I become pessimistic, but then I read posts from stargazergirl thundar and annej and then well not so much... I take an immense amount of comfort in I am not alone anymore. I am a stupid, pathetic stubborn fool who is in love with his wife.
Thanks, ziggee. I think everyone here is stubborn. Otherwise we would not be here.
If not in love, people here still love the spouse. Even if in a more mature, friendly way as I do. MLC changes the way one loves our spouse. At least I think it does.
There is a couple in my church who admit to having gone through something similar (5 years separated, even divorced) and now are back together and immensely happy - they are about 5/6 years older than my husband and I and if I remember rightly, this happened to them about 10 years ago.
Helas, Mitzapah, there really is some light at the end of the tunnel! Also, a proof that divorce, in itself, does not put an end to things. IMHO in can even, in certain cases, allow for a better future together. Nice to know that couple’s story ended well. It is important to hear from people that have been thought MLC and are already some years, or decades, past it.
"Annej, I agree. And if depression and other metal illnesses were actually accepted more and dealt with properly, at any age, it would reduce a lot of future problems for many people including potential future mlc's.
Depression, I think is already quite accepted. Don’t think it would avoid MLC. My husband had been depressed before the crises, and had stress burnout. It did not prevent the crisis from happening. Or maybe, the problem was that the depression and stress burnout were treated with medicines but no one made us a plan for how to prevent it from happening again (husband had had more than two stress burnouts with depression and I’ve had a stress burnout), not teach us ways for dealing with the situation.
Now, for me, it is different. One of my cousins had a huge depression. I would say it was a MLC but mild. No affair, just dissatisfaction with life, job, complaining of being old (he, like my husband, was about being 37 when it started, is now 40 and only a couple of months ago had he, finally, come out of the darkness). On the other hand, only because I have a husband in MLC was I able to notice some of the symptoms and reactions were similar to my husband’s ones.
My cousin situation, and what he has been told us about the years of anger, frustration, fog, and darkness, even if in a much, much milder way than my husband’s situation, provides both with an insight into depression, the stress modern life places upon a man reaching midlife and with a family that is much more benevolent with my husband’s destruction
Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together. (Marilyn Monroe)