I think grief is very personal. We all know people who rebounded fast and start a new life, even after dealing with a runaway spouse. We also know people who never get through the betrayal and stay in the anger for the rest of their lives. For me, I think I have healed as much as possible. This is what I need to accept, not that he left. I know we can't predict the future, but it is unlikely - no matter how my life turns out - that I will ever say this was a good thing. I will never believe that the destruction of my family unit was necessary in order for me to grow personally - that the growth from the pain was positive to my life. Lately, I feel that those around me are measuring my healing. If I say I had a terrible marriage and thank goodness he is out of my life, then they think I am healed. If not, I am still "broken" and shouldn't consider dating and re-building. This type of scrutiny is difficult for me to process.
I did not have a terrible marriage and for many years his words and actions matched. When it blew up, I was in total trauma and fight/flight mode. In the end, I went NC to help myself. I worked on myself, I learned to get in touch with my feelings, I did the best I could financially and recreating a home for myself. I feel as if I have made great progress, but I feel so judged - by people who have no idea what we have been through. Yes, it will be five years, and as I said earlier I still have the physical pain in the morning, force myself to start my day, and miss him terribly. The nights are long as I don't have children living at home to keep me distracted. Is it still about him or am I just lonely. If or when I do decide to date, if I am lucky enough to find someone important, will that daily pain go away - maybe, but it won't dissolve 20+ years of life with him. It will be different, and can be as good, but won't erase the marriage or how it ended. I am not sure I am making sense tonight, but my point is that - in my humble opinion - we all have so much to deal with and it affects how fast we heal. Issues from our childhood, the drama in the home before they leave, the damage they do to our self-esteem, financial implications, the breakup of the family, the death of dreams, the lonely nights and days, the loss of extended family and friends all play a role. Barbie's H may be home but it doesn't change the fact that she must deal with these issues - things can't ever be the same because the marriage died. My hope is that she and her H are able to find their way to a new life and a new marriage that is stronger than the original. For any of us, no matter the length of time, the only thing we can do is to continue to work through the process - whatever that means for you. For me, I need to accept that for the first time in my life I am depressed and anxious. I am working with a doctor to find a medication to help me. I also still need therapy. I also found a life coach to help me identify my own goals since I am so lost and unable to figure it out for myself. I still need certain friends that let me cry 5 yrs from BD and don't judge me. Most do, so I have learned who to go too. I know that when I am lonely and it is night time, I can come to the forum and read and not feel so alone. I know that I need to do a better job of self care, which I assume will come with continued focus on the depression. I know that I still need to work on not obsessing over him with the OW - to let it go. I am still a work in progress, but I am not done. I will rise from the ashes, and my success story may not be that he returned home, but that I found myself and created a wonderful life. That is such a different thought than when I started years ago posting on this site. We all just need to keep putting one foot in front of the other --- until we don't.