EloiseLandau
Gold Member
About a year ago, SO ends up, in essence, cheating my trust.
It hurts. A lot.
But then I think I am starting to feel better, more rational, when that person he cheated on me with, in a nutshell, stops by. She tries to give everyone a hug; I flinch back and she looks shocked. So, SO...ran to her. Chose to comfort her.
And it still hurts.
I have spent the last year dealing with this painful feelings, and with an ineffectual therapist who kept siding with my SO when he was around, and my SO himself trying to "fix" things but in his own way, and getting frustrated when I didn't get better right away.
He has also said, over and over, how sorry he was he chose to act like that, and that it would have been better if the other woman and I had worked it out ourselves.
When we recently tried to talk, he told me my speech pattern was aggressive, and then proceeded to name several people I had been aggressive with when they had, in his opinion, done nothing to warrant it. He told me he was sick of talking. That he had denied himself certain things for years and now he was going to do some things for himself. That all I ever talked about....was....the....same...thing...over....and...over..... he accused me of only wanting someone who agrees with me. That he's tried and tried and tried and he doesn't believe I'll get better.
But on the other hand, he's glad I'm seeing a new therapist and maybe he can make me better because the SO can't.
SO says he's worn out. He's tried. He's tired. He' can't keep up with the pain and rage and defensiveness when he tells me I'm doing something wrong.
Funny thing is, the rage did go down a lot. So did the pain. But the insecurity is there.
I'm trying to make the conversation more civil. So I am asking for rules of engagement that people have when they talk to someone else.
Otherwise SO and I will continue to go on our own ways, which may be best anyway, but at least try to be civil.
It hurts. A lot.
But then I think I am starting to feel better, more rational, when that person he cheated on me with, in a nutshell, stops by. She tries to give everyone a hug; I flinch back and she looks shocked. So, SO...ran to her. Chose to comfort her.
And it still hurts.
I have spent the last year dealing with this painful feelings, and with an ineffectual therapist who kept siding with my SO when he was around, and my SO himself trying to "fix" things but in his own way, and getting frustrated when I didn't get better right away.
He has also said, over and over, how sorry he was he chose to act like that, and that it would have been better if the other woman and I had worked it out ourselves.
When we recently tried to talk, he told me my speech pattern was aggressive, and then proceeded to name several people I had been aggressive with when they had, in his opinion, done nothing to warrant it. He told me he was sick of talking. That he had denied himself certain things for years and now he was going to do some things for himself. That all I ever talked about....was....the....same...thing...over....and...over..... he accused me of only wanting someone who agrees with me. That he's tried and tried and tried and he doesn't believe I'll get better.
But on the other hand, he's glad I'm seeing a new therapist and maybe he can make me better because the SO can't.
SO says he's worn out. He's tried. He's tired. He' can't keep up with the pain and rage and defensiveness when he tells me I'm doing something wrong.
Funny thing is, the rage did go down a lot. So did the pain. But the insecurity is there.
I'm trying to make the conversation more civil. So I am asking for rules of engagement that people have when they talk to someone else.
Otherwise SO and I will continue to go on our own ways, which may be best anyway, but at least try to be civil.