I don't know if this is relevant at all to you (or anyone else here) Red Dog but my H and I have been thinking through his second marriage - which ended when he discovered that his then wife was emotionally abusing his oldest (her step) daughter, although she had been cheating on him for a couple of years. He was "waiting until the youngest turned 18 to divorce." He believed (as many people do) that he could minimize the harm of divorce on his children by waiting to split up until they were adults. (WRONG.) He has always said "she was a very very plausible liar." I came to our relationship with the idea that "the other parent always knows." But he maintains that he really really didn't and that she was a total con, for years (it helped that he was chronically sleep deprived, ill and worked 60-70 hours a week.) I didn't know what to make of this, frankly. As soon as she confirmed her abuse to a school social worker (who relayed it to my H) he and the two girls decided the wife had to go. And out she went. (not softly, or gently, however, but that is a different story.)
Recently, however, we have been thinking through the implications of her having been sexually abused as a child (which he knew, and she acknowledged) and that she almost certainly suffered/suffers from PTSD. It came up the other day, that perhaps she was such a convincing liar because she *was not lying* but rather was dissociating. He is an exceptional judge of character. So how could she have fooled him for so long, I asked myself? Well, what if: The "her" that abused oldest girl, was not the *her* he spoke to later about it. What if, in fact, when she spoke to him, she was not, in fact, lying? but in another "personae?" There is not really any way to tell at this late date what was actually the case, and she has gone down the road of "self medication" into denial and addiction. But it added another dimension to our understanding of a tragic and horrible family dynamic. It is pretty likely in retrospect that they both re-traumatized each other in the course of their marriage. In any case, denial is a powerful powerful coping mechanism, and should not be underestimated.
What a house of mirrors. :depressed:
Bottom line, he decided to get better. She didn't. And we all shed tears for the kids...:cry:
Post Script: Both big girls are/have worked through a lot of this stuff, and we continue to support them emotionally and financially in doing what they feel they need to to heal a decade plus after the fact ... because we love them and that is what good parents who acknowledge the truth do. Of course, I hasten to mention, they are both today beautiful and charming and talented and accomplished... Ok, end of bragging about the adult children.:angelic::D