Home→Forums→Relationships→why can't I just end it?!
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July 11, 2016 at 3:16 am #109375pixieParticipant
Im so frustrated. I have been unhappy in my marriage for years and now i have been presented with a brilliant work opportunity in anothr town. My husband and I have been drifting apart for a long time and i want to move on in my life as I am so tired of being unhappy. My husband HATES having difficult discussions and often shuts down/turns his back or walks away from me.I am going through waves of being excited for a future on my own and feeling terribly guilty for the prospect of hurting him. He has suggested that he would hurt himself if i left him. Im trying to move on but everytime i think about initiating the conversation i get so anxious i make myself sick, i cant find the words or i find absolutely any excuse to not start saying what I need to say. Help me!!
July 11, 2016 at 5:08 am #109377InkyParticipantHi pixie,
I know several couples who live apart.
Seriously ~ take the job in the other town with or without him. Have a (very) small apartment/house while he keeps the one you’re at or sells it. And you guys can visit each other.
If he throws a fit over you moving or wants to move with you, set a separate place up for a one year lease and tell him you just want to see if the job works out.
You both will either feel more freedom and happiness living your own lives in a periodic Marriage Sabbatical…
…and/or it will be easier for you to have the conversation and for him to live without you when he realizes that he can.
Blessings,
Inky
July 11, 2016 at 7:26 am #109383AnonymousGuestDear pixie:
I re-read your previous thread and the answers to your question “why can’t I just end it?” are:
1) You are afraid he will not cope without you, that his mental health will suffer and maybe he will harm himself and that if he does, you will be responsible for it.
2) You feel that if you end it you will be admitting that you failed in this marriage.
3) You are somewhat attached to him after this more than a decade relationship, attached to him and to the marriage.I sure hope you take this job, moving away from him and yes, ending the relationship. These are my reasons:
From your examples in the previous thread, he is far from being a good partner, husband. He is not even a good friend. He doesn’t listen to you, doesn’t remember what you shared, no matter how important to you these things are. He got together with his friends on his birthday while you were at work (how rude, and after cancelling a get together with you included!) He reached out to you for support when he needs to and otherwise treats you like you don’t exist.
I am thinking he is quite selfish, an it-is-all-about-me kind of a person. If he really needed you for his well being, why isn’t he SEEING you when you are there, present (except when he is desperate)? If he needs you so much – that without you he will fall apart- why is it that he got together with his friends on his birthday, you not included?
I think that you believing he needs you much is a delusion, a false belief.
When you leave him, you will not be there with him. When you are with him, you are invisible to him. What is the difference for him?
Is it that he wants you there for his desperate moments only? Is that a good reason for you to stay with him, as insurance for his desperate moments?
anita
July 15, 2016 at 5:44 pm #109755pixieParticipantA few days ago I told my husband I was unhappy and wanted to be alone for a while. He had a total emotional breakdown and told me that he can’t live without me, he was going to be alone for the rest of his life and begged me not to leave him. He laid in bed and cried all over me all night and in the morning I had a mega overwhelming case of the guilts. I caved and told him I will give it a few more months but already I am doubting. I know this makes me seem very selfish but it broke my heart to see him so upset and desperate. I don’t know what to do. I am so mad at myself for giving in again but I am so tired of the indecision I feel and I have no idea what to do now or how to be strong enough to stick to my guns if I ultimately decide to leave.
July 15, 2016 at 9:25 pm #109765AnonymousGuestDear pixie:
Maybe he is manipulative. Maybe he needs professional help.
Maybe he needs a competent therapist, not a wife.
It is probably not good for him to go through this again and again. Better for him you make a clear cut, a final ending, instead of this…
I suggest you end this relationship once and for all. You can suggest to him to attend therapy to deal with his desperation while, if you need to attend therapy to deal with your guilt- do that.
anita
July 23, 2016 at 11:44 pm #110389pixieParticipantI know what i need to do. The odea of it makes me sick. Today i have just wanted to lay in bed and cry all day. He wont leave me alone. He is smothering me with affection and wont give me a moments piece. I am not returning his advances but when i think about telling him i want this to be over i feel sick. I am in a rut of depression so deep i am struggling to see a way out.
July 24, 2016 at 7:37 am #110396AnonymousGuestDear pixie:
In your first thread here you wrote: “I feel responsible for his happiness. I sometimes worry about his mental health, he has told me before that he can’t live without me and I just don’t know how he would cope if I wasn’t in his life anymore.”
Problem is you worry about his mental health while your mental health is deteriorating. You feel responsible for his happiness/ mental health while in reality you are responsible for your own mental health, not for his. You worry about how he would cope if you weren’t in his life anymore, but see how YOU are coping having him in your life!
I think you can’t end it (the answer to the title of your thread) because you got confused about what your responsibilities are. You are not responsible for him, you are responsible for you. And you worry about his mental health, while it is YOUR mental health that is in trouble.
When you were a child, pixie, did you feel guilty? Did you feel responsible for the mental health of one of your parents??? Looking into the origin of your guilt and self sacrifice can be helpful in resolving your current situation.
anita
February 22, 2017 at 3:39 pm #128885pixieParticipantI am still exactly where I was when I posted this months ago. Still scared. Still guilty. Still lost. Still in an incredibly unhappy marriage. He plays sport 3 nights a week and gets mad at me if I want to socialise with friends the nights he IS home. He gets jealous of my friends andeven my FAMILY. We have had sex once since July last year which lasted for maybe a minute and I got absolutely no pleasure from. We fight and sleep in separate rooms more often than not. I don’t know why the hell we are still here and I feel like a pathetic excuse for a lerson.
Anita – I never replied to your last post. When my parents separated I was 12. My dad used to cry all over me and tell me how much he was hurting which made me feel like his pain was mine to fix.
Rereading my original post from months ago makes me so sad because I know my life is being wasted for no good reason.
February 22, 2017 at 7:30 pm #128911AnonymousGuestDear pixie:
On July 11 last year, in your original post here, you wrote: “I am… feeling terribly guilty for the prospect of hurting (your husband). He has suggested that he would hurt himself if i left him. Im trying to move on but everytime i think about initiating the conversation i get so anxious i make myself sick.”
In your second post you wrote: “He had a total emotional breakdown… He laid in bed and cried all over me all night”
In your most recent post, seven months later, you wrote: “My dad used to cry all over me and tell me how much he was hurting which made me feel like his pain was mine to fix.”
Clearly, your husband is doing what your father did and you are stuck in the same guilt you had when you wanted to get away from your father crying-all-over you. Your father’s pain imprisoned you as a child, and your husband expressed pain is imprisoning you now.
To break free from your past and current prison, the false belief that you are responsible for your father or husband’s pain, competent psychotherapy can do wonders for you.
And by the way, it was abusive of your father to express his hurt to you, his daughter, a child. He should have expressed it to an adult, and an adult who is not his daughter. Your husband, reads to me, repeats the behavior that works for him- he cries, you stay. And yet, he doesn’t seem to love you. He just wants you there. Why? I don’t know…
anita
February 22, 2017 at 8:49 pm #128925DonMemberDear Pixie,
I have read Anita responses and they are not helpful.
You are torn and need to seek some help for yourself. I have been in a similar situation and
reached out to a counselor.Hope you find some peace in the days ahead.
drknh
Ps What Inky wrote may be a possible solution
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