Anonymous wrote:OP here again, this is only my third reply to this thread. None of the other post regarding going to therapy or discussing my marriage was me. That was someone else. I would sincerely appreciate feedback only from those who have been divorced or separated. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my spouse will be angry. He thinks our relationship is fine. I’ve told him many times it’s not, we have gone to counseling twice. He hasn’t changed. He is too focused on work. Divorce will upend his easy life, so I expect it will get ugly. I want to prepare and get organized before things get heated so it can go as smoothly as possible.
I hear you, but that is kind of cruel. You will get the benefit of organizing things making financial, social, emotional, logistical arrangements, and you spouse will be all the more upended. Reconsider. ESPECIALLY if you have children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my spouse will be angry. He thinks our relationship is fine. I’ve told him many times it’s not, we have gone to counseling twice. He hasn’t changed. He is too focused on work. Divorce will upend his easy life, so I expect it will get ugly. I want to prepare and get organized before things get heated so it can go as smoothly as possible.
He won’t be surprised; though he may try to be and try to blame you for wrecking everything (his easy, selfish life). You’ve tried to be adults and talk about it; he will not or cannot. The fact that any lawyer or therapist you’ve spoke with pegs him as one so unreasonable that you have to move out in order to get a response for him tells us everything we need to know. He doesn’t even have enough maturity to move out himself when asked or via a separation/temp custody letter.
Can you move out with the kids or is he a competent caregiver and good with them and for them?
Yes pick your lawyer, sign the retainer, fill everything out. Move and file that same day for separation and temporary everything.
His lawyer will call yours, talk through them.
You may be able to mediate, or he goes bonkers and wants to fight everything. In that case freeze all joint bank and brokerage accounts also when filing.
I would not tell him anything, he already failed at responding to talks about the relationship, feelings, goals, and his role/work addiction. Trust and love is gone.
I think you are giving terrible advice that will lead to a high conflict divorce. Mine was amicable because I took the slow road and did not do it the way you describe. The way you describe leads to very high conflict divorces. The better way is to insist you need to divorce and do it in the best interest of the kids and get a property settlement agreement done that is fair. People can mediate or mediate with attorneys. The way you support leads to a tramautic divorce. You have to work together vs. being pit against each other.
Have you ever gotten divorced? You both are saying the same thing, but either way someone has to move out, someone has to file for separation, and someone has to start the finances and custody agreement talks.
What does “slow road” event mean? 5-10 years and wait until the children are in college? Sit on your couch and agree to terms, get them papered up at the mediators and then both sign them? The latter happens in 80% of the time, especially if both parents are decent child caregivers and know the marriage is over.
Anonymous wrote:OP here again, this is only my third reply to this thread. None of the other post regarding going to therapy or discussing my marriage was me. That was someone else. I would sincerely appreciate feedback only from those who have been divorced or separated. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my spouse will be angry. He thinks our relationship is fine. I’ve told him many times it’s not, we have gone to counseling twice. He hasn’t changed. He is too focused on work. Divorce will upend his easy life, so I expect it will get ugly. I want to prepare and get organized before things get heated so it can go as smoothly as possible.
You should rethink this decision to divorce. It not getting enough attention your only grievance with DH? He works too much? Could fill the need for attention elsewhere? Maybe you take a look at the pool of available men. The selection of decent single men is slim pickings.
Anonymous wrote:I think my spouse will be angry. He thinks our relationship is fine. I’ve told him many times it’s not, we have gone to counseling twice. He hasn’t changed. He is too focused on work. Divorce will upend his easy life, so I expect it will get ugly. I want to prepare and get organized before things get heated so it can go as smoothly as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my spouse will be angry. He thinks our relationship is fine. I’ve told him many times it’s not, we have gone to counseling twice. He hasn’t changed. He is too focused on work. Divorce will upend his easy life, so I expect it will get ugly. I want to prepare and get organized before things get heated so it can go as smoothly as possible.
Clearly he does not understand how serious the situation is from your perspective. If there is any chance he might snap out of his work-always trance if he knew you were at the end of your rope, it might make sense to let him know more directly. He may be thinking you're just going through some ups and downs in the marriage. Maybe if you told him directly that you feel like you're at the end of your rope and ask him whether he sees any possibility that things could change, he might finally understand. -- former workaholic DH who saw the light
Sometimes an ultimatum finally gets a person's attention. If you say that this has to change or I do not see a future to this marriage. I don't want to leave I would like to have a different life with you, but it can't be this life that has developed to become this. He might change, and in any event if you do this he can never claim to be surprised.
That requires some self awareness, maturity, and no personality/ mental disorders.
Two therapy sessions and your life partners telling you her concerns and marital issues were the last straw. No need for drama now. He had years to be a real partner, father and homeowner, and he wasn’t.
A man can be driven by fears about being a good provider and securing a financially sound future, so that he ends up working in totally unhealthy ways (esp in jobs and industries where this is highly encouraged). That doesn't excuse this behavior, but I do think it is a form of myopia and not mental illness. If that is what is going on, even a couple of therapy sessions might be misunderstood as just a few bumps in the road (of course, it depends on what was said in those sessions).
Op said they tired therapy twice, likely for multiple sessions. So she knows if anything improved or not after those two attempts.
Op is on a good track. She’ll be relieved soon and once this is all over.