fbpx
Menu

Traumatic divorce, remarriage of ex has brought out a lot of grief

HomeForumsTough TimesTraumatic divorce, remarriage of ex has brought out a lot of grief

New Reply
Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #128117
    Alfred
    Participant

    So to put things into a nut shell, my spouse whom I had been with for nearly 10 years and had a child with, had an “exit” affair (started off being a long distance relationship) a year ago and we got divorced last year.
    It was a very traumatic experience, as we lived together in the same house for a few months after discovering she had someone
    else in the picture, and she would talk to that person in another room for hours while we were living together. I was still in love with her at that time and it was emotionally devastating to go through, I pleaded for her to not do it but her response was that we were done and I had to get over it. So night after night I’d be in our bedroom crying and she’d be laughing in the other room talking to the other man.
    She prematurely introduced my son to the man and went as far as having our son recording good night messages to the man while I was in the house. It was painful to see that happening.
    She even got my son to start saying “I love you” to that man only 2 weeks after introducing them to each other.
    It was very heart-breaking for me to see her manipulating our child and bending him however she wanted to benefit her new relationship. Betrayal was an understatement.
    She did a lot of things that were quite malicious and almost seemed like she was trying to just replace me fast. She even went as far as to trying to get our child to dress like her boyfriend and look like him in appearance.

    I thought there was a chance of reconciliation even after our separation but she was checked out. She initially had the idea of taking our child outside of the country to go live at her boyfriends but backtracked on it I believe because she knew I would go to court if she tried.
    But I was running around like a sprint runner and anxious through the roof thinking my son would be taken out of the country, I was in that state for about 3 months until she told me that her boyfriend would be moving here.
    It all happened extremely fast. They were living together only a few months after our divorce was final.
    Less than a year after that, they got married. The wedding just happened and brought out much grief in me.
    It brought out memories of our wedding, of the family we used to have, the things we shared and the companionship that was constant.
    After the divorce, one of the hardest things to do was accept that I’d only be seeing my son half the time.
    It was something I had such a hard time coming to terms with.
    I didn’t want to miss time with him.
    Letting go of that was very very hard. Letting go of the idea that I can’t control what happens on her time with our child was tough.
    I couldn’t believe she would settle for seeing him half the time. She was always impulsive in her decision making.
    So as I mourn the loss of our relationship, lots of life questions came up, lots of what do I do now moments have come up, questions about my life’s purpose and mortality, my faith, impermanence in this life (this one has sort of upset me a little).
    I’m just dealing with a lot.
    And on top of that, she is now moving an hour away, our custody won’t change because her husband will be driving him back here for school as they promised, but having that distance between me and my son has been heavy on my heart.
    How can I move forward? How can I be at peace with my son being that far from me when he’s not here?
    I’m trying to let go of the idea that we were supposed to be together forever.
    Please, any words of encouragement and advice would be greatly appreciated.
    Thank you for taking the time to read this, anyone, everyone who does, thank you, love you all.

    #128129
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear peacetoall:

    You described a heartless woman, one who had no consideration for your emotions, who didn’t care about hurting you and proceeded to hurt you day after day, laughing while you were crying.

    Did she ever care for you… ? If she used to care for you, what happened between you and her, if anything, to lead her to have absolutely no care for you?

    anita

    #128151
    Alfred
    Participant

    Hmm, I think she did, but in retrospect it’s hard to say what she felt for me. She was in a bad situation at the beginning, she wanted out of a bad family situation, I took her out and then it became one thing after the other. I think she did care for me, but I think I wasn’t what she wanted me to be. She had a lot of insecurities and needed a lot of validation that I don’t think I was able to constantly give her. And so she took it as me not loving her how I was supposed to. I asked her why she stayed with me so long at the end, she said it was convenient for her. I certainly have my flaws and take responsibility for our issues. But I don’t think anything could justify what she did to me. I don’t believe I lead her to being that way, I could have loved anyone the same way, I’m capable of putting my heart into a relationship fully. And I did. I loved her unconditionally. But her expectations perhaps were not realistic, and even then I went above and beyond in many ways.

    #128155
    Alfred
    Participant

    I suppose my values and hers are different, she was raised with constant change, I was raised with stability and predictability. Her parents split, mine stayed together. She moved often, I didn’t. She’s following a familiar pattern. Her mother did the same thing to her father as well. My idea was that family works through everything, you try everything you can before you call it quits, but clearly we weren’t on the same page.

    #128199
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear peacetoall:

    I am sorry for the pain you experience and have been experiencing for so long. Clearly, half time with your son is legally all you can have, with the custody agreement you have. Make the best of it, being a good father to your son. Be gentle with yourself as you grieve your dissolved marriage and limited time with your son.

    I re-read your original post and two following posts, trying to understand better what could have happened. What I figure is that she was and is indeed heartless. She did not and does not value you, figuring that hurting you is not a matter worth considering. All that mattered to her was she feeling good.

    I think she allowed herself the outrageous behaviors of talking to her boyfriend- while you were in the other room, still married- talking and laughing, having your son say good night and ‘I love you’ to her boyfriend- while you are in the other room, crying-

    She felt comfortable doing those heartless, outrageous things because she knew there is no danger from you, that is, you will be the devoted husband you have been to her, no matter what she does. She put her all into her new relationship knowing she… owns you, so to speak, that there will be no consequence to her behavior, that you will always welcome her as your wife.

    She was correct about you being there for her no matter what she did. After all that she did, those outrageous behaviors on her part, you “thought there was a chance of reconciliation even after our separation” – you were willing to have her back as your wife.

    You have to be careful about WHO it is that you love unconditionally. Don’t love unconditionally, at least not by intent, a woman who has no love for you. There is no merit in such love.

    Interesting, you ended your original post with “love you all”- freely and indiscriminately giving your love to all. Evaluate a person first before loving that person and giving that person your all, and you will prevent future traumas and grief. Hope you learn and heal.

    anita

    #128281
    Alfred
    Participant

    Thank you Anita, youre right, all I can do is all I can do and I make the most of the time I spend with my son. When he is with me its just about us and enjoying our time together.
    Thank you for the different perspective.
    I have been given a lot of good advice on this journey but I never looked at it the way you said it.
    To be careful who I give all my love to. Thats a big lesson for me. A huge lesson. I just thought once im in it were working it out til death do us part but you cant solely depend on others for happiness. I depended on her for that and thats where I went wrong. With her I didnt have much of a backbone, I was passive a lot and allowed her to make me believe it was always me who did something wrong. That there was something wrong with me but I no longer see it that way.
    I was willing to have her back but the truth is I would not trust her. In reality I didnt fully trust her before it happened because of similar behavior she showed in the past with other people. But I forgave her and thought it could work.
    I got used to the kind of “love” I had with her because I never knew any other kind. She was my first relationship. We were so young when we met and jumped into things quick.
    I have learned so much though. As painful as it has been and can still be, I know more now of what I want from a relationship and to not make my world revolve around anyone completely. But to find someone who can compliment me and for me to do the same for them. But not in a way where we are.holding onto eachother to survive.
    I do say love you all in a pure sense of just sending my good intentions out to anyone who wants to receive it. But youre right. I cant just give my love to anyone and the next time I do fall in love it will be different.
    That person will cherish me for everything I am and everything I am not. They are out there somewhere.
    Im just going to live and pursue my passions and live with good intentions. Thank you for your helpful words.

    #128313
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi peacetoall,

    This woman has something seriously wrong with her. Like a mental illness, but that would be insulting people with mental illnesses. It’s not what you do, it’s how you do it. If she wanted to divorce you, fair enough. She would actually be doing everyone a favor, as she does not deserve you anyway. But the thing is, to act openly like she was single, to dress your son like soon to be husband #2, to groom him into saying “I love you”, to move in together and get married so soon after the divorce. That’s horrible!!

    One suggestion would be to move close to where they are for the sake of your son.

    And guess what? When your son is in college she will shed this one as well in an equally outrageous way.

    Blessings to You,

    Inky

    #128355
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear peacetoall:

    You are welcome. I do hope you learn all you can from this relationship and make good choices in the future.

    You wrote: “I got used to the kind of ‘love’ I had with her because I never knew any other kind.”- good point. Now you do know that “love” was not love. You wrote that you were passive, lacked a backbone with her- but that did not give her the moral/ ethical right to mistreat you.

    You wrote: “In reality I didnt fully trust her before it happened because of similar behavior she showed in the past with other people. But I forgave her and thought it could work.”- when she mistreated other people, it was up to them to forgive her, or not. It was up to you to learn WHO she is, but you didn’t take on that opportunity.

    Best to you, post anytime.

    anita

    #128619
    Alfred
    Participant

    Thanks Inky, she does have manic depression, but it seems to be under control right now. I know that she tries to find happiness by changing the things around her but she hasn’t yet learned that the change has to come from within before all.

    You’re right Anita. She was my first anything, I will definitely never forget the life lessons and growth from this experience. I couldn’t if I tried. I’m going to follow my dreams and just do the best I can for me, my son, my family and the world around me. Three months into our relationship she was talking to other people, but I didn’t think it would happen again so I gave her another chance, there was so much I didn’t know, my innocence was still childlike. But I won’t let anyone take my heart and mistreat it like that again. I’ve realized that I’m worthy of good things, I deserve love and I will pursue my passions with the time I have.

    #128681
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear peacetoall:

    I hope you copy your thread, especially your latest post and frame it (your latest post, for sure)- then re-read it every so often!

    anita

    #129135
    Alfred
    Participant

    Thank you Anita I will definitely be taking that advice to heart. Have a blessed week.

Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic. Please log in OR register.