My H asked me to sit & began his BD speech. I could see his mouth moving & heard the words he was saying but I was surely mistaken; these could not be the words my H was saying. I was in shock for two or three days, not eating, not sleeping; I didn't even call family or friends. I was filled with thoughts of trying to find the apt in the neighboring town that my H had said he was going to live in with the OW. I thought I could find him by just driving around aimlessly & seeing his car. What I would do then, I don't think I knew, but I actually didn't have any energy to go anywhere.
I then became agitated & manic. I had panic attacks & called my H, who was actually quite concerned at that point. I paced our home day & night, crying & moaning, clutching my stomach. I told someone I felt like I had been kicked in the head & punched in the gut. The pain was physical & emotional & mental. At one point I felt my depression rapidly deepen; all was pain & darkness & despair. I didn't know how I could survive long like this. Miraculously, as quickly as it descended, it lifted back to my depressed baseline. It was a glimpse of hell I don't know how anyone could survive.
My H had agreed to see a counselor with me & because of my reaction he arranged to move the appt up a couple of days, which meant we went to a different office. When I arrived, I sat in my car staring at the counselor's sign, paranoid, because I believed that perhaps my H had arranged to have the appt in that town because there was a psychiatric hospital there & he would try to have me committed.
I lost a great deal of weight & didn't even realize it until my pants began sliding off my body & my wedding ring would constantly fall off my finger. I lived on soups & yogurt. The obsessive, racing thoughts were overwhelming. There was no thought in my mind except for that of H & OW & "the situation". I couldn't focus on anything else; I don't know how I drove around without an accident, my mind was so distracted. I searched the internet obsessively for a couple of weeks to find a picture of a heart with a dagger through it to have tattooed on the left side of my chest.
Soooo, pretty seriously crazy for 3-4-6 months! I tell people I'm not sure what a nervous breakdown is, but I'm pretty sure I had one. I began sleeping some & very, very slowly, but steadily it improved. I began talking to people; actually I talked to everyone I came into contact with. Every day I had a mental list--who could I call tonight to get me through the long hours. I continued with my counselor weekly & he provided a framework (not too unlike MLC) that immediately informed me that none of this was my fault, that H was likely depressed with poor self-esteem & that his "new R" was a completely unhealthy, addictive one. So, I spent very little time blaming myself. I've never had much anger, although everyone kept telling me I should be angry, that it would help me.
I had much more anxiety than anger. The triggers were everywhere--everything in our house, all the music, anything on TV we had watched together, any photos, the constant flow of memories of our long R. Downloading e-mail was awful, because just seeing H's name pop up would cause panic. Just knowing he had been to our property caused anxiety attacks. Some attacks were random; I had to leave church services more than once due to anxiety attacks. I had to teach a class a week after BD & had others scheduled for the next two months. In each class I relived the anxiety of the first one & I had to resign from teaching the craft classes I loved so much.
I survived all of this because I am a very stable person, I am a very mature person, I had good RL support & an excellent counselor, & because I intuitively knew that the quick fixes of alcohol, drugs, or rebound R's would only hurt me. I instinctively knew that I had to walk straight through the flames of this tortuous pain; there was no other way.
I found The Hero's Spouse six months after BD. It has filled out my understanding of what has happened to my H & to me, it gave me the wondrous support of LBS's from around the world, & it has given me the task of passing on that support & understanding to others.