Fwiw, I think the feelings of loss are much the same regardless of what happens. Life is not the same post BD and it’s normal to feel sorrow about that bc it usually affects the things we care most about - our kids, our home, the day to day priorities of life. I found it painful but also freeing when I could see that, regardless of what I did, I had already lost the things I was grieving over. The future could be good or not, but the past was in fact lost.
What matters perhaps is to reach a point where we get in our bones that today’s actions can’t save those losses, but they can help us shape our next chapter.
It’s all about acceptance really. But it’s easier to see that with hindsight than it was at the time.
Based on what you said, it sounds as if you believe that you do not have full control over building a new life that does not depend on him for anything important? Hence your ‘asking’ him to move out as opposed to either having the power to tell him or moving out with your kids yourself or being able to set up a legal separation where both of you have to live independently. Is that right?
I’m not sure how much of that is about the law where you live, how much of it is about other peoples’ opinions or how much of it is about your own fears or hopes. It’s all very well for someone to say you should do nothing until the kids are ‘settled’ (and how long is that whatever it means?) but it sounds as if living this way is hard, painful and draining.
What is really honestly stopping you taking whatever actions you can control to establish an independent life that does not depend on him?
Bc imho putting your finger on what that is, the real barrier, can help you plan a path towards options that might work better for you.
Is it money? In which case, how can you move towards being financially self supporting where you live?
Is it the law or culture where you live? In which case, could you choose to live somewhere else? Or find a way and other women who have found a way to navigate this?
Is it the opinion of family/friends? In which case, why does that matter if they are not living in your shoes or prepared to help you find other shoes?
Is it your own fears/hopes or a lack of confidence? In which case, how can you build your confidence and tackle those fears and put those hopes in an appropriate box in baby steps?
Or are you truthfully not yet at the stage where you feel ready to take action and begin to carve out a new path independently?
Whatever the answer is, no judgement, we get it. Most of us here have probably struggled with at least some of these barriers. Tbh the impossible tends to become strangely possible when/if we teach a stage when we just cannot bear to stay in the situation we are currently in….we LBS can be surprisingly resilient and creative when we must lol.
As an aside, you mentioned the house (which I assume is being built?) vs your current home, and that this needs to be arranged by the end of the year? Fwiw, unless the new house is solely in your name, or legally secured as a place for you alone to live with your kids, and I’m guessing it’s probably not, the house is irrelevant in any independence plan…it’s just a frying pan to fire change of scenery probably. Just a thought.
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