Hugs and empathy from here too, MoS.
Hmmm, those feelings that bubble up sometimes. Yup, we get it, I hope you know we do. It’s pretty normal. Sucky but normal. Ditto that ‘I’m sick of feeling this way and sick of not being able to click my fingers and magically feel different’. I remember that stage in my own process - and how exhausting and disheartening it was - and I can only imagine that with kids, it’s a bigger and more complicated set of feelings.
I remember that I started to notice over time that these kind of ‘down blips’ were often less of a negative thing than I thought they were but more a kind of presaging of an internal shift in me. I also want to suggest that it is quite possible that in reality you have been on a metaphorical battlefield for the last couple of years, focused on survival. I honestly think that some bits of our healing don’t really start to happen until our system knows we are now a bit more distant from that, as if it knows we can now have space to process stuff we just couldn’t before. It’s not a very nice feeling though, is it? I recall it feeling like a failure, as if I had gone back not forwards….but I suspect now with the gift of hindsight that it was more like picking up some things I’d had to throw off to the side of the survival path.
The other thing I’d like to throw in for your consideration is that it may also be a rather normal part of the grieving process. I read a great book called ‘Second Firsts’ at a similar stage which put words to a lot of things I couldn’t at the time. (And isn’t it exhausting having big feelings that you’re not even sure you can describe to yourself lol?) This stage - or so I found - was like a sort of internal subterranean stirring and clanking. I really felt it was a bad thing, certainly I didn’t like it, but actually it was more of a readying for what next.
Anniversaries - along with a whole bunch of other often small things - can be pretty unsettling and leave us not quite knowing how to feel about them, I think.
So, if it’s any comfort at all, what you describe sounds very normal to me and perhaps a more constructive thing than it feels. And perhaps one of the advantages of some of those boundaries starting to stick is that it gives you more space and energy to focus on your own recovery rather than everyone else’s or indeed their messes xxx
T: 18 M: 12 (at BD) No kids.
H diagnosed with severe depression Oct 15. BD May 16. OW since April 16, maybe earlier. Silent vanisher mostly.
Divorced April 18. XH married ow 6 weeks later.
"Option A is not available so I need to kick the s**t out of Option B" Sheryl Sandberg