I'm going to give perhaps a softer overall message in this post than I have prior in your thread (which were more 2x4 in nature), and I'm going to relate it back to my own experience. Which is the advice you are generally getting here is based on other posters experience.
The way you post and process information strikes me analytical, nuanced, and circumspect. There is nothing wrong with this sort of mindset, and most likely it has treated you quite well over the years. You have probably avoided many situations where a more rapid emotional reaction might have created more damage than taking it in calmly and trying to execute the actions that would result in the best possible outcome.
It's a pretty good way to go about doing most things. And let me tell you, go visit my first thread. Hell, visit any of my threads for the first year or two after. I'm a bit of a thinker myself. I'm a bit of a waffler myself. I have a hard time setting a hard line and not backing down from it. When we give this advice, it's often what we wish we could have done, and rarely, have second hand observed folks actually executing on their side.
The reality, of course, is that each person working through betrayal is facing a marathon of work and healing to get through to the other side that they likely never prepared for. You are bound to face realizations about your wife and yourself, some of them affair related, some of them not, that you likely have areas of weakness you could work on. Or that perhaps the general patterns of behavior you use simply don't work in the area of infidelity.
There is an assumption about working together. About positive intent of your partner. About many things, where if those assumptions are true, make the analytical, nuanced, and rational process a great tool. But if your assumptions are wrong, it's not necessarily as good a process.
For me, one thing I learned, is that I simply was not communicating the pain I was in. I wanted to have positive interactions to lead to more to create a virtuous cycle of improvement. But that's just not how recovery from betrayal works. If you don't tell your partner you are in pain, or angry, or pick an emotion, they simply won't know. If you are busting your ass internally trying to get over the turmoil, and you don't make it clear that you are struggling, they simply won't know. You are prolonging the process and doing more damage.
It's OK to let it out. It's ok to be hurt, and angry, and to behave as though you are hurt and angry. Because you are.
The reason I still post here, six plus years later, is because I got so much great advice on this board.
You are getting great advice on this board. Take what helps and leave the rest.
[This message edited by This0is0Fine at 5:20 PM, Friday, May 22nd]