Sitting here in Rhode Island on the beach, enjoying life
But, on others topics, I know that W went out to a bar/restaurant last night and was shady about it, didn’t even reply back to kids when they called her to try and tell her we got here safely.
Also, I know that her car is at a hotel right now, I can only imagine what’s happening or about to. Do I confront? Mention slyly? Stay quiet? The court order included a status quo so I can’t kick her out. I know things are about to get worse but I’m not a doormat/deserve respect. Looking for help on this one, thx.
This experience is a Life101 lesson for most of us about the things we cannot control and how we respond to that imho. Most of us find it’s a surprisingly long list and it challenges a lot of our prior assumptions about how life works, so it tends to be a bit of a process of trial and error, doesn’t it?
I don’t know how you know where your wife is, but I’d encourage you to expose yourself to less of that info. You’re an adult. You know why married people go to bars and hotels without their spouses. You know enough.
And I’d encourage you to stop thinking of her as your ‘wife’ currently. Actually, do what you can to stop thinking about her at all. A couple of weeks ago, you were focused on zit popping and chesty displays - I hope you can see that this meant nothing. A few days ago, you were focused on her showing up to play family - I hope you can see that this meant nothing either. And this is why we bang on about detachment being so important bc it’s exhausting to be on that kind of rollercoaster and to have one’s view of the world shaped so much by the inconsistent and self-centred behaviour of someone else.
I’m sorry that you are forced legally to share your home with her - how long is that likely to last? And what changes have you made in how you organise day to day things? Basic stuff…finances, schedules, sleeping arrangements, food etc? Bc right now you are not sharing your home with a wife - you are sharing it with someone who looks like your wife but is more like a distant and unwanted teenage roommate, I suspect.
She is going to do whatever she is going to do. And you can’t control that. Nor tbh can we make anyone respect us if they don’t. All we can do is respect ourselves sufficiently to step away from them and decide to not play whatever role they have given us in whatever game they are playing.
So, practically speaking, no, don’t do any of those things - your ‘wife’ does not care what you think or feel (if she did, she would not be doing what she’s doing, would she?) so there’s no point talking about it to her. Talking will not change anything. Plus it keeps you hooked into the game and feeds her sense of importance imho. You are going to feel how you feel, but find other places and people to share those thoughts and feelings. Show her nothing. Say very little about anything much. Do not ask her questions bc either a) she will lie or b) you won’t like the answers or c) you won’t be able to do anything useful with them.
So, what can you do?
Focus on your own life and activities. Focus on your kids. Pull away from doing ‘family’ things that involve her. Expect nothing good from her. Read about going grey rock. Stop mentally calling her ypur ‘wife’ - perhaps experiment with something like ‘soon to be ex wife’ or ‘kids’ mother’? Focus on the process of accepting that you are almost certainly going to end up being an ‘ex husband’ and start behaving now in ways you think are appropriate as an ‘ex husband’….things you will stop, start or continue, but choices you consider that are intentional rather than reacting in the ‘same old, same old’ way if that makes sense? (And avoid alcohol and attractive women to chat with for a while bc neither of those will help lol)
I am very very sorry. We know how hard it is when one’s spouse has metaphorically left the building but is still physically there. It’s a bit of a mindf**k, isn’t it? But imho the sooner you can swallow the horrible pill that your wife is no longer your wife, and that you have no control or influence over her behaviour or feelings, the easier things get. We all eventually learn to call a quacking thing with feathers a duck, but not one of us underestimates how hard and painful that can be. But looking reality in the eye ironically is what gives us new choices and new ways to treat ourselves with respect and consideration when our ‘spouse’ simply does not.
Beach sounds good, so more of that!
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