OMG ... what 1t posted regarding UM's mom's view from a psychological viewpoint ... spot on ... spot on ... spot on.
I am tempted to screenshot the whole post and send it to my husband. From the very first sentence to the last, I am just shaking my head in agreement. And you know what? I don't care who your higher power is ... it could be the grass on the ground ... but when you finally accept that higher power and embrace it, things will fall into place.
And instead of wasting so many precious years trying to fix what our spouses are/were missing, I wish every newbie could just understand that really, there is nothing you can do to speed up the process. Until our spouses figure out what is missing within them, we are just wasting precious time working on our own happiness.
UM, what an absolute genius your mom is. I will read and reread that post. Thank you.
As for the articles, I found HB's articles to really help me in my time of need. Perhaps they need updating ... perhaps not ... it's all what the individual takes from it and what works for each of us. Take what you need ... leave the rest behind. The very first book I bought when my husband's MLC started was "Men in Midlife Crisis" by Jim Conway. Way back then, I took my highlighter out, started reading fervently and could only check off some of the symptoms.
I thought: "My, God, my husband would never be nasty to me. He may be distant, but there is NO WAY he is cheating on me. He's just going through some mild mid-life crisis." Hahahahaha. Little did I know what was to come.
I then bought another book: "My husband's affair was the best thing that could happen to me." I read that book over and over. Of course, her husband probably was just having an affair or a MLT. I thought it was good, but I would never say this is the best thing that ever happened to me.
If I could offer one piece of advice, it would be to stand if you want to stand and move forward in your journey without standing in place. If this crisis is any less than, I'd say, four years, it's bound to resurface sometime down the road. I know you can't put a number on it, but it took our spouses a long, long time to burst at their seams from whatever was demonizing them ... it's going to take a long, long time to restructure their brain to come out of this.
I also would say, and this is just from my own experience, our spouses will have to find their higher power to get through this. They cannot do it on their own. I am hesitant to talk too much because my husband is not even home yet. Who am I to say he is through his MLC? I can say that I have never seen someone work so hard to better himself. But remember, my husband also has another demon to deal with ... alcohol.
I know ... off topic ... but I am very scared because I am seeing a pattern in my husband once again. He has only been at sober living four months and is trying to save everyone else. It's like he is avoiding his own issues and feels better helping others with theirs. How can I get through to him? I can't. As I said on my own thread ... I have learned that no one can complete me but myself. It took a l-o-n-g time to get there, but I can finally say I'm happy ... in a very different, grown-up sort of way.
I hope I am making some sense. I tend to ramble, don't read through my posts before hitting the "post" button, and my brain tends to go in all different directions. Hey, I'm a work in progress, too