My experience was that once I changed
myself, stopped being controlling, trying to fix, all that codependent sh*t, the fight went out of our relationship. I realized that if we weren't fighting we were emotionally estranged and that my PTSD emotional avoidance was part of it.
If he is not hitting you, calling you a sl*t, struggling with addiction or stealing your money, maybe your relationship is safe enough to reflect on the only thing you can change- yourself.
Your name
@HealingMama implies you have kids? If you do and he is the father, they need you to work this out.
I've done a lot of work on the anxiety based control stuff. A LOT.
The relationship is safe enough that I am not likely to be killed, but it is chaotic almost all the time. The stress has given me a chronic illness.
Yes we have kids. I think staying in a toxic relationship isn't necessarily in children's best interest. We have been to multiple marriage counselors. I'm working on my own stuff. I asked him to work on his own stuff. He's not really trying to grow or at least not at the same level. He has caused massive financial problems for our family and has done some traumatic things throughout the years. Don't want to give details but suffice it to say he causes a lot of chaos for me. He requires a ton of managing because he has executive functioning problems. I limit it to stuff that will directly put myself or the child in harm's way, but that means things are falling apart, breaking, taking way too long, and there's a string of broken promises all the time. So the relationship is incredibly strained and stressful and it's almost impossible to not control some aspects because he would destroy all practical routines, order and stability if I don't do any of that.
I have been reading this book Should I Stay or Should I Go that is meant to help women understand if their relationship is salvageable. I've been back and forth so much I need a structure to help me assess it.
I don't necessarily want to divorce but I need him to realize things can't stay the way they have been. I think a separation might help us both have space to address our issues. I honestly don't know how I can keep working on my trauma stuff when my marriage is regularly triggering it all. And when it's too easy for him to frame everything as my issues instead of owning his own. He's always got a bunch of excuses. And he doesn't hold back. He calls me names almost as soon as there's a disagreement. He walks out of the room when I'm speaking. He's very disrespectful. I can't make him change that. And I can't stomach stroking his ego and accepting that we have to gloss over everything real which is how he wants his marriage to be. Pretense and surface and everyone pretending things are ok while there's a dumpster fire in the background.
But yeah I am trying to exhaust every possible option before calling it quits because I don't want my child to have to deal with two homes.
Sorry to tell you sweetie but people lie and hide things all the time. There is no true way of knowing if anybody is "safe". It's a crap shoot. I wish it wasn't but it is.
Yeah, you're right. I just... Ugh, I don't know how to keep my heart open to people then. Its easier to just be celibate. Betrayal just hurts so bad. I was numb until my early 20s so I didn't really learn how to cope and buffer these kinds of emotional impacts and it's just really hard. My heart was closed, busted my butt in therapy to fix that. Now I wish I hadn't ever fixed it. It was so much easier to deal with let downs.
I don't think it's unusual at all. Take the rule that whoever you are attracted to run like hell and you'll be fine.
My very first trauma therapist explained to me what "being better" was going to look like and "seeing the people who would be good for me and being able to avoid the others" was part of it. I don't see it yet.
Yeah the pull of the familiar and the effort to complete the story with a different outcome is pretty powerful.
Unfortunately we cannot take what some people say at face value. My opinion is (for some, not all) we have become used to abuse or we minimize it or sometimes we don't know it's there.
People who we thought we could trust lie about everything.
I hope you stay safe. Sometimes clarity comes with patterns, example, a person may be very controlling and watching your every move and you had no idea.
This is not uncommon. I wish it were. Wishing you the very best, if that's okay with you.
You are correct. It's like the frog that is boiled to death but the water heater up so slowly the frog can't tell it's about to be cooked to death.
I agree sometimes there's a bunch of extra stuff going on that you couldn't see. Makes it really hard to have healthy, functional beliefs and willingness to trust anyone.