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Newest Member: conflicted24yearsold

Wayward Side :
What to say when everything has been said

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 feelingverylow (original poster member #85981) posted at 3:54 AM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

In our talk today my wife indicated that she was really frustrated that I did not have much response to some of her comments in our last talk. She indicated that she realized they were topics we had discussed many times before and she does not know what she would want me to say, but that the lack of response frustrated her and triggered the question of if I even get it. I talked to my therapist in IC last week about this and she indicated sometime just being a witness to her pain is all that I will be able to do. The therapist had a few suggestions for what I might say. I ran a few past my wife in our discussion today and she said she is pretty sure she would get physically violent of I said any of those (she was joking about the violence, but very serious that she thought those sounded condescending).

We both agree that we have talked about the affair enough that we are only revisiting the same topics. I fully disclosed everything so nothing left I can tell her about the affair itself. Wondering what others WS have found effective and what other BS wanted to hear when you get to this stage.

Me - WH (53) BS (52) Married 31 years
LTA 2002 - 2006 DDay 09/07/2025
Trying to reconcile and grateful for every second I have this chance

posts: 111   ·   registered: Mar. 19th, 2025
id 8888447
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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 3:22 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

That’s a tough one. Generally rote responses that you tell her about ahead of time would come off as patronizing.

She is wanting more sincere responses from you. And I don’t think you can wear out identifying with someone in the moment. Even if you’ve made apologies for them. Don’t take any of these down as rote responses, but as examples:

Make a specific apology. It doesn’t matter if you have said it before.

Restate for her what you are hearing from her. Ask follow up questions.

Break some shit together, go to smash room even.

Say the things again. It’s her trauma response that is making her cover the same ground over and over. Don’t let her feel alone in that even though it seems unnecessarily repetitive.

One thing is for sure though, this sounds like you are being authentic and maybe not so doused in shame that you aren’t able to stand in these moments? Is that true? Because that’s progress.

You just have to be careful not to leave her behind or make her feel silly for being so repetitive that she starts holding it in. Always remind yourself if she is staying open with you and showing you how her mind is working that does serve a purpose in you consistently providing emotional safety. This helps builds trust.

Look it gets exhausting for both of you. You would take it away if you could so that helpless/hopeless feeling can be very hard to cope with. She gets tired of the loop and would love to exit, but she cannot. Rest when you can rest. Help her rest when you can. This stage is normal and cannot be helped, skipped, etc.

I would reccomend maybe reading a book on what trauma does to the brain and that knowledge will better equip you. This does tend to wane around a year and then there are new stages that start.

Provide reassurances however you can in between. Pick up her favorite treat, set out fresh flowers, plan some things she can look forward to, pick up some of her chores. Some of the things you do outside of these bouts can be helpful and reassuring for her. Because one of the things that can make it worse is when she feels like her grief is becoming a burden to you. It’s a huge burden to her and that will lead her to projecting that you must feel that way about her. Not sure if you are there yet but that can happen and is common. You have to bring her the lightness to help her deal with the burden.

I would plan concert dates because my husband loves music, plan weekend trips where we could start having shared experiences that didn’t involve long horrendous talks, it was a great reminder of our connection and some of the activities would allow us to have some mental rest. We took hikes and spent time in nature together. That can not only provide a mental respite but the activity itself help bring in some endorphins.

[This message edited by hikingout at 3:24 PM, Monday, February 2nd]

8 years of hard work - WS and BS - Reconciled

posts: 8502   ·   registered: Jul. 5th, 2017   ·   location: Arizona
id 8888465
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sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 6:05 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

I found my W's A was so disorienting that I had to hear about it again and again. The first time I heard, I took in a few facts. The 2nd time, I took in a few more facts. The 3rd time, a few more. Etc. Etc. Etc.

fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex apDDay - 12/22/2010Recover'd and R'edYou don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.

posts: 31666   ·   registered: Feb. 18th, 2011   ·   location: Illinois
id 8888496
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BondJaneBond ( member #82665) posted at 7:22 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

What Sisoon said. It's so shocking when you find out about something like this, it alters your whole view of your relationship, the other person, the experiences you've had in life, your potential future - it's like an earthquake that just alters the whole terrain and you have to find out where the earth slipped and where the solid ground is now. So to make it real and process it, sometimes you have to go over it again and again and again - I think the more of a cognitive dissonance thing it is - how can my wonderful, loving spouse do....blah blah blah, it's unbelievable. So it can take time not only to absorb what happened but to have some ways of responding because the responses themselves can vary - one day it might be rage, another fear, another sorrow - so many things this brings up often from the bottom of your soul. It's takes time to absorb, it takes time to process, it takes time to re-adjust and decide what to do. It's a fundamental change in one's life....like discovering you're actually the kidnapped child of Queen Elizabeth, or something like that. It's not just an event....it's life changing. And I think many of us do get sick of thinking or talking about it, but how else do you integrate it as a fact of life and figure out how to deal with it without that. So as tedious as it is, it's kind of like exercising an injured body part....you keep doing it till it seems to heal, if it does.

What doesn't kill us, makes us stronger. Use anger as a tool and mercy as a balm.

posts: 249   ·   registered: Jan. 3rd, 2023   ·   location: Massachusetts
id 8888506
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BondJaneBond ( member #82665) posted at 7:27 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

I think it might be useful for Waywards to consider it like this - what seems like events to the Wayward, things that may not even have a lot of meaning to them, or might be fun, or entertainment or a supplement to the marriage or whatever view the WS might have, it's something that literally alters the REALITY OF OUR LIVES to a BS. How we look at our spouse, our relationship, our past experiences, how we regard our future, how can we trust someone who lies so well and often - so long - to us. It alters reality itself, it's not just an experience that you had. If you can imagine a BS saying....well, so my WS actually IS a reptilian after all, hmmmmm...... It's not an enclosed experience, it shatters reality itself and how we view this person and ourselves and many other things. That's what makes it so bad and so hard to recover from.

What doesn't kill us, makes us stronger. Use anger as a tool and mercy as a balm.

posts: 249   ·   registered: Jan. 3rd, 2023   ·   location: Massachusetts
id 8888508
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hikingout ( member #59504) posted at 8:10 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

It may help to know he posted back to back- the post about why details matter - which is where a lot of us talked about why the need to go over it over and over again. I am not sure if this post is looking for the same explanation. I am not pointing it out because anyone said a wrong thing, but to maybe help his responses get him not the why, which was the other question but how do you manage it?

Both sides of the fence get fatigued bit by different things. He feels he has responded to the reaction many times, at some point you start saying, what am I not doing? I don’t know another response. Listening doesn’t see to be enough to fit the bill, how do you sta authentic while giving your partner that shared experience they are hoping for? It’s not a shared experience because both are experiencing it differently but shared in empathy and being able to fully show the bs you understand them and offer the proper connection.

I don’t think any ws are perfect at this but the effort matters a lot. I restated a lot to make sure he felt like I did hear him and interpreted him.

[This message edited by hikingout at 8:11 PM, Monday, February 2nd]

8 years of hard work - WS and BS - Reconciled

posts: 8502   ·   registered: Jul. 5th, 2017   ·   location: Arizona
id 8888512
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Unhinged ( member #47977) posted at 10:04 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

"It's deja vu all over again."
- Yogi Berra

You've been warned that she will ask the same or similar questions over and over again. When she's done asking questions then, and only then, have you discussed it enough. In the meantime, answer every question as well as you can no matter how many times you have said the same things.

There is no way to avoid this without avoiding reconciliation. There are no tricks, no pacification or emelioration. There is only openness and honesty.

Be patient!

This is just a part of the process.

Get it?

Married 2005
D-Day April, 2015
Divorced May, 2022

"The Universe is not short on wake-up calls. We're just quick to hit the snooze button." -Brene Brown

posts: 7134   ·   registered: May. 21st, 2015   ·   location: Colorado
id 8888517
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Trumansworld ( member #84431) posted at 11:10 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

The one thing my H could do that would help me, is to bring up the topic on his own occasionally. Answering questions is great, but it would really mean something to me if he took the initiative to discuss things that he might think I would want to know. I'm guessing he doesn't because he hates to see the hurt, but honestly it would comfort me to know that he was thinking about it. Digging deeper.

BW 65
WH 67
M 1981
PA 1982
DD 2023

posts: 156   ·   registered: Jan. 31st, 2024   ·   location: Washington
id 8888521
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Amy44 ( member #47329) posted at 11:26 PM on Monday, February 2nd, 2026

Reading this, I really wish there was an active directory of therapist who are actually vested with their clients/patients. Being a witness to a loved one's pain hardly seems like an effective strategy.

Me - WW 40's
Husband BH 40's
DD - Trickled over past few years
3 grown / adult kids

posts: 144   ·   registered: Mar. 26th, 2015
id 8888522
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 feelingverylow (original poster member #85981) posted at 10:11 AM on Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026

I should have been more clear in my original post. Definitely do not mind and even encourage the repeated questions. The way sisoon describes his experience resonates with my wife. Many times she has started a question with "I know I have asked this before, but do not remember what you said".

I have repeatedly told my wife that there is no time or quantity limit on any topics or questions and fully expect the discussions like we are having now to go on for several more months / years.

My specific question in this post is how people responded when the discussion is less questions and more a revisit of the pain she is feeling. The questions about details are actually a relatively small part of what we discuss.

Hikingout's response was very helpful. I do worry about apologizing repeatedly, but a specific apology that is targeted at the specific pain she is expressing seems to land better than a more general apology. My wife is very gracious and she often acknowledges that she knows how sorry I am.

Also appreciate Trumansworld response about being proactive. My wife has also indicated the same and need to be better about that.

Me - WH (53) BS (52) Married 31 years
LTA 2002 - 2006 DDay 09/07/2025
Trying to reconcile and grateful for every second I have this chance

posts: 111   ·   registered: Mar. 19th, 2025
id 8888549
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BackfromtheStorm ( member #86900) posted at 7:02 PM on Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026

I can tell you something more.

What are words?
They are a tool to communicate a feeling or need in a synthetic way.

You can communicate the same with non-verbal, sometimes is better, sometimes is even faster.

Words are important because they hit the conscious mind.
Non verbals are important because they talk to our instinct and subconscious first.

Behaviors, connections, body language, even just looks to each other, they are all non verbal.
If you can somehow sync both into what you feel, you will see that not everything was said just yet. You may use the same words, but you will say to her so much more.

You are welcome to send me a PM if you think I can help you. I respond when I can.

posts: 220   ·   registered: Jan. 7th, 2026   ·   location: Poland
id 8888582
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WoodThrush2 ( member #85057) posted at 11:58 PM on Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026

Friend....

Validate her experience.

Validate her feelings and pain.

Express deep regret, remorse, and sorrow for what you did.

State your love.

State your hatred for what you did.

State your commitment to help heal her heart.

And do it over, and over, and over....don't stop until it stops organically.

Do these things and she will not think you don't say enough.

[This message edited by WoodThrush2 at 11:59 PM, Tuesday, February 3rd]

posts: 295   ·   registered: Jul. 29th, 2024   ·   location: New York
id 8888619
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Mr20Paws ( member #10027) posted at 1:01 AM on Wednesday, February 4th, 2026

The one thing my H could do that would help me, is to bring up the topic on his own occasionally. Answering questions is great, but it would really mean something to me if he took the initiative to discuss things that he might think I would want to know. I'm guessing he doesn't because he hates to see the hurt, but honestly it would comfort me to know that he was thinking about it. Digging deeper.

I like this response as a bit of practical advice.

It's not natural for a WS to want to bring up the affair trauma on their own. The WS assumes that this will just bring up additional pain for the BS. But the reality is that, in the earlier stages, the BS is likely already thinking about the betrayal all the time. For your BS to know that you are also sharing in their pain is really valuable.

My wife couldn't do this - she basically just wanted everything to go back to how it was as quickly as possible.
But looking back, if she had been proactive in any of the discussions, it would have made a big difference. Her not doing that left me with the feeling that I was doing all of the heavy lifting in our R. You don't want your spouse to have that feeling.

Me: BS 63; She: FWS 63; Married: 41 years (HS sweethearts);
D-Week: 03/01/2005 - 03/08/2005; Five different PAs 04/2003 - 03/2005;
R'd but it took a long time

posts: 69   ·   registered: Mar. 10th, 2006
id 8888628
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