Hi,
There has been a bit of discussion here lately about the MLCer's guilt -- Still said that her H cleaned their kitchen, HB said her H did things like that out of guilt, etc.
My sitch is that H has on a number of occasions mentioned, or possibly let slip, that he feels enormous guilt. About a month ago he said on the phone that he had felt guilty enough over having abandoned his family, that he had cried enough, that guilt was a useless emotion and he just wasn't going to have it any more.
Because, botton line, he doesn't want to consider us staying together, and that won't change.
I also know that things that I have said have only served to increase his guilt, whether I intended for that to happen or not.
So this discussion is two-fold: one, how does the guilt work in them? In my case my H seems to keep running, because feeling guilty isn't nice, so he keeps on justifying his actions and then seeking pleasurable things that make him feel good and take his mind off it. Replay actions, it would seem.
I understand that guilt is useless because it keeps you from finding a solution to the problem. You don't want to feel guilty, so you do things to cover it rather than admit your wrong and work to find a solution.
But how does it work in an MLCer? And the second part, how do we act?
I take it that we can't say outright that the way to get rid of guilt is to acknowledge the wrong and work to find the solution. Well, maybe we can in some situations, but I think I've probably talked about things like that enough to him.
My H has said that he feels guilty about our son, so does my asking to talk about him and getting H to take more responsibility there help or just make him feel more guilty?
RCR talks about encouraging healty guilt, I'd like to hear more about that.