment connected and expressing love and, literally, the next treating you abysmally and even discarding you. Often they will disappear for a period of time and then reach out to you again with the ‘love bombing’ (hoovering) to get you back - because they want/need something from you (because it is never about you it is always about them) - until they do a final discard (if you are lucky - but it will feel like one of the most if not the most painful experience you will ever have) and you will never see or hear from them again (unless they move on with someone else right in front if you - which can happen as well and makes it that much more of devastating).

Have a look at Melanie Tonia Evans website...there is a lot of free information on there that goes into much more depth about the traits/signs you would see and the behaviours and actions narcissist can exhibit. It talks indepth about what those in relationships with narcissist experience. Reading it opened my eyes...and I finally understood what I was dealing with (because unless you have experienced it yourself or been in contact with a narcissist before, it really is unbelievable what you can go through). It also, like this website, was a godsend because it helped me not feel so alone.

This may not be the situation you are in. And everyone’s situation is different.
But if he is a narcissist then, as harsh as this may sound, run. You can’t go no contact because of your children, which makes it that much harder, but do what you can. Narcissists do not just abuse their intimate partners. They will negatively impact their children as well. Those with PTSD on this website because of narcissistic parents can attest to this fact.

I wish someone had seen what was going on in my relationship(s) and told me all of this long ago. It isn’t easy to hear, it isn’t easy to comprehend and it isn’t easy to escape from. You need a strong support system and you need to take care of yourself first and foremost.
 
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