Showing posts with label #cheating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #cheating. Show all posts

My Top Tips for Emotionally Surviving your Divorce or Separation

Separation/divorce is the second most stressful event that can happen in a person's life (most sources agree it is second only to the death of a spouse). Going through this has pushed me to the brink of my emotional strength. I don't pretend to be handling it better than anyone else, but I am good at keeping track of what helps. One thing that keeps me going is knowing that I might help someone else going through the same pain. For anyone out there who needs it, here are the most important tips I have for emotionally surviving your separation/divorce:

1. Realize that the pain is temporary. It will go away eventually. People have told me this, but it took me quite a while to realize what this really means and it is so important. I told the director at my work that I was having marriage problems and he gave some context. He said, “I know it doesn’t seem like it when you are in the thick of things, but time really does help. It may not seem like it now, but it will get better.” That summed things up quite well, and really resonates with me as I go through this journey.

2. Make a list of all the things about your ex-partner that drove you crazy. We tend to overlook things when we are married to someone because we feel like we have no choice. I have told people to try this activity and the results are always positive. In my case, there are quite a few things- her hunched over posture, her pointy nose, the way she yells and swears at the kids, the way she is so messy, the way she breaks everything, how controlling she is, the way she blames me for everything, the way she doesn’t understand things, the annoying way she puts make-up on every morning, how loud she talks, how she took me for granted, how I couldn’t talk to her about important things…. The list goes on. These are things I put up with for years and never allowed myself to be annoyed by them because it wasn't an option. It is somehow very reassuring to know that I don't have to put up with this stuff anymore.

3. Know that there is nothing you can do to change your ex-partner. Have you noticed that anything you try or say has no effect? It's fairly universal when someone has made up their mind and is biased against everything you say. When I thought really deeply about the separation, I found that the only thing I could possibly do was to improve myself. If you think over your options, that is the only logical conclusion. As I have told myself a few times throughout this ordeal, there is something freeing in understanding this. When you can accept that this is the only thing you can control, you can work on it with the knowledge that you are doing all that you can. You stop pointless efforts to change your ex-partner's mind and start to focus on the only thing you can (and should) focus on, which is yourself.

4. On days when you are barely functioning and barely holding on, break tasks up into small parts and complete the small parts. Somedays, you are hurting so much that you can barely even have the energy to survive. When these days come, break your tasks into smaller parts. Even getting done a small portion of a task is a success, and be proud that you did what you did. Focus on what you have to do in the next couple of hours and do that as best as you can. Don't think about the future or anything beyond right now. Which leads to my next tip;

5. Try not to think about the future, and if you do, know that there are a great number of changes that will take place before that future arrives. I have found that when I think about the future right now, it just doesn't make sense anymore. It is impossible and there are too many things that just don't work. This can be very overwhelming. What has helped me is knowing that many things will change before that future arrives and those changes will help make the future possible.

6. Seek counselling, talk to people, and get your pain out. If you have a program through your work, go to a counselor. If not, seek one out in the community or pay for one. Everyone can benefit from this. Talk to friends, talk to Ministers, seek out whoever you can for this support. It may not always seem like it, but it truly does help. Keeping a journal is helpful too. It isn't a quick and easy solution, but it does help build resilience even if it is just a little bit.

7. Seek out new people, new experiences, and new activities. This is extremely difficult to do when you are going through a lot of pain. Just know that, if you make the effort, these things will help build your new life. You may only end up doing one new thing a week, but you have to remember this is a marathon, not a sprint. The new activities and experiences will help you a little bit right now, but will help you a lot over time as you build your new life.

8. My final tip is that your ex-partner's friends and family are just that, theirs. They will always support your ex, and even if they truly care about you, they have to support their family. That is the harsh reality, and it sucks. Whatever their rationale, whatever horrible things your ex did, they will not waiver in their support. So if you think you can call them up and tell them about what your ex did, don’t fool yourself. Even if it did work and they sided with you, it won’t help anything. Don't bother, focus again on yourself and your needs.

Dealing with The Pain of Her New Relationship

Many times, when someone is ready to leave a relationship, the pain is too much for them to handle and they have to find someone else to fill the void. Unfortunately, this is all too common when marriages end. There are so many of us out here that have had to deal with this and it is very painful. The person we loved is with someone else and there is nothing we can do about it.

My case is unique in that my former wife chose my neighbor's son for her new partner. This further adds to the pain. With kids in the mix, I see her every day and it is a constant reminder of the immense pain. 

I often ask the question, why do people make a horrible choice for their new partner when ending a marriage? The new person is almost always the worst possible choice. There is a very simple reason for this. People choose the first person that is willing to swoon over them, make them the center of their universe, make them feel special and loved. Even if that is a fake love and the person is the worst possible partner. It just feels appealing to them, it gives them what they need, it strokes their ego and makes them feel special. 

Of course the person delivering this fake love is a horrible choice. They have nothing else going in life, and they will do anything to make your former partner feel special. That is exactly what the former partner needs. Someone who will do anything for them and make them feel special. Someone who will never reject them because they can't, they have nothing else. 

It's sad, but it is the reality. I have seen it time and time again, and I have lived it. The former partner makes every attempt to make things look perfect and happy, but they are not happy. Far from it. The harder they try, the more unhappy they likely are. 

How do we deal with this? I am still figuring this out. It hurts a lot, but we have no choice but to work through it. The first thing to realize is that the former partner is not happy. The pain of divorce is hard for everyone, even someone that leave to be with a new partner. They are just masking the pain and ignoring the truth. The true fact is that divorce hurts for everyone, even if our former partners are trying to hide the pain.

The other thing to know is that the more your former partner tries to make things look perfect and make their life look happy, the more they are lying to themselves. It is not perfect, and they are just trying to make things look good to justify their horrible decisions. The sad reality is that this can continue for quite a long time, and they may not ever develop enough self-awareness to know the truth. We can't wait around for this, we can't tell them about their horrible decisions (because they will never listen), we can only accept the reality and move on with our lives. 

First Christmas Alone and a False Sense of Hope

I broke down crying on the 21st, sobbing uncontrollably from the harsh reality and pain of my first Christmas alone. 

I was facing the reality of the situation- my wife moved into an apartment with my neighbor's son, the kids aren't coping well, and life is completely upside down. I was overwhelmed, I couldn't see anyway forward. The kids were home from school and they were bored. I had to text her for help- something I really did not want to do. She came to my rescue, caring for me, trying to help. 

I think this gave me a false sense of hope for what could happen with us. She was just doing it to help. It didn't mean anything to her. Maybe she feels guilty for what she did to me and our family. Maybe she truly sees that what she did is wrong. I don't know if it really matters, but I can't seem to stop thinking about it.

The next few days were filled with hope. What if she can finally see the truth? I texted her, tried to explain that things are not right. The kids aren't coping well, they are in pain. I am too. I told her she needs to stop pretending that things are good and right. She seemed a bit responsive and admitted that she feels like crap every day. I tried to help her see the truth, but she went back to blaming me. She said she feels like that because of the things I say to her. I hadn't even said anything to her lately and whenever I did in the past, it was only telling her the reality of the situation.

I thought there could be some grand gesture for Christmas, maybe she could come home and we could be a family again. I asked her to come home. It didn't work. There was no grand gesture, there was no Christmas miracle.

Part of me thinks her brain is shutting it out, trying to protect her from reality. She can't see it all. She is not happy. She cries, yells, and then just pretends things are ok. This has to be some sort of defense mechanism. But in the end, does it really matter? The fact of the matter is that things aren't changing and I am having trouble accepting that.

Now I am alone, Christmas by myself. I do have some friends and somewhat of a social network that I have created in my new life, but it's not what I want. I want my family back. It is just not the same, it feels empty without her here. She doesn't care. She replaced me with my neighbor's son. She has this grand idea of what things are and how much better they are. She is wrong, but she will never admit it. 

I think part of my hope is that what she did is so horrible, so stupid, so ridiculous, that it is almost impossible for someone to not figure out that it is wrong. I know that time will come eventually. The problem is that I am waiting for it, and I can't do that. Yet, here I am, hoping for the future. Hoping for a family that doesn't exist anymore. 

I am not crying now, I think I got most of that out already, I am feeling empty inside, alone, sad. I know this will get better with time. I know I have to let go of my marriage and the happiness that I never even truly knew I had. I should have appreciated it more, but I guess I will never have that chance again.

She will continue to pretend, continue to think things are better and continue to ignore the family she tore apart. I always thought you could never just replace one person with another, but apparently you can. With a little denial and pretending, you can do whatever you want in this life. Or at least some people can. I can't. 

Good People Doing Horrible Things and the Effect on Happiness

For anyone who has read my story so far, it is very messed up. It is kind of like something that would happen in a movie- A bad movie. As it has played out, I have had to reflect on why a good person like my former wife would do such horrible, horrible things. 

I don't know if I have the answer to that just yet, but I think it has to come down to some sort of defense mechanism in her brain. It seems her brain just won't let her see the whole of the circumstances- the horrible thing she did to her family. Every time I try to tell her, or even help her make any sort of realization about the facts of the situation, she shrugs it off or blames me for making her feel bad. She will even blame the kids at times. What is clearly missing is any accountability for herself and her actions.

In any marriage, the longer we are together with someone, the more we can see their flaws, the more things bother us, and the more we feel taken for granted. That was all at play in her mind. Then, a loser comes along- and I don't use that term lightly, I almost never say that about anyone. Someone who swoons over them, makes them feel special, and gives anything to be with them. They are out there. They want what someone else has. He made her feel special, he made her feel like he was living his life for her. And he was doing that, he is doing that. 

The problem with this is that it's not real. There is no real connection, and it is all based on lies. Lies that the person thinks the same, wants to do the same things, is exactly what the other person needs. And of course they do that, why not? They want the person to feel special so they can be chosen to be a new partner. Hormones take over, and it feels like true love. The hormones and feelings wear off over time, as they do with all relationships. When this happens, she will be as unhappy as she was before if not more unhappy because of the horrible things she did to her family. 

People have a base happiness level. The fulfillment they get from life, it is fairly constant. It can be changed, but only with hard work and good fundaments and approach to growth and development. Good things and bad things happen, and the person eventually returns to their base happiness level. This has been proven time and time again. There was a study that looked at whether or not someone thought they would be happier if they won the lottery, or if they lost a limb. Obviously, everyone thought that winning the lottery was the clear choice. The study found that, years down the road, the person that lost a limb was actually happier!

Why is this? It is because that person had to work and improve themself, their outlook on life, everything. The person that won the lottery didn't do any of that. This makes all the difference. This is why each and everyone of us who have gone through (and are going through) the pain of divorce will come out better in the end. We will be happier. The person that did the horrible thing, the person that thinks they won the lottery by going with the loser that swooned over them- they will be unhappy.


Learning About Myself and Letting Out The Pain of Divorce

One thing I learned today is that I need to let out my pain. Writing, meditating, exercising, anything to get the pain out. If I don't, it starts to build up inside and I can feel myself getting mad or upset. Seems like a simple concept, but it is a very important one. Now that I have realized this, it has made things so much easier for me, and I encourage everyone to reflect on this.

I knew a little bit about this, but didn't realize how important this was until recently. Two weeks ago, I had stopped doing my "work" at letting it out. I did notice quite a bit of difference in my mental well-being. I was just not my normal self at all. I found myself getting angry at my ex and feeling sorry for myself and victimized.

Through talking to people and noticing the positive effect of doing my work, I started to realize what I had to do. I started doing my work again- journaling, writing, letting my pain out- and I started to feel better. It wasn't a quick fix, there was nothing that just flipped a switch in my brain. It was more of a slow improvement as I started to do more of the activities that I needed for myself. I am certainly not back to normal, but better enough that I am starting to have some good days again.

It reminds me of something a counselor said to me once- "Those who feel, heal. When you resist, it persists." I think this is very true, and part of the reason why there are people out there who have not healed at all from the pain of divorce. I don't know about anyone else out there, but I do not want to be a person who is still angry and hurt for years after their divorce. I want to feel what I need to feel and heal as much as possible so I can get on with my life. I can't control what my former wife did, but I can control what I do about it and how I live the rest of my life.

I hope this helps someone else out there!

Her Justifications for Cheating

Throughout this whole ordeal, my ex-wife has been trying to justify her decision to cheat on me and leave me for my neighbor's son. She can be very convincing at times, even convincing me that I am as bad as she says. I will openly admit to my mistakes, which makes it worse because it just reinforces her negative views. As soon as I knew about any issues, I took immediate action and to make positive changes. She said it was too late, but some of the changes were just for me- to be a better person.

One thing she criticizes me for is that I was lazy. Yes, I was lazy at times- I get exhausted from thinking and worrying all day long. I get exhausted and need to recover. Is that an excuse? Maybe, but my battery was was running on empty. I have changed that now, and barely ever sit around doing nothing. She got mad at me for making these positive changes too. I am not even sure why.

We just kind of glided along over the years without talking about or changing how we organized our lives. Life got in the way of our relationship, the kids and their needs did too. We both could have changed, but we didn't. We both made a lot of changes after the separation and one thing that bothers me is that we could have done that together, but she chose to do that with someone else instead. There is nothing that I can do to change this. I have no control over her and would never even try to control her because that is not who I am.

One of the things she said was that I didn’t support her enough with the kids. I didn’t agree with this. Our kids are difficult, and I tried so many things, but they just didn’t listen. I remember numerous times when our youngest child would have a meltdown (temper tantrum) and I would try so hard to get her to calm down. Anything I tried would just not work, and she would even get more angry if I tried. Sometimes I just gave up, but I don’t think it is fair for my ex-wife to get mad at me when there was nothing I could do to resolve the issue.

I think it comes back to communication. We never effectively communicated with each other. We think differently and we don’t even talk the same way. I don’t think we ever communicated properly. There were so many times when I thought I did something good or helped out, and she didn’t know or even care. That is the funny thing about housework with kids. You can do a whole bunch of things and the other person may not ever even know you did it.

Our older daughter was given so much attention from my ex that she would only calm down for her. Again, I could try all day, but the daughter only wanted her mom to calm her down. This put me in a difficult place because I would try, but nothing would help. My ex-wife’s response was “you are the father, you have to do it.” I think this is both true and untrue. Yes, it is moderately responsible to expect that it has to get done, so the father has to do it. However, there are other dynamics at play. Her helicopter parenting made it much more difficult for me to do this. She did way too much for them, and I had more of a hands off approach. The interesting thing is that now that she goes out all of the time with her boyfriend, I have much better nights with the girls, and they go to bed far better than they did when she was at home.

When it comes to her justifications, it helps to understand that she made her decision, and was looking for everything she could to justify it. She was looking for negative things to help support her decision. Anything I said or did was twisted to support her decision- she was looking for negative things to help her feel better about her guilt and about the horrible thing she was doing. There was nothing I could say to change her mind. My most compelling argument was “you have to decide what type of person you want to be, the type of person that worked as hard as she could to save her marriage and family, or the type of person who split up her family to be with her neighbor's son.” Even that fell flat with her. Sure, it made her feel bad, but she believed it was me that made her feel bad, not the facts or her actions.

This comes to my point of tossing out the Hail Mary. I need everyone to know that if you get to this point, it is over. Don’t bother, just don’t do it. I said “What about our vows?” This is the dumbest question I could have asked. It seemed like a valid point to me, but it is wasn’t. It’s that last hope that maybe, just maybe, the vows actually meant something and it could change her mind. It didn’t. It would never work. Please never try this, it sucks.

Healing from Separation and Divorce- Writing a Letter to your Former Partner (that you will never give to them)

I have been reading a new book about healing after separation and I came across an activity called "writing a poison pen letter." It immediately spoke to me and I started on it right away. It was extremely helpful, and I recommend it to everyone going through the pain of separation and divorce. It really does help and feels so good to do.

Here is an outline of the task:

1. Sit down and write a letter to your former partner.

2. Write it as mean as you possibly can. Don't pull any punches. Swear, and say your worst.

3. Never send it to them. This is empowering, you are choosing not to act. You are choosing not to let them in anymore. 

4. Feel awesome after! It is so liberating.

I may share my letter in the future, but wow did I say some harsh things. All true though, but many things I would never say to anyone. I was tempted to send the letter, but I resisted. It would not be good. These are things that she needs to realize for herself and she will never ever accept them if someone tells them to her. 

Try it today, I highly recommend this and I will do it again very soon. If this helps, check out my other top tips for emotionally surviving your separation or divorce here.

My Experience With The Anger Stage of Divorce

I have gone into the anger stage quite a few times. I seem to go in and out of it quite often. This can be a dangerous phase to enter, but I think it can be quite helpful to get through my denial. I have been trying to find healthier ways of dealing with the anger, things like journaling and writing. These activities are very helpful as they can help get out the aggression in healthy ways.  

I verbally lashed out today. I don’t know if I should have, but I know I said a few things that needed to be said. I have to be very careful with the anger, I don’t want to make things so much worse. I think the anger is mostly due to the fact that I finally know what is going on with her. The other relationship is confirmed at this point and that definitely put me into the anger stage. My mind seems to be protecting me from the hurt now.

I don’t even know what to feel at this point. It is still about the pain. The hurt. The betrayal. The lies. Not overly inspired to write today. Not very creative. But at least I am slightly less depressed. I seem to flip back and forth between anger and depression at times.

We got into a huge fight. A couple of hours long, lots of tears, swearing from both sides. What was accomplished? I would say probably nothing. I am hopeful that she learned something about my point of view, but let’s be honest. There is no chance in hell of that being true.

The funny thing about arguing is that there is literally no way I can win. If I talk- she gets annoyed with me. If she makes a good point, it confirms her negative opinion of me. Worst of all, if I make a good point, she feels bad and blames me for making her feel bad. Arguing is completely pointless. Worst of all, I couldn’t help myself, I had to do it. Almost like a compulsion.

She was lashing out and trying to hurt me. She threw a lot of things in my face. I probably did that too. The funny thing was that this was our first ever real big fight- in all 17 years together. We have had small ones before, but never a blow out fight like this. How does a relationship end without fighting? I feel bad. The fight was bad. I can’t imagine anything good came from it.

After the fighting and more realizing that she is in a serious relationship with our neighbor's son. I really started to pull back. I did not focus on her at all anymore, and just focused on having fun with the kids. The weird thing about this is that it really was the only thing she responded to. Yet, as soon as I stopped doing it, she went back to her old ways.

It really is about not trying to get her back at all, when someone makes a decision like this and is trying to justify it, there is nothing you can do to change their mind.

I have a friend that is going through a separation at the same time, he is stuck in the anger stage. I don’t think it is a good place to be. He is haunted by the feelings he had for his wife, and has turned those feelings into anger instead of processing them. Everything he says and does leads him back to his feelings (and the anger form they are currently in).

I have lashed out a few times, it didn’t help at all. Not in the least bit. This last time, she is already gone. Nothing left. I am not even sure if she is trying to be pleasant at this point.

In a bit of an angry state, once I knew about her relationship with the neighbor, I said that I didn’t want my girls growing up thinking it is acceptable to split up their family to be with their neighbor. Harsh thing to say, I know, but it is true is it not? She took this to say that I was going to tell them right now that it is unacceptable. I don’t even know, I was just saying it out of anger. She then says that I am “fu*ked in the head” because I was going to do that. Maybe I am, maybe having my wife leave me for the neighbor has messed up my head.

The interesting thing about anger is that it helps you grow apart. If there is anyone out there foolish enough to want to save their marriage at this point, you absolutely should not show any anger towards your spouse. If you do, it will progress the separation process significantly. As I look back to these days, it was the anger, the fights, me telling her what she was doing wrong that pushed her further and further away.

The Truth Comes Out- Finding out about my ex-wife's cheating

One night, my children and I saw my wife walking with my neighbor (actually the neighbor's son) and holding hands. It was a one in a million chance that we would even see that, maybe even less likely now that I think of it.

I was pretty mad, the children were pretty mad too. I texted her when we got home and told her that we were upset. I asked her not to come home. Not that I was kicking her out, just that I had confirmed what I suspected and didn't want to fight. She came home anyway and we fought. She lied and denied everything, and maintained that there was nothing going on. She was lying quite a bit.

One really weird thing happened, I called her my ex-wife and she started crying. I was very confused. I asked her why she cried, and she said that she never had considered that before. Again, quite confusing given the fact that she was already in a relationship with the neighbor.

We talked a lot more over the coming nights. Three nights in a row of talking. Some fighting, some hugging, and a little calm talking. I want to say that the hope didn’t make me feel better, but it really did. The other side of it was that I didn’t even know if I wanted her back. Obviously, the trust was gone, and she really wasn’t the great person that I thought she was. Still, she maintained that she only walked with the neighbor and spent time with him, listening to music, and talking and such. She felt bad about lying, but said they got close as friends. Could it really be that she was so upset about just spending time with him and lying about where she was?

A few days later, she admitted to me that she “liked him.” He was nice to her, he was nice to the kids, and she had fun when she was with him. She said she was confused about her feelings. She didn’t know what to do. Yet, she was still spending her time with him and I was spending my time with the kids.

I still find myself trying to convince her to be with me instead of with him. I really want my family to stay together, but honestly, I don’t even know if I am attracted to her anymore, or if I truly want to be with her anymore. She is not the person she used to be. She is making poor decisions and she is being dishonest. I honestly think she has already made a decision to be with him, but that she is hesitating because she feels guilty about what she is doing to the kids. She says she is confused, but I don’t think it has anything to do with me at all. Yet, somehow I still have hope.

The one thing that hurts the most is that we were having a good conversation and I was asking her questions. I asked her if her relationship with him has gotten physical. She said no. I asked her this question four times in a row, and each time, she said no. She maintained eye contact as she said it, but each time she looked down and to the left immediately after saying it. Every single time. This is an indisputable sign that she was lying to me. I guess the extent of the physical nature is still unknown- there is that damn hope again- I know I am fooling myself. They could have hugged, cuddled, held hands, kissed, or more. She later admitted that she is attracted to him.

She eventually agreed to talk to a counsellor about her feelings. I guess that is a good sign, but I later realized that she was only doing this to make herself feel better about what she was doing. Essentially she said she has to decide what to do, and I agree it has to be her own decision. She almost seems to be trying to compromise at this point, but that is just not an option. I told her that I do not believe there are people out there that regret working hard to make their marriage work, but there are people who regret breaking up their families for another person.

I still don’t even know if I want her to stay. Can I ever trust her again? I really don’t know. She is so good at lying. She lied so much. She did things nobody should ever do, and she can do them again. Will she really stop talking to him? Doubtful. Or if she does, it will probably be short lived. Like for 2 weeks or something. I know he is trying to convince her to go with him. I also know he can act as nice as he wants, but that doesn’t make him a good person. His whole life is drama and he is dragging her into that. I don’t want that life for my children. They cannot have that life. He may be nice to her, but he is a horrible person and she is being sucked into that black hole. I don’t want my kids to be involved in that at all. Of course, that saddest part about it is that I have no choice.

I can hope that things go sour with him I guess. Maybe he is getting mad and frustrated with her. Maybe he is starting to show his true colors. Maybe not. There is no way to know. I still have hope. This is sad, but I always have hope. Right up until the end. The very end- Which may come soon. June 1st is the day for her potential move out of the house. I guess I will know more by then. Doesn’t seem like she is doing a whole lot to prepare for that day though. I guess that could be a good sign. Or that could just be a sign that she is not really thinking rationally, which I already know.

We spent a few hours together today, alone. Almost like a small date. Why did she do that? Why? Is she testing me? Is she taking one last look at whether or not she can stand to be around me? Is she just trying to confirm that she doesn’t love me and won’t regret her decision to leave? That one is the most likely I would say. There is nothing I can do to change that. I need to just focus on my life and move on.

It sucks. It really really sucks. All of this is happening around me and there is nothing I can do about it. I can’t change her mind. I can’t do anything to make her love me again. I can’t do anything at all. There is nothing I can do at all.

As things unfolded further, more and more came out. My wife was buying furniture with the neighbor, planning day trips with the kids, getting an apartment together. She said he was just “helping her” but there were texts saying I love you and I miss you from both parties. Back and forth many times. As I talked to her about it, trying to make sense of things, she basically said they fell for each other when they were spending time together with the kids. She said she was not happy for a long time, and had a lot of needs that weren’t being met.

In the end, I am not sure if I clarified this throughout, but my wife cheated on me with my neighbor's son, fell in love with him, and is moving out with him. That is pretty messed up. His personal life is a mess- his ex is crazy, she yells around and causes problems. It is a messed up situation. I would say my ex-wife’s moral code has been tested, and she failed.

One night, nearing the day my ex was moving out, she had to rush out to meet him. He was upset because of the situation, and because he was cheated on before and felt bad for how things were. He sent me a big long text trying to justify their behavior. It was obvious that he did it to make himself feel better. I don’t even know how to respond to it. Do I message him back to make him feel bad? He should feel bad. Of course, if I ‘make’ him feel bad, I am the bad guy and that just justifies it more. If not to him, certainly to her. Again, not really sure there is a way to win in this situation. Probably best to keep my mouth shut.

After many many lies, she moved in with him right away. Right from the first night, they were living together. They were planning it for a while. You can’t just ‘get on a list’ for an apartment. You have to apply together and they did. It is actually still hard for me to believe this happened. That she did this, all of this.

I have so much pain. So much hurt inside me. Many days I just try to feel as much of it as I can so that my brain can just shut down and stop thinking about it. I called a crisis line yesterday. It actually helped quite a bit. I could cry without judgement at all. Just talked and let it out. It literally shocks me that so many people in this world have gone through this. I don’t understand how they do it. I have been through painful breakups before, but nothing like this.

One Year After My Separation

Somehow, I don't know how, but I made it through the one year anniversary of my separation. It has been a painful and long year. I had s...

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