Please do not apologize for writing this, and please do not dismiss what you are feeling as a pity party. I am likely in the same timeline as you and it has been very disorienting to say the least. You have just discovered that the life you believed you were living was not the same life your husband was living beside you. Of course there are days when you feel strong and know you will survive, and other days when the weight of what has been taken from you feels impossible to carry. That is not weakness. That is grief.
You are not only grieving your husband or even the marriage as you knew it. You are grieving the future you spent years sacrificing to reach. You moved for him. You allowed friendships to fade because you believed the two of you were building something together. You organized your life around the idea that the sacrifices were shared and that one day, when the children were grown and the constant responsibilities finally eased, the two of you would get to enjoy what you had built. The travelling. The companionship. The quiet years together. You did not simply lose the present. You were robbed of the future you had been faithfully working toward.
You are not a fool for believing your husband. A marriage is supposed to be the one place where trust is not treated as stupidity. You were not foolish for loving him, supporting him, or believing that the man you had built your life around was protecting that life alongside you. He had information that you did not have. He made choices in secret while allowing you to continue sacrificing under false pretences. That is not you failing to see clearly. That is him deliberately preventing you from seeing the truth.
I understand why reading about faithful husbands hurts. You thought you had one of those men. You believed he understood loyalty, family, sacrifice, and the sacredness of being trusted. Finding out that other people were capable of making the choices you desperately needed him to make can feel like further proof of what you lost. But his failure to value what you gave him does not make what you gave worthless. Your loyalty still says something beautiful about you, even though it was handed to someone who did not protect it.
His childhood abandonment and abuse may explain some of the damage inside him, I have the same damage, but they do not excuse what he chose to do with that damage. Many people have been terribly hurt and still refuse to make their pain someone else’s wound. You were the steady person in his life, and perhaps he took that steadiness for granted because he believed it would always remain available no matter what he did. Sometimes people who have spent their lives escaping discomfort will even run from the safest thing they have, not because it was not good enough, but because genuine closeness requires honesty, responsibility, and the willingness to be fully known.
That still does not answer how he could do this to you. There may never be an answer that feels large enough to explain the size of the destruction. No childhood wound, unmet need, loneliness, or desire for escape can make the exchange seem reasonable. He risked the woman who stood beside him, his relationship with his children, and the future all of you were building for something that could never carry the same weight. That was not because you were lacking. It was because something inside him allowed temporary escape to matter more than permanent consequences.
And you are right,you did not deserve this . You did not deserve to reach this stage of your life and discover that the person beside you had secretly changed the terms of everything. You did not deserve to be left financially frightened, emotionally isolated, and wondering how to rebuild a life you had already spent decades building. Please do not force yourself to turn this into inspiration before you are ready. Some days are simply going to hurt. Some days the most honest thing you can say is, "I gave everything I had, and I cannot believe this is what was done with it."
But I hope, when the wave passes even slightly, you remember that the future you imagined was not valuable only because he was standing in it. You were the person creating much of the stability, love, and meaning in that life. Those qualities did not leave with his integrity. They still belong to you. Starting again may be frightening and deeply unfair, but you are not starting with nothing. You are starting with the same loyalty, strength, competence, and capacity for love that held your family together for all these years—only now, slowly, some of that care has to be given back to you.
You also should not have to carry this completely alone simply to protect the possibility of reconciliation. You can choose one safe person, a therapist, or someone who will support you without turning your life into gossip or pressuring you toward a decision. Reconciliation, should you choose it, cannot require your total isolation while he remains protected from the consequences of what he did.
You did everything out of love. That love was real because it came from you. His failure to appreciate or return it does not rewrite your intentions, and it does not make your years meaningless. It means you loved sincerely and were not met with the same care.
Today, you do not need to be inspiring. You do not need to know whether you are staying, leaving, forgiving, or rebuilding. Breathe. Eat something. Get through this hour. Let yourself be angry and devastated without apologizing for it.
You were not foolish for believing in your marriage.
He was foolish for gambling the one person who truly believed in him.