fbpx
Menu

alibro991

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 18 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: Husband who wont let go #280915
    alibro991
    Participant

    Valora,

    We have been married 20 years and dated for 5 before that. It is very hard to pull that trigger on divorce. I am ready but my husband is not and all of the complex emotions that go with it. If I could just leave and buy a place I would, but I have alot of debt and as much as I want a divorce, I am afraid of the unknown.

    alibro991

    in reply to: Husband who wont let go #280871
    alibro991
    Participant

    Mark thanks for asking. My husband still loves me and as much cheating as I have done, he doesn’t want a divorce. He wont sell the house, which I need the money from the equity of the sale. He is hoping we will reconcile someday but right now I want to be single. Again, I moved out once and if I move again I want to be able to share full custody and you need money for a new life.

    in reply to: Husband who wont let go #280777
    alibro991
    Participant

    My girl is 15 and my boy is 12. They are not aware that I am dating other men. Its not often, but I have been on dates with other men on the weekends. I know it seems logical for me to move in with my parents, but my mother is a literal nightmare. We dont get along and the last time I moved out my kids suffered too much with out me.

    in reply to: Should I move back home? #182847
    alibro991
    Participant

    Let me clarify. I don’t drink around my kids. I mean, I may have a glass of wine but I wait until I don’t have them to have my fun. I know all of this sounds bad. I know all of this sounds selfish. But I don’t want to go back to the prison that is my home where my husband ignores me and watches tv all night. And my kids, stay in there rooms. I only have this one life and I’m getting older so I’m having fun.

    in reply to: Should I move back home? #182759
    alibro991
    Participant

    Thank you for all the responses. I feel like I’m moving back home for all the wrong reasons. I know this sounds selfish, but right now I like being a part-time Mom. I see my kids all the time, even when its not my custody week. They are very in tuned to my drinking and everyone around me has kind of adapted to it. I know I’m a functioning alcoholic and my ex-wants me to quit and I refuse. He has been through recovery before and I have resentment towards him that he wants me to change. It has to be my decision. If I move back home, I will have to be back in my marriage 100% and I don’t know if I want that. Sometimes I am stubborn and avoid doing things that are best for me.

    in reply to: Should I move back home? #182167
    alibro991
    Participant

    Thank you for the responses. My parents have been married for 55 years. They have fought all my life and stayed together because of the kids. I used to think that was an old school thinking but now I do think I should just tough it our for my kids. Maybe when I go back home I can grow to love my husband again. We can both take this experience and work through our problems. Although I love being single, Its time for me to wind down and settle back home I think.

    Anita, you have some really great points. Inky, if I wait for my kids to go to college I will be 53. I am 46 right now. I don’t think I will be very attractive to the opposite sex at 53, but I guess that’s not important.

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178345
    alibro991
    Participant

    And allowing my daughter to be used by him? With her living with him I am not there to protect her all the time. He said the other day he was crying alone and she came to him. I don’t know how to stop that. Except to keep telling my husband to put the kids feelings first instead of his own. My son is the opposite, he isolates himself on his video games and chooses not to have any interest in what’s going on around him.

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178343
    alibro991
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    You have made some excellent points. My father was and alcoholic growing up. So my husband always  said aren’t you glad I’m not like your Dad out in a bar. That is what he used constantly to justify what a good husband he was and use his sobriety as a crown of some sort. I have to admit  to you, in the last year, feeling lonely in my marriage I too have become a functional alcoholic just as my father was.  So I became the scapegoat as you will with our marriage failing. The focus is all on me, never on him. My family feels my husband can do no wrong. But they haven’t lived with him for 25 years.

    Allison

     

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178295
    alibro991
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    My husband is grieving the loss of me. He gets very angry and uses my daughter against me knowing he should not. He was told about this when we were both in counseling. I am pretty sure he has told my daughter that I was with another man. He was beside himself with anger and grief when I left. Like I said before, I love my apartment and having alone time. I have been out with a few men and I am enjoying it. However, I feel like a bad mother leaving my perfect family to date and have fun with other men.

    Allison

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178241
    alibro991
    Participant

     

     

    • This reply was modified 7 years, 1 month ago by alibro991.
    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178237
    alibro991
    Participant

    Thank you for your responses Anita. You are a huge help.

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178231
    alibro991
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    Actually yes, when my husband is feeling sad and crying. He often turns to my daughter for someone to talk to . It makes me so upset he does that. It also adds fuel to the hate she already has for me. Right after the affair, we went to counseling to work it out. It was not my first affair either. I cheated on him the first year we were married too. After that first affair, I was 100% committed to repairing the marriage. We came out of it better than ever. This second affair 18 years later, I’m not feeling committed to the marriage. In counseling, he was trying and I just was not. Then I decided to leave.

    Allison

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178221
    alibro991
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    I meant that being married to my husband wasn’t always horrible. We had good times as well as bad. I guess he would always judge me when I drank to much or spent to much. Nagging mostly. When I would talk to him about things he was very rarely sympathetic and always managed to make it my fault. Just didn’t support me. I’m sure I was horrible with him and I learned a lot of bitterness from him also.

    Allison

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178207
    alibro991
    Participant

    My 14 yr old daughter is not taking the separation well. She is very angry with me for leaving. Even though I see her and talk to her daily. She just started therapy to talk about it so I really hope it helps her. She sees her Dad sad and it hurts her.

    in reply to: Is it a mid-life crisis? #178205
    alibro991
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    I feel like its a little more than just trying to recapture my youth. It wasn’t always horrible with my husband. But I just always imagined having a different life. One where I didn’t cook and clean after my husband and have to listen to him judging me and cutting me down when I was sad. I don’t mind cooking for my kids, but just resented him so much I had to leave. Does that make sense?

    Allison

     

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 18 total)