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October 31, 2007, 2:53 pm PDT
Still confused here...
Quote From: jelebean1Unfortunately I didn't find these things again until a few weeks after he had the stroke and I got on his computer. So here I was nursing this person, being a good wife and human being and pretty much just getting crapped on. Sorry to be so blunt but I see no other way to put it.....In fact I HAVE pity for him is the problem vs NO pity if you read what I wrote....If he was not sick I would have left and gone to take care of my mother where I know I would be appreciated. His being sick is a great part of why I am here. I will say that monetary reasons are also a huge part of things and even when he was gone he always left a majority of the money to pay the bills and I will go as far as to say relieve some of his guilt. He wrote me a letter a few weeks ago and basically acknowledged that he knows he has a problem and has for years. Dishonesty has been a way of life apparently for a large portion of his adulthood and has torn up past relationships as well as this one. I have turned into an extremely tolerant person as I have aged and have been living my life for my children who are now all nearly grown. Maybe it isn't much in the way of self respect but keep in mind that this is my third marriage, I am a person of deep commitment and also have religious views now that I didn't hold several years ago. On the other hand I have the harsh slap of reality telling me that the minute he is better his behavior will repeat.
My family knows very little. "Our" daughter just happens to be the youngest of six and we have one more child left at home. (yours mine and ours.....) I hide so much inside and put on a happy face. No one at church knows and very little people outside of my closest circle of friends know.
Do I love this man? Absolutely with all my heart. I know he hates the messes he has created but it is like he is an addict of some sort who doesn't know how to handle his issues and I am a person who feels like they are treading water to help everyone else stay afloat. OK, so you're saying that you thought your husband was being faithful until after his stroke when you found evidence that he was still carrying on the same sad saga of porn and setting up meets with people. Don't worry about your words, they are apt. You HAVE been crapped on, more than once.
What I was asking was what has changed this time?
He has never been a good husband, and you have caught him in the past in infidelities and lying. Yet you stayed with him. You do admit that part of the reason you stayed was because he always provided for you and the kids. You don't have to say anything on these boards if you don't want to, but you MUST be brutally honest with yourself. Did you settle for this arrangement because it enabled you to take care of your children better than you could have as a single parent? Did you delude yourself about what he was up to because it was easier to do so than to divorce him and have the kid's lives uprooted again? And now that he has had a stroke you may have to see more of him in the future than you care to, and THIS is what has you contemplating leaving him? I would add, is this why you feel guilty and protest that you DO love him, etc etc etc?
Understand, I'm NOT judging you. I know all too well what it feels like to be trapped in a marriage that seems to be all in favor of the one who is lying and cheating. What you have is a crisis. He has been slapped with his mortality and you are not so sure you can muster the proper sentiments, especially in the face of the latest discoveries.
I can't tell you what to do, beyond what I have- face your demons. If you really believe that he will revert to his former ways when he is better, then maybe it's time to take stock of your life and what you have been deluding yourself about all these years.
So that means things have to change. I can sense in your posts the reluctance, the wishing it would all just resolve itself and life go on much as it did before. I know this feeling also, he made the mess, he should have to do all the work. The thing you have to realize is that you enabled him to get away with it all these years. He may have developed some nasty habits, but you let it get swept under the rug. I know how easy that is when you're raising kids, when your husband is uninvolved, you tend to put the kids above the marriage. When he doesn't beat you and pays the bills and leaves for periods of time, it helps you to set up your life in a way that gets you through the day. It's not a glamorous life, but you feel "normal." Until things are upset and there's no going back. (This is the "change" I wanted you to zero in on.)
Dr Phil recommends that you work your way out of a marriage, by availing yourself of counseling and anything else that you can try. My suggestion is that if your husband is truly remorseful, but doesn't seem to be doing much to make it up to you, YOU need to fill in the blanks for him. Decide what you need from him and let him know. Hold him to any agreements he makes with you. Beware of ultimatums though, like "I'll divorce you if you ever___again" unless you are absolutely prepared to back them up with action.
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