I am always astounded in what we have in common. I too worked 20 years in c level positions and while I wouldn’t say I have icy veins, it just was easier for me to see the business world in black and white.
Our personal relationships have shades of grey because we are much likelier to inject our emotional world in them.
I also had a lot of anxiety and honestly had trouble even functioning at work for the first year after dday. There are things that I got better at with therapy.
It’s the whole fear of abandonment, needing to be seen and understood. My identity was wrapped up in being a wife and mom and so his opinions about me mattered more to me than my opinion of me, it had always been that way.
After dday it was like him seeing my faults and wiring and now he knew I was bad, it was like confirming all that private shame I carried to be true. Plus after cheating I had valid reasons to feel shame on top of that whole history of carrying it, feeling like something was wrong with me. I had been a perfectionist wife to the point I strangled my own connection with him and blamed him for not being more emotional. (He also came from a Very normal family and just doesn’t have the chaotic tendencies I did- in many ways it’s probably a big reason why I chose him)
I have noticed for some of us over achievers at work, it’s driven somewhat by that shame because we have a way of controlling our image and being important to the functioning and growth of an organization. Our perfectionism in our public facing self gives us a balance from the shame.
You are just struggling to find the new balance because it’s about creating a new self image, one that is less distorted by all the shame.
And I get how her staying and support feels both like finally knowing you are loved and also creating a heightened fear around if that’s going to break when the shock of it all wears off.
Your therapist can give you exercises to strengthen your self image. Mine would tell me to put my hand on my heart and saying this is about your need to be seen and loved,m - can I for a moment embrace that I can give that to myself. This may be too advanced yet for where you are in the journey, but I still use it today. I define who I am, I define that I am loved by God and by me, and it helps when someone close to me is upset with me or in other situations.
I think I told you before your dday that your wife’s decision doesn’t have to define you. It was almost like if she can accept you then you can exist. Sort of like she is your judge and jury. I felt very much that way, it’s a fragile place to try and grow from.
And I get that you love her and your preference is for her to feel and see you as you are and choose you anyway. But this is often the heart of why a lot of ws can’t walk into the light. In your case you have walked into the light being led by what you knew as needed to right the ship (another thing we have in common- I too confessed on my own and went to therapy beforehand to prepare), but it doesn’t make the fear and anxiety easier. At some point at least celebrate that you are obviously courageous and want to fight for the type of marriage you both deserve- and that somewhere in that 20 years you grew past who you were as a drug user and cheater, and could not live with that as a secret due to that growth. When you start to see yourself through a lens of compassion, what I am describing will get easier.
The compassion is hard to gain but you are doing the steps of learning what built you the way you were, and some of how you are now. Eventuality it’s a reconciliation of self where you start to understand when you know better you do better. Sure, we knew better than cheating, we just didn’t know better about building new coping, new ways to be fulfilled, feeling safe enough to build a connection that we all deep down crave. And you are doing that. A lot of people go all the way through life stuck not seeing it or not facing it.
What you are experiencing is normal, and you may need to give yourself more grace in the process as you go from being lost to being found. Sending prayers to you and your wife.
[This message edited by hikingout at 7:58 PM, Monday, October 27th]