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Should I move back home?

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Viewing 13 posts - 1 through 13 (of 13 total)
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  • #182039
    alibro991
    Participant

    7 months ago I left my husband and moved out of our house. We have two children 14 & 11. I left for a lot of reasons. Boredom, resentment, anger and just feeling unappreciated. I had been feeling for a while like I was trapped in an unhappy marriage. I started going out with a single girlfriend and wishing I was free. During this time, I cheated on my husband and he did find out. He wanted to work things out but I decided I needed to leave and figure out what I really wanted. What I really wanted was to party and have fun. I didn’t have fun with my husband. He never wanted to do anything fun. He doesn’t drink so I wasn’t allowed to have to much and if I did he would always get so angry. I love my apartment, but I am starting to miss my kids. While I have been out of the house I have been very involved with them. I see them all the time and we share custody. But I know they miss me at home. Now I’m thinking I should go home and be with them. My ex says he wants me back, but I’m not entirely sure I want to go back to him. I really just want to do what is right for my kids. I have met a few men, but I’m really just having fun with them. Nothing serious.

    I just think I’m going through some kind of phase and I just need to suck it up and go home where I’m loved and needed. But I also love being single. Also, my family is very upset I left. My parents are upset. What should I do because I am under pressure to sign a new lease at my place, but I wont if I might go back home.

    Undecided.

    #182085
    Poppyxo
    Participant

    Hi Alibro991,

    Can I ask your age? Can I also ask at what age you got married & had children? Did you air these concerns to your husband before you left? How do you feel about your most recent behaviour?

    #182111
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear alibro991:

    I tend to think, having just re-read all your posts on the other thread, that it is better that you do not move back home.

    You wrote above that you are considering to “go home where I’m loved and needed”- loved and needed by your husband? Doesn’t read like you have been loved and needed by your husband, not for a long, long time.

    Of course you are loved by your children, but the damage done to them by this bad marriage and separation has already been done. More of the same bad marriage, will that fix the damage done to them? Is your  husband not going to keep reaching out, inappropriately, to your daughter for comfort regarding this bad marriage…

    During this separation you didn’t gain insight into what went wrong in this marriage, so going back to it does not lead me to think there will be any improvement. It may cause further deterioration in that marriage and in the well being of your children.

    If during this physical separation you gained new insight, if there was an improvement in the communication between you and your husband during this separation, then maybe you going back would have been a good idea, some promise in it. But with neither insight nor improved communication, there is no realistic hope for a better marriage.

    You wrote above that maybe you “just need to suck it up and go home”- well you have been sucking it up for years, in this marriage, before you left.

    If you think of your marriage at this point, what has been wrong with it, and wrong for such a long time, or was it wrong from the beginning?

    anita

    #182143
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi alibro991,

    My vote is that you leave… AFTER the children are in college! As a mom, it is SO important that you and the dad are both at home. Your teenagers are more likely to rebel if their very own mother is out partying and never home. You are essentially choosing the single lifestyle over them. The mother leaving home and having affairs is even more of an abandonment psychologically for them than the father doing it. No one wants their MOM ditching them for some single lifestyle. Forget your husband. If you work it out, great. If you don’t work it out, let him be boring and mad. In the old days marriage was really for the stability of the home ~ for the children. And for inheritance purposes. Not necessarily for love. Now you go back home FOR the children! When they go off to college, then you can separate. They will be better off for it. Trust me.

    Inky

    #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.

    #182175
    Inky
    Participant

    There are plenty of attractive fifty-something women! You can always make yourself look ten years younger.

    Just remember: Right now it’s all about the kids.

    Inky

    #182193
    Amy
    Participant

    Is there not a way that you can still do it “for the kids” yet stay separated from your husband?  It does not sound like a healthy loving relationship that you have with your husband and at ages 11 & 14, I can guarantee that your children are already picking up on this unhealthy dynamic and the nuances of the relationship and are able to tell a lot more than you think.

    I would push you to consider your own motives before deciding anything.  If you are really focused completely on your children’s welfare and well-being, please do put them first and get yourself into therapy to see what is causing you to want to drink so much.  In therapy, you can also work through the issues with your husband, but maybe it would be best to sort that out BEFORE moving back home and disrupting things again.

    It doesn’t currently sound like you are able to put your children’s needs before your own.  Are you dedicated to changing this and doing anything you can to take care of them?  If not, perhaps you might consider the fact that their father would be able to do that.

    I understand some of the sentiment here that having a mother at home is the utmost importance, but I personally had the experience of growing up with an alcoholic abusive mother and I would have been much better off without her around.  She is finally now out of my life for good after I have estranged her, but while your children are so young I would really urge you to look into some of these behavior patterns of yours for their sake.  You can’t just “tough out” the next few decades.

    Good luck to you and your family– this sounds like a very difficult decision.

    Amy

    #182333
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear alibro991:

    You are welcome. My comment this morning: for a child to grow up with parents who fight against each other is very damaging for the child. It is better, way better for a child to grow up with one parent than it is for a child to grow up with two parents who fight.

    To grow up with one parent who confides with his child (like your husband does with your daughter) is also very damaging. There are different ways to damage a child, unfortunately. Help your children, whatever it takes, living with your husband or not.

    anita

     

    #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.

    #182795
    Poppyxo
    Participant

    alibro991,

    you said “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.”  how healthy is this for your children, & there physical & emotional wellbeing, I wonder?

    #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.

    #182849
    Poppyxo
    Participant

    Have you spoken to your husband about the status of your relationship?

    Have you seen a therapist, together & or apart?

    I haven’t picked up on any communication between the two of you… It does all seem selfish, you’re right.

    #182875
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear alibro991:

    The title of your thread is: “Should I move back home?”-

    Here is how you defined your home in your last post: “the prison … where my husband ignores me and watches TV all night. And my kids, stay in their rooms”.

    No then, you should not go back to prison. What would be the point in you living there? Commit to your new life as a single woman, a separated/divorced mother of two. Settle into your new life, stop considering going back to prison.

    You will be a better mother (my main concern) if you stay away from prison. If you find the freedom you need, the life you want.

    * you wrote that you are a “functioning alcoholic”- what does it mean to you, being a functioning alcoholic, what are the advantages and disadvantages of being it?

    anita

     

Viewing 13 posts - 1 through 13 (of 13 total)

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