Hi Nas,
It's not my responsibility now to pave the way by opening/maintaining some form of communication. He chose to disappear (at a time when I was most vulnerable) and in my mind, reaching out to him would be akin to enabling. It would be sending him a message that he can behave in the most selfish and cruel way and I'll still come back for more. I think the message he needs to get (and he won't now, but maybe some day he will) is that I have enough self-respect to not allow myself to be treated so callously. EXACTLY.
Your post sent me online to see what the story is with H's who leave their wives when they are sick.There are quite a few theories, examples, articles with the statistics and the reasons behind it.
I know of five men who stayed with their wives through their illnesses, and with the few people I do know that seems pretty good to me. One is my second cousin and the other was childhood friend of mines husband.
Currently I have a friend of 30 plus years who has MS and her H is supportive and attentive. The other two were members of my church. There might be more, that's as many as I could think of in a short time. So it does happen there are men who can deal with it.
Found online:
Book of Odds
July 28, 2013 ·
Why Do Men Leave Sick Wives? Are they just Jerks?
Jon Sobel
Thinking about leaving your spouse? You’ve got plenty of company.
Lots of people ‘fess up to intermittent thoughts of checking out of a marriage. The odds a married man occasionally thinks about leaving his wife are 1 in 4.2. Married women are even more likely to ponder the possibility: their odds are 1 in 3.3. And 1 in 10 wives think about it often (compared with only 1 in 20 husbands).
But introduce a serious illness into the marriage, and the balance shifts—a lot. A 2009 study published in the journal Cancer found men were seven times as likely to leave a wife diagnosed with brain cancer or multiple sclerosis than women were to leave a similarly afflicted husband. Specifically, 1 in 4.8 husbands left (20.8%) vs. just 1 in 34.5 wives (less than 3%).
The most famous case may be that of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who purportedly discussed divorce terms with his first wife while she was recuperating from cancer surgery. Are such men just being jerks?
It might be slightly more complicated than that. Researcher Marc C. Chamberlain, MD suggested that women might have a deeper emotional attachment to family, so that in an extremely stressful situation they’d be more likely to “hunker down and deal with it” whereas a man might be more prone to jump ship.
It seems men may have a harder time handling stress in general, and researchers have documented gender differences in stress response going all the way back to the womb.
For example, the September 11, 2001 terror attacks led to a 3% increase in the number of miscarried male babies, but no increase in miscarriage for female babies. New research on the stress hormone cortisol is helping to explain why male and female fetuses respond differently to maternal stressors (like illness, smoking, or psychological trauma).
( I found this eye opening)
For males who do manage to get born and live to adulthood, oxytocin, the calming, “cuddle hormone,” becomes key. Under stress, men make less of it than women do. Women tend to respond to stress by nurturing others, seeking support for themselves, talking things over; men tend to look for an “escape,” according to psychologist Carl Pickhardt, author of The Everything Parent's Guide to Positive Discipline.
And when men have babies of their own, their response to stress can be destructive to the new family. According to wellness guru Dr. John W. Travis, there’s an “epidemic” of men abandoning their families shortly after a child is born. Some literally leave; others detach psychologically via substance abuse, or by becoming workaholics.
A final, sour note for ailing wives: new research might just have added insult to injury. When men are under stress, they don’t just distance themselves. Their mating preferences change.(
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I agree with you staying and maintaining NC ..Nas.. Frankly? You don't need the stress.