Hey, welcome NotMyIdentity
I’m really glad you’re here and asking these questions, because the stage you’re in is one of the most confusing parts of the wayward journey. The crisis has calmed, your marriage is stabilizing from the bomb that went off, and now you’re staring at the long road of reconstructing yourself, not just the marriage.
And because you confessed, did the research, and probably caused less chaos than most WS who are caught off guard and start fighting for their life, you may have experienced something a little less like a nuclear blast and more like a MOAB. That could be part of what you’re seeing in his early "forgiveness." But I don’t think it’s true forgiveness yet. At 8 months it’s almost always shock, denial, and a little hope mixed in.
It’s wonderful that he’s committed to reconciliation, but forgiveness is usually a long, multi year process. And year two is often the hardest for both partners. That’s when the numbness wears off, the reality settles, and the full weight of the betrayal lands.
The betrayed spouse’s healing is intense and nonlinear, but the wayward spouse’s transformation is deep, identity‑level work. It’s not about fixing the affair; it’s about rebuilding the parts of yourself that made the affair possible.
I did get told by my therapist that it’s not really something I can rush, that it takes time.
This is true. My experience with this part was that I was so ready to get my shit together I thought that my determination and willingness would see me through a swift transformation. I actually laugh at that version of myself now. I had no idea what "the work" really meant. The real transformation comes from doing the deeper internal work that changes who you are, not just how you behave. There were days I felt like I was gutting myself like a pumpkin to make room for something new. Hollow in between, unsure of who I was becoming.
This may seem like a no brainer .. One of the biggest turning points for me was practicing radical honesty. I had spent so many years avoiding, minimizing, or softening the truth that honesty felt foreign.
So I made it something I practiced every single day, in every part of my life. No white lies, no half truths, no strategic omissions, no deception at all. I needed honesty to become my knee-jerk reaction instead of something I had to consciously force. And once it started feeling natural, I could finally turn that same honesty inward.
That’s when the real introspection began, looking at myself through a clear, unfiltered lens, naming the patterns I used to hide from, and slowly dismantling the parts of me that made dishonesty feel easier than truth.
My biggest piece of advice is that you don’t have to take all of yourself on at once. This takes time. Start with what’s most obvious. Practice, consistency, and patience are the core ingredients. The deeper identity work is not an overnight transformation.
I’d also suggest reading around the other forums. You can’t post in Just Found Out, but you can learn a lot there. It can be tough to read, but it was instrumental for me.
I learned quickly that I was on the front line of two very different battlefields, my healing and my BH’s. It’s just as important to stay attuned to his emotional landscape, understand betrayal trauma, learn the grief process, and recognize what cheating strips from a BS. This will seep into your everyday life, and learning to hold some of that weight with strength and steadiness matters.
You don’t have to have it all figured out right now. But starting with safety and honesty is a must. That’s the baseline everything else is built on. Continue there.