Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your own health and well-being is being compromised (physically, emotionally, mentally).
There is nothing wrong with divorcing a mentally ill spouse. Maybe they have less control over their behavior, but the effects can be just as detrimental.
Do you think it's a different threshold than for physical illness? For example, needing to push your spouse around in a wheelchair limits your life a lot. Same if they need help using the bathroom.
It's different. Someone in a wheelchair can't help but be in a wheelchair. Presumably OP didn't marry their spouse when their mental illness existed or was unmedicated. Which means if their spouse put in the effort to get the proper treatment they could likely return to a better state. Now if op married someone who acts exactly as they do now, op is a bit more at fault but certainly Doesn't mean they have to stay
Anonymous wrote:Even when a spouse gets help, s/he may still be impossible to live with. What then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your own health and well-being is being compromised (physically, emotionally, mentally).
There is nothing wrong with divorcing a mentally ill spouse. Maybe they have less control over their behavior, but the effects can be just as detrimental.
Do you think it's a different threshold than for physical illness? For example, needing to push your spouse around in a wheelchair limits your life a lot. Same if they need help using the bathroom.
It's different. Someone in a wheelchair can't help but be in a wheelchair. Presumably OP didn't marry their spouse when their mental illness existed or was unmedicated. Which means if their spouse put in the effort to get the proper treatment they could likely return to a better state. Now if op married someone who acts exactly as they do now, op is a bit more at fault but certainly Doesn't mean they have to stay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your own health and well-being is being compromised (physically, emotionally, mentally).
There is nothing wrong with divorcing a mentally ill spouse. Maybe they have less control over their behavior, but the effects can be just as detrimental.
Of course there is something wrong with divorcing a mentally ill spouse. Unless you have marriage vows that said, "In sickness and in health, unless your sickness is mental and makes my life pretty awful..." there is a LOT wrong with dumping a spouse just because of mental illness.
You have depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder and still not be abusive, either verbally or physically. THey are not symptoms of those diseases. If someone has become abusive, that's an issue beyond the illness.
I think you're being disingenuous. Proactively working on mental health issues, is different than not.
And those vows are antiqued. We may still utter them today, but in their origin, mental health issues were ignored.
I think it's abusive to bully someone into staying in a marriage in which their own health is being regularly or permanently compromised, by saying "hey you took this vow!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't care how mentally ill you are or what label you put on it or you being in a wheelchair. You verbally and physically abuse me and I'm gone.
F support. There are too many normal people out there to marry. I'm not about to raise a husband child with defects nor will I live a miserable life.
Well, I hope you made that clear when you got married so at least he can dump you without guilt when you get crazy.
How does one just "get crazy"? I am not being snarky- I'm being serious. My MIL (DH's dad who he's been estranged from for 20 years despite the occasional rambling card that devolves into paranoia quickly) got married around 28, she and DHs dad are about the same age, onset for most things are early 20s, he very clearly has something diagnosable but hasn't been diagnosed. They divorced around early 40s, I'm always trying to understand how it wasn't obvious immediately or at the very least very early on in marriage (before kids) that he was ill. I get hanging in for kids and trying and how you can talk yourself into that- but how do you not know when someone is ill from the beginning? Isn't it odd to come on suddenly in 30s and 40s for most things?
Genuinely curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't care how mentally ill you are or what label you put on it or you being in a wheelchair. You verbally and physically abuse me and I'm gone.
F support. There are too many normal people out there to marry. I'm not about to raise a husband child with defects nor will I live a miserable life.
Well, I hope you made that clear when you got married so at least he can dump you without guilt when you get crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care how mentally ill you are or what label you put on it or you being in a wheelchair. You verbally and physically abuse me and I'm gone.
F support. There are too many normal people out there to marry. I'm not about to raise a husband child with defects nor will I live a miserable life.