Yep. YOU going to counseling will help you get to the bottom of why you cheated in the first place. It also sounds like you feel really guilty about all of this. What you did was wrong but you cannot let your guilt destroy the marriage. That's what will happen if you don't get the guilt under control. If you don't get the guilt under control you will become more paranoid he is cheating on you, or paranoid you are doing something which looks wrong, and you will never be happy with yourself.
You have to accept yourself as a person who cheated, but who has changed and moved on. AND you have to keep working on the marriage. He should do things YOU like, and vice versa. Love and commitment take ACTION.
- Have you really changed?
- Have you really moved on?
- Have you accepted yourself that you did something bad in the past, but are committed never to do it again?
To apologize and show you were really sincere, did you do something special for him? Like, dress in a Catwoman suit and feed him home made brownies or something? Maybe take a trip with no kids? Did you ever say the words "I'm sorry"? They make a difference.
Last edited by bulrush; 16-09-11 at 04:42 AM.
I have a long time interest in psychology, specializing in relationship dynamics for 30 years.
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