Your response reads a bit hostile. So if I said something that rubbed you the wrong way, I apologize. Maybe there are some interpretations going on that have little to do with what I've been saying.
Nope. Not mutual in the least. And as I was the one there, I can attest to it.
I believe you. And I'm glad you guys could take that step.
Also hardly unique.
The OP is doing it.
I’ve done it.
I know tons of people who’ve done it or are doing it.
Neither of us know if the OP "is doing that," because we can't look inside this relationship or his state of mind, so neither of us are wrong here. From my experience, and from observing everyone around me, I can't come up with a single example of this having worked. But that's my experience and my perspective, so again, neither of us can claim to know what's "normal."
its not her job to help him find a clean break.
First of all, I'm talking a clean "emotional" break here, not in terms of logistics and living situations.
Secondly, this is where I disagree somewhat. Sure, we're all responsible for ourselves and our own feelings. But we can't deny that we're also responsible for how we treat other people and/or what situations we put them in. While their reaction to our treatment is their own to manage, it doesn't mean we're exculpated from treating them in whatever way in the first place.
So in this scenario, sure, the person who was broken up with is responsible for extracting themselves if the situation is too painful. But that doesn't absolve the other person from behaving in ways that make it harder, more confusing, or sometimes even impossible for the other to know how to extract themselves.
"We're all responsible for ourselves" is a right and true concept, but it's also limited when you look at it in the context of human interaction as a whole. If we were all running around thinking we're only responsible for ourselves, the whole concept of morality and social contract would go out the window.
That’s not what they’ve discussed, or decided upon, together. They’ve decided to try being friends, living in the same place, whilst they work out what they’re each individually going to do next. And, so far, that’s going fairly well for them. Some bittersweet moments, to be sure, but that’s to be expected.
I'd not be commenting here if I read the OP's comments to mean this is "going fairly well." What I'm reading, rather, is someone in relationship with PTSD, trying to figure out what the hell this means, whether there might be hope, getting his hopes dashed, thinking it'll be ok to remain friends, bumping up against the very real and natural fact that remaining friends is really difficult, managing the fact that there still is some hope in the back of his mind (because her actions are somewhat inconsistent,) while also taking care of her children, being there for her, performing acts and duties of a partner (when she lets him,) and having conversations that sound emotionally harder to place than necessary.
What I'm seeing is that his focus remains very much on her, what she needs, her limits and boundaries, and how he can keep being a good friend (most likely with some hope sprinkled in that that will increase the chances of her "coming back,") while at the same time expressing some very understandable emotional pain about the whole scenario.
I obviously have no horse in this race, but what I do know a thing or two about is codependence, and the many ways in which it can disguise itself. As ever, the OP should take what helps and leave the rest, but I wanted to highlight the areas in which he may be caught up in a scenario that isn't serving his emotional well-being, as well as where he may be fooling himself about his true feelings, regardless of what his ex partner wants or needs. Whether I'm right or wrong, I have no idea, nor do I care. I'm merely offering my perspective, as we all are on here.
I’m really not sure why you seem so determined to prove I “haven’t” done that?
I'm trying to prove anything. I don't know anything about what you have or haven't done. I'm merely expressing a perspective that may or may not apply to your situation.
Or are continuing to press “for a clean break you need to do this”, or how what they’re doing is terrible practice for a clean break
I'm also not pressing for anything. I merely have a different opinion and perspective. Nothing that's been said particularly convinces me that my perspective is totally off base, so I'll keep expressing it, as should you.
There’s no need to vilify their ex, or go no contact, or harden their heart and walk away for the sake of their own sanity.
A few posts up I clarified that I don't believe there's anything wrong with this woman, or that she's doing anything out of conscious cruelty. I also don't think there needs to be no-contact or any hardenings of hearts. That's taking everything to an uneccessary extreme. I do believe, however, that when a relationship ends, and when someone is struggling as much as the OP is (and especially when a mental illness is at play, which always runs the risk of eliciting codependence,) it's time to re-individualize, not keep things the same (or rather, keep things entirely on the other person's terms,) while slapping on a different label.