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Mixed Up - Mixed

I am very glad that I found this web site.I have read almost all of the letters and they have been very helpful. But now I need some help of my own. History: I have been married for only 7 years. We have two small children(4 & 3). For the past year my life has changed dramatically.

I used to think that we had a very good marriage but now I think that we were just very good at hiding all of the pain. A year ago, I went outside of my marriage in search of something. I've yet to determine what the something was. After the affair was discovered, my husband wanted to make it work, but I took it as an opportunity to get out of a dead relationship. I left him and the children and went on to pursue my new life.

I must admit, it was better than expected, at first, but as I began to get serious with a new lover, I realized that this was not the picture of marriage that I had in my mind. As our relationship grew, I wanted him to be apart of my entire life, which included my children. The thought of having another man around my children is what brought me back to my family. That is not how I envisioned my children's lives. They did not deserve this.

After a year apart, I decided to come back "for the sake of the children". I told him that was the only reason I was back and he agreed to that. He said that he loved me and that he would wait until I was ready to resolve our issues and get our marriage back.

He had been seeing some else during our break-up and because I was not ready to let go of my other relationship, we agreed to continue to see our lovers until we got our marriage back on track. needless to say this only lasted for a month. He became jealous of my relationship and insisted that I end it. I told him I would and for two months I actually did. But the only way I found to be with my husband was to continue to see my lover. I am still seeing my lover now. I know it is wrong but it helps me get through the week with my husband.

I feel like Luise and Kelle of "Really, really unsure of my relationship & my life" I feel that I am scarifying my own happiest and that of my husband for the sake of the children. I have read enough self help books to realize that my affair is just a tool to avoid the real issues in my marriage. My unwillingness to work on my marriage is another way to avoid working on my marriage.

My children's happiness is the most important thing to me but am I really being fair to them by being in a marriage that I am not respecting? I tell myself that once my outside relationship is over, I will concentrate on my marriage. But will another distraction be waiting for me when this one is over. I have told my husband I am not ready to "work" on our marriage. That I will give what I can but I'm just not ready yet. He has accepted this, which really surprises me.

Deep down I truly believe that my husband is probably the best person for me and I should make this relationship work. Religion, family and the sense of being a failure, keep me from considering the possibility of divorce.

I just do not know where to begin or what to do. Which is evident by this long letter and my rambling. I know I should seek individual counselling and I actually went to 8 sessions in 1996 but did not find them helpful. More because I really did not want help. I just don't feel ready to deal with my problems because I fear that they may lead me to conclude that I should not be with my husband and I just can not see doing that to my children.

Any help or insight that you could provide would be appreciated.

From: Bernd

The one question that sticks out for me in your posting is “My children’s happiness is the most important thing to me but am I really being fair to them by being in a marriage that I am not respecting?” My sense is that the person you are being most unfair to is yourself, and it isn’t the marriage so much that you “aren’t respecting” - it’s your own inner voice, and your own sense of values and truth inside you. That’s where the real harm lies, and that is the example your children will very likely emulate.

At the root of your own-going affair is your acute awareness that your life is empty without love. Your lover takes the edge off your emptiness, but my sense is that continuing your affair also keeps you from doing any real, permanent healing of that emptiness. An affair is like an addiction; it kills the pain in the short run, but there’s a price tag inside that keeps building up, and eventually - to our horror - we end up paying for it in ways we never expected. And often our children pay part of that cost too.

You and your husband are both very likely carrying a lot of heavy emotional baggage from before you ever met. That weight tires both of you out, and distorts your judgment, and keeps both of you crashing against each other. You can’t do anything about your husband’s baggage, but in beginning the process of healing from yours, you can stop adding so much of yours to his load. In our case, the less I crashed into Lynda, the more able she was to find healing solutions of her own, and vice versa. That is how we made it out of the swamp.

The less genuine love we have for ourselves, and the less sources we find for HEALTHY love, the more we naturally resort to trying to find it in unhealthy and self-destructive ways. Loving yourself means treating yourself in many of the same ways an honest lover would. This includes searching for anything that helps the healing process, being honest with yourself, allowing yourself to feel all your emotions without shame or judgment, respecting your feelings and thoughts, and finding friends and support networks that validate your specialness. A good friend would gently, and without judgment, tell you that what you are doing now isn’t getting you what you truly want. They would also tell you that there is always a solution, but sometimes it comes in a whisper, so to hear it we need to learn how to trust and be with that calm, special place inside us. A good friend would tell you that none of us can do it alone, and that there are others who are willing to share that journey with us, through listening and sharing their experiences.

When I began my “recovery”, I thought that it would take me a long time, and be hard as hell. Well, I was right, and I was wrong. What would be even harder would have been finding myself five years older, and in the same old swamp or worse. All the short cuts lead to dead-ends, and the “long road” is actually the shortest way. I have gained some valuable insights about faith, love, acceptance, happiness, and many other things that are important to me - and the truths that I’d stumbled across keep working wonderfully well each day. I don’t want to go back to the “easy route”, ever.

Let go of the questions of whether or not you should stay in the marriage, or what’s best for the kids. Whatever is truly best for you, is truly best for everyone else - including your kids, and your husband. You haven’t had a lot of practice at finding out what’s truly best for you, so begin learning and searching for what that means. Consider a therapist like a dress - sometimes you gotta go through a bunch of them before you find one that’s just right for you. You’ll know intuitively when you find the right one for the part of the recovery path you’re on, and you’ll also get gut feelings for when and if it’s ever time to move onto a new one.

My way out of my swamp was frustrating, confusing, and full of mistakes. That’s normal. Why should I expect the route out to be any less difficult than the route that got me in there? But each step I’ve taken has brought me one step closer to solid land, to a place where it’s safe and fun to dance around, and where there’s a bit of magic under every tree. You know that place exists for you too. Maybe it’s time to find out where that little voice inside you is really trying to lead you?:)

Hope this helps a little.

From: MZET

Boy, you sound just like my wife, though my circumstances are a little different and not as drastic, yet... I hope I can help you since I cannot directly help my wife. All my offers of assistance to her are interpreted as control, so I have decided to step back completely. But since you and I are not married to one another and since you asked for insight, maybe you won’t interpret my suggestions as control…and maybe you will be able to help us or someone else back some day.

Here’s what I’ve learned so far:

Our children (and a nagging voice telling us not to get divorce) is also what’s kept us from a divorce. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that or demeaning to your husband or your relationship. In fact, if you think about, it is a beautiful reason: that the children, the physical manifestation of the love you once had for one another are still bringing you back. That’s powerful stuff.

I have also told my wife that I love her and that I would wait (forgiveness is another matter, a very difficult and long process also). She is now dealing with the pain of not being able to see her lover. We’re not sure she’ll get over it, but she’s trying. It was her choice to leave the lover. Yes, her family pressured her. Yes, her conscience may have dragged her back. Yes, I also pressured her, but eventually I gave up. And yes, I am also sure she was somewhat conscious of the pain she was inflicting on me, but ultimately it was her decision.

I think you need to make that same decision, that is, if you want to save the marriage and avoid more pain to you, your children, your husband and your lover. There is no other way around it. It is a decision. Having an affair is like being addicted to drugs. My wife tried to quit three times. But you make a decision and you quit seeing your lover because you want to, not because you "feel" like it. The break up needs to be surgical: tell your lover goodbye, that you are going to work on your marriage, that he shouldn’t wait for you and that he should get on with his life and other relationships. You have to do it with the conviction that you will work on yourself and your marriage 100% and that you will never see your lover again.

Then you’ll go through hell (and everyone else around you). But you’ve got to hang on (and so does your husband), and you’ve got to avoid the temptation to run back to your lover. Even a phone conversation can take you back to square one. I have read that it can take up to a year to get over the depression of not seeing your lover. Remember, your feelings WILL change, but expect to feel sad, lonely and hurt. These will be the darkest nights of your soul. But one has to suffer and die before coming back to life. If you are religious at all, hanging on to your spiritual life will help.

During this time, your husband MUST also work on his side of the problem. This is something that you can read about in this forum in some of the responses from Bernd. Your husband must avoid anger, disrespect and demands and give you space, space, space, as much as you need, despite the pain, the perceived risk and the impatience he will feel. It is a superhuman task, I am telling you. In my own experience, only by holding on to one’s spiritual life, can this be done. Tell him it will be hell all over again for him also, but that you will give it a 100% effort.

And whether he likes it or not, he needs to recognize that you had an affair because he failed to meet some very important needs met. He needs to listen to you, needs to change and needs to give it an all out effort also.

This needs theme and the addiction theme are two that the Marriage Builder’s website (http://www.wife.com/) emphasizes. I recommend you read every single page from that website, especially the Q &A sections on infidelity. Like you, I have read everything there is to be read on this theme, and Dr. Harley from Marriage Builder’s has the best practical insights I have ever encountered, along with Bernd’s and Lynda’s.

You also need to dig very deep inside and find out why you had an affair. You need to find out two things: One, what needs was your lover meeting that were so important to you? And related to that, what were the specific problems you were having with your husband that you may never have told him about? And two, what is that something you were searching for ? Or better yet, what is the source of your desire to seek that something (because I’m not sure we ever find what we are looking for but we can at least understand why)? And don’t seek outside of yourself, you already found that the affair didn’t help you in that respect. Seek from within. Dig deep. This is perhaps where individual therapy can help you. Don’t give it up, and don’t think that the results will be instantaneous. The road to recovery is very bumpy.

Then the next critical phase is to recognize that you had an affair because you failed to communicate these things to your husband. You need to come out of your shell. Nobody can force you to take that step. Your husband will need to be incredibly patient. But I would hope that eventually, little by little, you will crawl out. This act of communicating will also be painful to your husband. The few times my wife has talked to me in the past two weeks I have felt literally sick to my stomach. It’s been great for the waistline J, however…But remember, there is no way around it. You’ve got to go through it. Only then can your husband begin to take in the information, change and begin to meet those needs. And only then, once those very important needs are being met, only then, will you be able to fall in love with your husband again. Your falling in love happens, I think, later, after you work through all these steps, not before. You do not fall in love with him first and then you begin to work on the marriage. You do not wait for the "feelings" of romantic love to be there and then say, wow, now I can work on this relationship. That sounds like is the way it should be but I am afraid it is also the impossible way. It will never happen in that order. I keep telling that to my wife but to no avail. I am afraid at times she waits for the task at hand to become "natural" or easy.

Now, if after all of that effort your husband does not want to or cannot meet those needs, or if you are not willing to give it a 100% effort to give up your lover, then all bets are off and perhaps a divorce may be the only way to be fair to your children. But I think your children deserve an all out effort on both of your parts first. Remember, your feelings will change, and you will fall in love with your husband, but the road to get to that possibility is a difficult one and it requires a lot of work. It won’t come easy or naturally.

I also think that after going through this hell and after you have re-established your love for your husband, both of you will be extremely careful to make sure that you have your needs met by the other. In other words, you will "affair proof" your marriage, to use one of Dr. Harley’s terms. The thought you expressed, between the lines, about the risk of another affair is a real fear, my wife has it also, but it is a distraction from the immediate task at hand.

Your fear that you will conclude that you should not be with your husband is unfounded. It is more likely that you just don’t want to live without your lover because you are addicted to him. Besides, the divorce will only take place if he is not willing to gain back your love. And from what you wrote, he is willing. Give him a chance and help him; teach him how to meet the needs your lover was meeting. Teach him how to love you and you will love him back. And it will be better than anything else you’ve experienced before.

I am not sure what I have said makes sense or if it is guaranteed, but it is the only path I see one can take. From my perspective, it is the road less travelled, the "difficult" that the poet Rainer Maria Rilke talks about: that we must embrace the difficult precisely because it is difficult, that love is good, love being difficult, and that to love another person is the most difficult task, the one for which everything else is but preparation.

I hope this helps a little.

From: Bernd

Wow! Where were you Mzet when I was going thru MY hell????:)

So much of what you said rang echoes inside me, and brought back lots of memories of the struggles I had. But there is one thing that I found worked the OPPOSITE way of how I thought it should. And that's needing, expecting, wanting the spouse to work on THEIR problems.

In my case, that need and desire kept me in the quicksand, instead of helping the marriage. What I've discovered going thru that struggle is that I had to let go COMPLETELY of wanting any change from Lynda - a huge leap of faith. But in hindsight, it makes all the sense in the world. I didn't know what my own needs were, and I was so tangled up in trying to figure out what to heal, and why, that looking for any change from her led me back to the slippery slope of codependency, where I'd fall over and over again. Here's the facts, the way I see them. When one partner heals, that process alone makes "non-recovery" extremely difficult for the partner. It's like having one partner build a cosy fire - the other partner gets awfully uncomfortable keeping their coat on as long as they stay close.

As one partner heals, the contrast between their increased peace of mind and serenity becomes all too obvious to their partner. In fact, in AA, many marriages break up AFTER the alcoholic begins achieving true sobriety, because the alcohol no longer distracts the non-drinking partner as much from their own inner turmoil from past pain.

What I've found, from my own experience and that of others, is that the non-recovering partner's emotions and life usually spiral out of control even more, as their partner heals. In other words, things SEEM to get worse, instead of better. I say "seem", because it's actually a very necessary part of the process. Before we are willing to make the huge leap in faith and commitment to deal with old buried pain, our lives have to become so unmanageable that we reach the crossroads of "begin recovery", or "fall completely apart". That's the way it is, it just is.

There were many times I - and Lynda - were ready to give up trying. It wasn't the "feeling of love", no siree, that kept us hanging in there. It was that damn little voice inside us, that kept telling both of us "hang in there, it's worth it". I had made a commitment to find out how love worked, and that's the one I kept following. A commitment to learn how to love myself first, because I can only give what I own.

Expect things to get worse. Rejoice in it, bless it. Leave your partner's recovery to them and God. It will all make perfect sense one day, but first we all have to give ourselves time to "unlearn" those things that keep getting us back into the swamp. Your partner wants inner peace, love and happiness too. When they see you getting more of all that, they'll struggle mightily to keep deluding themselves that there's a shortcut, but eventually, truth has a way of knocking us all over the head with a 2x4.:)

Whew! Enough from me!

From: MZET

I hate to have to agree with you. I want a short cut for my wife sooo badly. I know there are none.

I know I have to LET GO of my partner. Totally. I know I have to heal myself, too. I intuit that only when I am finally able to be at peace with myself and the pain and fear of letting go, only then and only that will create the environment within which my wife can heal.

I know that communicating to my spouse my desire to want to see her work on her problems or worse, my direct attempts to "fix her up", do not work and worse, backfire.

I know all of that. Embracing it is another matter.

My parents have a sculpture that I never understood as a teenager. It represents a marriage: It is crucifix wherein the one crucified is a woman. She is crucified not to a cross but to a man with his arms extended as a cross.

I often think of that image. I think I finally understand.

From: Bernd

I'm keep being silently amazed at how much impact your posts have on me. My gut feeling is that you're very much on the right path. It will come. After all, if we had everything we wanted, where would we put it?:)

From: Kelle

No doubt you're right, MZET, about me not meeting some of my spouses needs,either. (Of course I KNOW you're right.)

I really appreciate the fact that in this forum, Bernd and Lynda can speak as a couple who have been there (and have recovered nicely!). . . and also that there are people like you who can help us broaden our perspective. It keeps this from being just a husband-bashing exercise. Believe me, I take very seriously all the good advice that you respondents take the time to write. THANKS!

From: Mixed

Thank you for your response. Several comments you made really hit home. I agree that I must make a decision regarding my lover. But I am afraid of the "hell" you spoke of that I will go through without him in my life. The first time I ended the affair, I began to resent my husband for "making" me chose between the two. This was not good for our relationship. We began to fight and I did not care to be in the same room with him. At least now that I am seeing my lover again, I enjoy being around my husband. I am able to tolerate my husband because I know that what he does not give me, I will get from my lover when I see him. If it was not for my lover, my husband and I would never have sex. But because of the quilt I feel, I am able to bear having sex with my husband. (Yes, the lack of sexual fulfilment is one of our problems). But what I know more than anything is that all of this is just an excuse not to work on my marriage

You talked about my husband giving me space. Part of me believes this is part of the whole problem. I have been given too much space throughout our entire marriage. I have taken advantage of his love for me and his overall gentle nature. Maybe I need less space but I also realize that I can not blame him for my behaviour. If I know I am doing something wrong, I should not continue that behaviour just because I am allowed to.

I guess I just want my cake and eat it too. I am not ready to make an 100% effort to my marriage and it is partly because I do not feel I "have" to. Sometimes I think I will only commit after I am caught again or that I am waiting to get caught so that my decision will be made for me. My husband has stated if he finds out I have had another affair, he would probably leave me.

I am also aware that I have alot of unresolved relationship issues that I brought to this marriage. Most of it has to do with my perception of a perfect marriage which of course I got from my parents. But as I have gone through my own problems, I have realized that their marriage was in no way perfect and in fact my parents stayed together for the sake of the children and are currently living in separate rooms of the house.

What amazing me about this whole situation is that I am aware of all of my problems and understand the cause of most of my actions but it as though I can not do anything about them. I just want them to magically go away even though I know that is not how it will happen. It is like you said, I will not just wake up one day and be in love with my husband again. We must first resolve our individual issues, or at least work on them, them work on our marriage before the love will come back. I just feel frozen in place. As though I can not make a move. That I realize I am sinking and I see the rope that will save me but I will not reach out for it.

I just hope that I reach out for the rope before I ruin everyone's life.

I will take your advice and soul search for the answers to why I am having an affair and what I believe I am in search of.

Thanks again for the very thoughtful advice. I will keep you posted.

From: MZET

My wife also resented me, almost hated me, for feeling that I was making her chose between me and her lover. Only when I was able to say that leaving her lover was not a condition for my wanting to get a divorce did the resentment stopped. But we have not made love (how can we if there is no love!) or even kissed since we both confronted the affair four months ago. She just cannot get herself to be intimate with me. She continues to feel very strongly about that. :(

She also came up with the same excuse you have that the affair is good for the marriage because at least that way she can be good to me, whatever that means: sex, intimacy, communication, etc. I felt otherwise, however. I just knew the passion was not there and that the whole thing was a farce. I’d rather have her be authentic to herself and to the marriage, even if it means distance from me, even if it means separation or even divorce. I think she also would rather be authentic, and I can tell you would too.

I also gave my wife an incredible amount of space during our marriage. But that was not the problem. I also had a lot of space and felt that was good. The problem is more what we do with that space. But that’s another subject. When I talk about space during recovery, I mean that while you are recovering from the addiction to your lover, you will need space. At least my wife does. Any attempt from your husband to come close to you unless you are ready for it may backfire, especially attempts to change you. I am trying really hard to not even want or need to change her.

Yes , you want your cake and eat it too. That’s what my wife wanted (or still wants, I guess). But it’s an illusion of stability. And in the process you are hurting yourself and are inflicting an almost unbearable amount of pain to your husband. And the more you wait, the closer you get to the brink of disaster. You DO "have" to face reality, eventually. That little voice inside of you is talking to you and you are listening. I can tell. The longer you wait the harder it will be. Remember, you are addicted, and it does come down to a rational decision of the will, not a feeling.

I don’t know what your husband will do if he finds out again. I’m not sure you’ll stop with more threats or even if he finds out. I threatened my wife with divorce three times; each time I really meant it. But threats do not work. In the end she made her decision to continue the affair despite of the threats, but stopped only when I stopped the threats. Odd, isn’t it?

My wife also felt (and feels) the same way you do as she was struggling to make a decision: frozen. To her, like you, it wasn’t really a matter of not knowing which way to go, but more a matter of facing the hell of not being with her lover. But if you are not giving your husband a chance to give you what your lover is giving you, if you do not teach him how to love you, how can you ever get out of the hell and fall in love with your husband again? You are in a prison and you have the key to get out and enjoy reality. Use it.

You say you feel that you are sinking and see the rope that can save you right there, within reach. You probably have touched it already. It reminds me of an image from "The Piano", the movie. Did you see it? The main character is sinking into the ocean entangled with a rope attached to her piano and, after having lost all will to survive, somehow, after what seems a hopeless eternity, she gathers the strength to free herself and swim to the surface.

I hope you (and my wife) do the same.

From: Kelle

MZET--I hope your wife does, too. Otherwise, she is obviously missing out on something good. While you are obviously and admittedly human, your perceptions here are pretty enlightening to us all. Please hang around for a while. . . there's still plenty we can learn from you!

From: luise

boy MZET, I've been to numerous counsellors and you make more sense than any of them. There is so much truth in what you say and I know it, however, there is always ONE thing in any advice, self help books, etc. that doesn't pertain to me and that is the fact that I was never in love with with my spouse in the beginning. Why did I marry? I had come off of a relationship when I was 17 and "in love" but he went to college and met someone else. I was crushed and never really got over the hurt until years later. Unfortunately for my spouse, we met not too long after the breakup when I went to college. He was so much fun and I laughed so much that I thought this was so much better than "closeness". We dated off and on for 4 years because he pursued me but I always broke it off because I was never certain. However, after college and he was still pursuing I made the "decision". I was a virgin and felt that the closeness would happen. When fireworks didn't go off added to the fact that I had married an overly critical perfectionist and someone who did not want to be close to my family or have anything to do with my father(I wanted my spouse to be like a son to my dad) I pushed the hurt away so much because I'm a peacemaker and wouldn't consider a divorce. As you mature, you realize how unhappy your life is and in your late 30's begin to realize that life is in fact very short. Entrapment and depression set in. This was 4 years ago. If I had loved my spouse in the beginning I think I would be more inclined to work harder at the marriage. He has made some great improvements in the way he treats my family now and has become much less critical, but it took 3 years of prodding to make these changes and I feel they are partly due to wanting me off his back. We have 2 wonderful children 13 and 15, good kids, and I want them to stay that way. I'm afraid splitting up our family could change that and am willing to suffer quietly for at least 5 more years. At that point, I'm afraid to think about what I may do or feel so I just keep going through the motions. NOW, do you have any more advice or do you feel sorry for me like many of the counsellors I've seen? I'm not trying to be flippant, it's just that there is no acceptable answer for me.

From: MZET

I’ve thought over and over about your case: You never loved your husband. OK. Case closed? You wouldn’t be in this forum if you thought so. Cheer up! There is hope !:)

The more I think about it the more I feel that perhaps your case is not that different from that of someone falling out of love with his or her spouse during an affair. I can tell you that my wife currently wonders if she ever loved me and she cannot imagine she ever will. I think if you read about others who have had intense emotional affairs, you will find that to some, that is also the case. So I am not sure that trying the same approach (dig deep and look at what emotional needs your husband is not meeting, then talk to him about them and ask him to change so that they are met, etc.) would not work. And I am not sure there is any other way. You may find that as soon as he meets those needs you will fall in love with him, for the first time!

And why just go through the motions for the next five years? Wouldn’t that be a waste of your time, however noble the desired outcomes of not splitting the family or not hurting the kids are? Will you have grown during those five years? Will you have found out something about yourself? Suffering quietly for the next five years and not doing anything is not really suffering. It’s something else...…perhaps giving up or accepting defeat, but NOT suffering. It’s like the parable of the talents Jesus talks about. The one who did not put the talents to work was a loser in the end. It’s the same with suffering. Put it to work. What you have now is, I believe, a talent or a gift in disguise. It’s telling you something about yourself. Can’t you see that? If you don’t try, if you don’t look, if you call it quits, you’ll never know what this is saying about you and you’ll never know if you can actually love your husband; and in the end, you will have thrown away all those years. You’ve got to try harder. The reward is just too big. And if it does not work after really trying, then you go to Plan B in five years, like I hear you say between the lines….

Anyway, I also have the feeling you think that being in new relationship or by yourself will be more fulfilling in the long run. We tend to repeat our mistakes in relationships unless we work on our current ones. If you don’t learn from the current one you will fall into the same trap in the next one. I think that’s why those who divorce and marry someone else, have a much higher chance of a second divorce.

I can also tell you that I never really loved my wife, that is, unconditionally, until after eight years of marriage, and that I never really really loved her, unconditionally and with a letting go attitude until now, twelve years into the relationship. I mean, I had fun with her, we enjoyed each other, we had that "romantic feeling" before we got married, etc. but true, mature love? Not so sure it was there.

Plus love is more than just a romantic feeling. It is a decision. Feelings are fleeting and change rapidly. I am convinced feelings of romantic love exist in our minds for strict evolutionary and Darwinian reasons: to procreate. But you cannot base a long term relationship on those feelings alone. After the game of procreation is over, after the honey moon is over, the work of loving really begins.

You are closer than you think. Imagine if you had to deal with the nightmare of an affair. That complicates things a thousand fold. You are a step closer than a lot of us. It seems as if your husband has changed and I don’t see why he wouldn’t want to change some more in order to save the marriage. You need to take the next step. What do you have to lose?

Take care.

From: luise

Thanks so much for your quick responses! I must be blind as a bat because I don't know to which talents you are referring to about me that you think will help me help myself. I have told my spouse many times what emotional needs he does not meet. I've also told him the HE too needs counselling not just with me but by himself. He has been a couple of times but he hates it and I'm tired of suggesting and dragging him along. He comes from a very mixed up family: parents divorced when he was sick, both remarried and his father moved 600 miles away. His stepdad cheated on his mother (he saw them) and his mother died when he was in college. I know that I wanted to give him the family he never had and when he rejected mine I was so hurt. I made a wrong choice and I have prayed and prayed to fall in love with him over the years and I guess I got to the point a few years ago where I stopped trying and just got the help I needed to get through this. I totally understand what you are saying (except for my talent!) and in 4 years of therapy with many different counsellors I can't see any change in my feelings except for a general acceptance that my life is not so bad....I'm just not thrilled.

From: MZET

I guess I know what you are saying. It takes two to tango and if he is really not willing to change, there is very little hope. Only a crisis will wake him up. I just hate to see him (and you) suffer when it would be so easy to try to change now. But God has a way of working in mysterious ways...

The talents I refer to have noting to do with your abilities, which I am sure you have, but more on recognizing the current situation as a challenge for growth. My point is don't give up during the next five years. Use that period in a productive way.

Take care.

From: CINDY

The truth sometimes hurts and it is clear to me that your life has been a constant merry-go-round. You can't face the fact that you want your cake and eat it to. Your children will survive what ever decision you make. Sure it's hard for them, but if there's no love between you and your husband, they will know. Children are much smarter then most people give them credit for. My advise to you is to STOP using your children as a scapegoat. Your hiding behind them and won't realize the true problem is your own insecurities.

From: Mixed

I disagree that my life has been a merry-go-round. The way I classify my life is one of always trying to do the right thing. Trying to live up to everyone else's opinion and expectations. Trying to be the good daughter, the good wife and the good mother. When I left home a year ago, that was one of the most liberating experiences of my life. I had to put up with everyone telling me I was doing the wrong thing. But at the time, I felt that what I was doing was right. But later I realized I was just being very selfish.

In addition, I am not using my children as a scapegoat. I am using my children as the motivating factor for me to honour the commitment we made to them when we brought them into this world. (Not to blame them for the way my life has turned out which is what scapegoating means - one who bears the blame for others). We commitment to provide a safe, secure and loving environment for them to grow in. But to honour my commitment to my children,I need to also honour the commitment I made with my husband to stay with him for better or worse. I am trying to think about someone's feeling other than myself. I am trying to weigh the effects that leaving versus staying would have on their lives. Trust me, I have done alot of homework on children of divorce. I have talked to more people who are products of divorce and also those who are products of living in a house with no love. My research says that the majority of the people I spoke with said they would rather their parents stay together as long as there was no violence or disrespect than get a divorce.

Because I do not know the future, I am very insecure about how my decision will affect their lives so therefore, I must make the best decision I can now. That is to work on my marriage. True I am not ready to work on it yet, but I am not ready to throw it all way just yet either.

That is why I am seeking the advice of others to help me see how I can make this marriage work and bring back the love to our marriage. I know that I at least owe it to my children to at least give it a try. So until I do that, I guess in your opinion, I will continue to use them as a scapegoat.

From: luise

Dear mixed......I read your post and thought "did I write this?" No kidding, between you and kelle, the three of us must be an awful lot alike. I have been the good, dutiful wife, the good mother, the dependable daughter, but I'm so disappointed that I am not happy. Mostly I', not happy in my marriage. I live for my kids and it scares the heck out of me to think that in 5 years they will be 18 and 19. I fear that I will stay here even then because I want them to have our home to come to on college breaks, etc. But all those days in between college visits will be what for me? I feel like a wimp but it's the principals that I believe in and was raised by. No divorce in my immediate family and since my husband and I get along most of the time it's hard to think about splitting up. I know this sounds awful but at times I have almost wished he'd have an affair! I think I'll change my name here to Crazy Luise!

From: cindy

Hi, I guess I should have said more then I did in my last response, so here goes. I completely understand what your feeling, but to stay together just for the children isn't fair to them and most of all to your husband. What you have to understand first and foremost why you strayed from your marriage in the first place. When a women doesn't feel loved, cared for, respected, or if she is verbally abused like I was, you will look for some other king of security, love or companionship somewhere else. Most times, it's with another man. I had an affair with another man and ended it a short time later because my children didn't deserve it, or my husband. I felt if I got it out of my system, thing would get better. They only got worse. As a women matures she realizes what she wants and what the needs from their partner. Alot of those things their partner can't give. It's only after years of maturity and a lot less of thinking about what he needs and more about what you need, is when you will finally make the final decision to leave for good. Your children deserve 2 loving parents to raise them. They need to see love and respect between you and your husband. That is what setting a good example is about. Not you going out, coming home and pretending your life is a bed of roses. Your children will sense it and know the difference. If there to young now to understand, they will know soon enough.

My children now see their father as often as they want because I felt they needed that extra security. I was right, they are adjusting just fine, my daughters marks are A++++ and my son is doing very well. My life has been different to say the least, but I'm happy and content with myself and with my children. My boyfriend is a part of my life but we don't live together. That is something I can't elaborate on because as far as I'm concerned, my children have had enough adjusting in their lives so why disrupt that by moving in with someone. In time maybe, but for now we are all happy the way thing are including their father. Sorry if I sounded cruel in my last message. I was just trying to make a very strong but honest point. Take it from someone who's been there. There is happiness out there.


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