Quote from: Songanddance on February 20, 2023, 05:43:36 AM
It took my H almost a year on his own after 9 yrs as a stay at homer to really begin to understand what he has done. I'm not advocating the kick them out principle either - but I am saying - don't "wait" for your stay at homer - GAL sensibly, get your finances in order - look after yourself and children first. If your MLCer is going to come around there is nothing you can do to make that happen any sooner.
Quote from WHY: I think we all too easily dismiss what a seasoned vet like Song is saying here. I know we advocate for standing and allowing the MLCer to remain or return home. But it seems like wallowers get stuck and can get stuck for years. Although I can’t know for sure, Im a strong believer that sending them on their way with grace and leaving the door open, is the best way for your own survival and gives you a shot at reconciliation.
Each situation is different. The LBSer doesn't really get the choice to "send them on their way" because many have left on their own, are in other relationships, become vanishers not because of anything the LBSer does. In some cases perhaps the LBSer allows the MLCer to live at home but even when they are living in the same house, they are living separate lives and come and go as they please, do what they please, see who they please........
As like most everything else, you cannot "fix" them or increase your shot at a reconciliation by either sending them away or letting them stay, nor by standing or not standing.
Now regarding "standing"...Song has expressed what we "preach" all the time....
GAL sensibly, get your finances in order - look after yourself and children first. If your MLCer is going to come around there is nothing you can do to make that happen any sooner.Standing is an intensely personal decision and I disagree with Treasur's assumption:
The difficulty with Standing imho is that it can be easy to avoid accepting that in your bones and lead you inadvertently to a sort of one foot in both worlds way of living. At least for a time.
Accepting
that there is no going back for either our spouse or ourselves to a time before that landscape was changed.
is achieved regardless of whether you decide to stand or not. It doesn't have to be one way or another.
I was never told to stand or not to stand, I did however know from the earliest days that I was "standing"...some say here that means the door is open or left ajar a bit...it doesn't mean that I have only been waiting for our marriage to be restored and somehow have missed out on living my life.
I do believe that MLC happened to him, changed him and is something that occurred without a "conscious decision" and I wish it had not happened but I accept that it did.
Standing for me, accepting that whatever this MLC/depression/brain change/crisis is......leaving the door ajar....allows our family to spend time together, allows me to forgive him and live without anger or bitterness towards him, allows me to be comfortable to be with him recently twice when he was hospitalized and take care of him while he was recovering, allows us to enjoy watching Super Bowl together...without expecting anything from him..because I accept that his life is his to live and I cannot change any of that.
But I also value the sacrament of our marriage, and that cannot be erased. When we married, there were three at the alter, God, my husband and myself and God and I are still in agreement.....
There is nothing about standing that will hold you back from living. If this is what God has placed in your heart (and that is not something that everyone will experience) but if it is, then all the debate about the "dangers" of standing are nothing.
Standing is not only for those whose religious beliefs are a part of their decision, standing is for anyone who believed that their spouse was a good partner, that their marriage was strong, that they would like a chance to reconcile if that every happens. It isn't a tool or a method to increase the chances of reconciliation, but a philosophy that comes from one's heart.