@renegadelegion Fully realize that I am walking into my own demise here, but for the sake of potentially helping you... I will take whatever mean things the internet has to say.
I was the one who cheated on my husband. I had a lot of reasons and excuses, but none of them matter. I am the bad guy. At the time, everything felt pretty much beyond hope. All the icky feelings that had led our marriage to where it was were still there, then the addition of the deceit and guilt and shattered trust made everything feel completely irreparable.
I was ready to throw in the towel, especially during the times when it felt like he'd never be able to let it go. But being a child of divorce himself, he kept wanting to hang on in spite of all reason. We went through therapy, did a lot of individual soul-searching, and put all the effort into our relationship that we should have been doing for years.
I can honestly say that we are stronger now than we ever were before. Yes, the pain is absolutely still there for both of us for our own reasons. But it's a scar that we acknowledge and choose to see as a reminder of the place of honesty, vulnerability, and partnership that we got to because of it.
So take my experience with a grain of salt, since I'm coming from the other side of it. But I can at least tell you that there is hope if you both are willing to put in a lot of hard work. Not just to recover, but to figure out how you guys got there in the first place. Because otherwise you really can't be sure it won't happen again.