On your musings about MC….every story here I recall suggests that, at best, it will be a waste of your time and energy. If you think about it, the MC process has three ‘clients’ - you, your h and the relationship. You can’t say or do anything to fix your h, the relationship is currently dead in the water bc your h has chosen to leave and your h is unlikely to be much useful help to your healing. So tbh not much point thinking in advance what you ‘should’ say or not say. The best you can do probably is be open-minded enough to see it as an opportunity to see what the situation is in reality for all three ‘clients’.
It’s normal to hold on to that bit of belief in the ‘if only I had’ or ‘if only I could’, and I can see that this is where you are. And that’s so normal at this relatively early stage. We humans tend to find it very hard to just metaphorically open our hand and let things be bc we don’t want them to be how they are. So at least for a while we engage in a bit of ‘magical thinking’. Makes sense doesn’t it when the alternative is so deeply painful and absolutely life-upending? Don’t beat yourself up about that but imho if you can try to observe it when that’s what’s rolling around in your mind. Try to focus on facts as much as you can and to keep things as simple as you can, recognising that actions matter more than words and some actions more than others.
So, for instance, spouses don’t move out bc they are committed to a marriage and family…at best they are choosing to move these things from the centre to the edge of their lives. At best this means that a whole bunch of things, big and small, will now work differently than they did. And you’re allowed to plot your own path in how you adjust to such a big change whether they like it or not, to decide what is acceptable or doable for you.
Imho the ‘playfully feminine’ thought comes from the same magical thinking stable. And obviously, as you said, a bit of your brain knows that. Be playfully feminine if that is who you are…but not in order to influence him. You are enough pretty much as who you are most probably. Other husbands including some LBS here would find you an admirable partner and count their blessings!
There are plenty of tales here of husbands leaving bc their wife is too capable or not capable enough, too career-focused or not ambitious enough, too fat or too thin, too nice or not nice enough….the list is endless. And I’m prepared to wager a great lump of cash I don’t have that your h is not perfect as a person or husband either….the difference is that he chose to leave and you did not, that he sees his current choices as a solution to whatever ails him and you did not. That ‘third client’ in the MC process can’t be worked with until or unless both of you choose to reshape it and that requires your h to reach a point where he owns his half of the street.
It is unusual here at this stage of the game to see that happen, I’m sorry to say. Much more common that MC becomes an exercise in blaming you as justifying why they did what they did or an invitation to feel sorry for them or even try to manipulate the terms of a separation or divorce in the hope that you will be trying to appease them. Sorry.
So no amount of playful or pretzelling on your part changes that - it’s an inside job not an outside job if that makes sense. In life, in all kinds of relationships, people choose to appreciate others for who they are. Or not. But that’s not a choice we make for them, only for ourselves. And you can’t perform like a performing seal or a be a multiple/topping pizza for the rest of your life, can you?
And most LBS here are so traumatised initially by what happens that it takes us a while to remember who we really are and appreciate ourselves! If I were you, I’d start there…remind yourself of all the things that are rather lovely about you, and spend time with people who remind you of that bc they appreciate you. I cannot emphasise enough - although I know there are lots of LBS here nodding along - how big a number this life experience can do on your own sense of self worth and and stability in who you are.
A friend said to me yesterday, out of the blue, that she thinks I am so talented, that I have so many gifts that she feels very lucky to know me….wasn’t that nice? But, for a moment - and I am years past the big devaluation of BD - I was a bit speechless. I remember feeling years ago that I had lots of talents but those so called talents were pretty useless and inaccessible to me when my life got blown up! So it changed how I saw myself and changed how I lived and felt about how my world worked….i could only see failure and doubt and mistakes and wasted things, so it was hard to see much good in me at all. Still is some days tbh…so imho that’s the fight worth fighting against…that insidious inner voice that blames you for someone else’s choices or opinion of you.
Again jmo, but when someone leaves and particularly if they have betrayed and deceived us, their opinion of me becomes much less important! My xh may indeed believe that I was a terrible wife and horrible human…I have no idea…but I know that I’m a pretty decent human and that I would have thought myself very lucky indeed if I’d had the kind of spouse that I was, particularly when life was difficult! I did my best, I acted honestly and with good intent for years and years…my xh could not honestly say the same about his half of our marriage and that’s about who he was not who I was. I wasn’t very different years on from the person he married for whatever reason he chose to propose…but these folks tend not to see it that way. They believe, I think, that replacing your spouse will be some magic fix to their internal discomfort….an outside fix for an inside problem…which is why, over time, that rarely turns out to be so. But they break things on the way and life changes bc of that, often in ways that seem to surprise them. Bc of course they take whatever the inside problem is with them into their new lives…new relationships or jobs or places might be a distraction for a while but that tends not to last forever in normal life, does it?
It takes a while for most LBS to really understand in their bones that, whatever imperfections you have as a normal human, YOU were not the problem. The problem - such as it is, and put more simply - is that your spouse was unhappy with their own life and chose to blow up their old life with you as a solution. I guess that might work out for some, who knows, but it’s not so likely it seems to me. But YOU are not the problem. Which also means YOU are not the solution either. Whether you are winsomely feminine or not!
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