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Feel surprisingly calm: Mantra( I deserve to be happy)

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  • #123821
    Nan
    Participant

    Coming back to post after several months. Things are moving forward, Barriers that were, are going away. A little bit of money stashed. House was sold and living with R-2 in apartment, for last 2, going on 3 months. R-1 final divorced and in January will move out of home after payment of his half of house in January and find a place for us. R-1 remains steady and steadfastly calm and absolutely enchanting to me. No pressure, but waiting for me, as long as it takes, he says.His love is unconditional and never wavers.
    Holidays a little miserable as I put that smile on my face and barge through the holidays with R-2 and son. Lots of gifts that meant very little to me. Son will go back to college mid-January.
    Feeling calm, I have thought of all the “What If’s” and worked my way through the scenarios.
    Will leave sometime soon in the next few months, and drop the note on the table and temporarily go to a cheaper hotel with my pet, to weather the storm and settle my thoughts. Able to work from anywhere as I have laptop and just need W–Fi.
    Terrible of me to just drop and run after 36 years, but (I DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    R-2 will probably collapse and disintegrate or some type of breakdown, but (I DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    R-2 and son will both be bitter, angry and maybe violent, but (I DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    The filthy things I will be called will be terrible, but (I DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    I may never get divorced if R-2 throws up barriers, but (I DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    For R-1 and I, any and all family members may hate us and tell us so, but (WE DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    We are in our 60’s, so life is getting short, and (WE DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    R-1 waits gently,calm and faithful, for me to make our life together, and to hell with the rest of the world (WE DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)

    I have been in counseling for more than one year for myself. My counselor says I am an inspiration to her, as it is never too late to find your true happiness and shed the things that aren’t working for you, whether relationships, work, families or anything that doesn’t allow you to be truly happy and in joy…..after giving my entire life to others and taking very little for myself, I have recognized nothing is as important as being happy, calm, centered, and knowing in your own soul (I DESERVE TO BE HAPPY)
    Nan, she ran…. to find her way………..

    • This topic was modified 7 years, 4 months ago by Nan.
    #123823
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Nan:

    Nan- she deserves to be happy: calm, centered, loved.

    I was hoping to read from you before New Year. I never understood, in all my reading of your posts, why you think R-2 will be violent. I didn’t read any evidence to him being inclined to be homicidal or suicidal or otherwise bring about physical mayhem as a result of you leaving. It is possible, as any person has the brain that can conceive of violence and carry it through, but seems to me improbable, as far as R-2 is concerned.

    This is how I assume he reacts to you leaving, and again, taken from my reading of your posts:

    He will complain and approach others for sympathy: poor me! My terrible wife left me! Oh, poor, poor me!

    Pretending in the meantime, living with R-s, must be very hard, as used as you are to it, isn’t it?

    anita

    #123826
    Nan
    Participant

    He probably wont be violent, as he is older. I feel he may be out of control, as there are many women who are hurt or killed when the man feels he has nothing to lose, and doesnt want the woman to be happy in any way. Also, the fact that this scenario played out 40 years ago, when I was dating both and went to R-1 and married him, left him and it may feel like R2 “won”. Maybe he cant give that up. SO, I am practical and leery, and wont be foolish enough to not pay attention to what could occur. There are many shocking stories out there.
    Not so hard with the fake. I deserve an Oscar for my performance sometimes !

    #123835
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Nan:

    You wrote that “there are many shocking stories out there” – so I did a tiny bit of research:

    https:// en.wikipedia. bborg/wiki/ Domestic_violence_in_the_United_States
    says: “1,181 females were killed by their intimate partners in 2005.”

    infoplease. com/ipa says there were 879,000 divorces in the US in 2005.

    Divide 329 by 879,000 and it is about 0.1% IF all murdered women were newly divorced in that year. The percentage is less than 0.1% for you because of your and R-2’s ages, lack of history of domestic violence, etc.

    Now, notice this,
    https: //www.cardiosmart. org/Heart-Basics/CVD-Stats, reads:
    “35.3% of deaths in American women over the age of 20, or more than 432,000, are caused by cardiovascular disease each year.”

    This means, according to my unprofessional understanding, that your chance to die of a cardiovascular disease (caused or aggravated by the anxiety of living with R-2, planning and pretending and so forth…?) is about 400 TIMES your chance of being murdered by R-2. (1,181 as opposed to 432,000)

    What do you think about this?

    anita

    #124014
    Nan
    Participant

    Yes, I realize the anxiety/cardiovascular disease connection. I am pretty good at compartmentalizing feelings and anxiety over the years. Not feeling guilty anymore or confused, so only have to deal with the unending desire to be elsewhere these days.
    I am not overly fearful of violence, but living here, the news is quite repetitive, with the shooting thing. 3 days ago, a woman on the highway a few blocks from my home, was shot in the head by her estranged husband and killed. He followed her out of her job, pulled up beside her and nailed her. I am very interested in criminal psychology, so do read and attempt to understand the violence factor. My expertise is in domestic violence and as nurse, seen it all practically.
    I calm myself when my heart is aching, by realizing that R-1 and I are closer than ever to the big event. It has been nearly 3 years, and surprisingly, when we connected in 2014,, we had both talked of 3 years being the time that would seem right. His house would be totally paid off and it would just be an asset divided, without mortgages, title transfers, paperwork, etc. Also, the barrier of estranged wife holding hostage is over. He had a brief period of having a medical emergency that was a surprise, as he never took pills for anything, no medical issues, and was never in the hospital.
    The estranged wife had the reality check that she would be stuck with his medical bills, or have to take care of him if he remained ill. So, I guess she was ready to cut loose fast after that. We spoke of 3 years on my side, as I wanted my son to graduate, and not have drama or excuse to not finish college. So, even though it felt faraway, it is only weeks or a couple months away. My, how time flies! He will graduate in May and I feel that if I leave earlier, then it will totally be his choice to waste the 3 1/2 years he has already invested.

    Taking it all in, a day at a time. I have learned I cant control anything. I can only control myself.

    #124016
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Nan:

    Please promise me that when you make the move you will write about it here? It’s been a long time… even for me and I am so curious to know how it is going to work out.

    You wrote that you can’t control anything but you sure have been trying, sure are trying, to make the move just at the right time and the right way to avoid the different catastrophes you envision: your son not graduating, R-2 falling apart into paralysis of sorts, suicide or worse: causing mayhem.

    And yet, again, as one reading your posts over time, your son and R-2 don’t read to me, from your sharing, as sensitive or likely to not graduate or fall apart. It reads to me that they will be fine. Reads to me that R-2 will lie to you and to others about how badly he will be doing, so to manipulate you.

    Remember that, will you: anita said R-2 is likely to tell you (directly or indirectly, through another) how badly he is doing.. maybe how badly your son is doing, and you will be inclined to believe him because you already predict such catastrophes, but check the truthfulness of it before believing.

    Back to the title of your thread: yes, you do deserve to be happy, and the good news: your happiness will not bring unhappiness to anyone at all, says I!

    anita

    #124017
    Nan
    Participant

    I will follow up with this TB site, so the end of the story can be told. A different ending to “Bridge of Madison County”. Francesca finally gets it, the happiness she wants and deserves!

    #124018
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Nan:

    Yes, Francesca maybe thought it would be better to her then teenage children that she stays with their father, and she stayed. But her daughter ended up in a bad marriage. The daughter, at the end of the movie, decided to leave her bad marriage after reading her mother’s story. She, the daughter, decided to make the choice her mother was too afraid to make. Hence, the message is- go fro it, Nan- Nan she ran, this time toward something good.

    anita

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