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Thursday 29 December 2016

107 - Looking Back - a year that was


Well, that was a year.
On December 20 last year – my birthday – in  a fit of anger and (uninformed) jealousy, she burst out and asked for a divorce. Am Broken

I said that that this was unaffordable. But I moved out of our shared room, did my own washing and cooking. This remained the case till the middle of June.

I went and undertook some Counselling which was helpful without being revelatory.

But my story and emotions are, of course, very common.

Then, in the summer, came a dramatic turnaround.

And we are pretty much in that same situation now. There are some glimpses of the old person but, overall, the relationships between her and me and her and our son are tidy and much improved. Drama is less, humour is more.

Am I convinced that a person can change just-like-that? No.
Have we had The Conversation as to where we go from here? No.

I had lunch the other day with a friend of mine – she had been the first person I had shared my troubles - way back in 2011.

I described what had happened over the last year and that things were better. ‘But you don’t sound as if you love her or like her.’

The point possibly is that I do not and I see no point to having that conversation – or, rather, initiating that conversation. This is ‘work’ now and I will try and do what is necessary for the sake of our son.

I can’t remember which day it was but it was recently and I was hugging our son – and I just felt an overwhelming love and attachment. I have written before about how I draw strength from him and that was how I felt. (October 2019 note - 'the rhythm of nature')

I also remember a Valentine’s Letter (July 2019 Note - old letters) I wrote to my wife right at the beginning of our marriage and another letter – in about the same time period – that I wrote while travelling for work. I spoke about what she had given me, the love that I felt. I threw myself into the relationship but soon came the demands, the anger, the never-good-enough and I just put my head down and worked; am still doing so but on more equal terms.

My cousin, my friends believe I should not give up on the hope that this closeness and mutual support and overwhelming love can happen with a partner as well as a child. I have no doubt it can and I have seen it amongst those whom I love. But I am content to survive and should I achieve freedom at some point, friendship and companionship I will be able to handle but mutual dependence is something I will be petrified of for fear of failing and hurting myself and another.

106 - Glimpses


There are occasional glimpses of the old personality – as a I wrote in Regression and Return

Last year, I put aside identical amounts as Christmas and birthday presents for her and me. £600.

This year, I suggested that we go together for her Christmas present and the balance of £600 we would simply transfer into her account. So, we had a pleasant morning and lunch, she chose something and decided that she would order it online and have it delivered. About a week later and only a couple of days before Christmas, she says, ‘I haven’t ordered that leather jacket yet. I was expecting you to remind me.’ I did not react.

If am looking at something on my phone, she finds an excuse to come around and glance over my shoulder. In the dog days between Christmas and New Year when there’s hardly anyone in, she finds an excuse to ring me in the office when she never does otherwise – presumably checking whether I really am at work. She has not ‘caught me’ at anything because there is nothing to catch.

During our winter holiday to Spain there were attempts at control on what I might wear and in front of our son – what she was saying was perfectly sensible but I could not give in in front of the kid and she gave in without losing it.

Lately, she has been very helpful to my cousin who recently had a baby. So, by way of thank you, I bought her a box of posh chocolates. ‘Oh, why have you done that? The box says, ‘with thanks’. Thanks for what?’ A weird reaction. ‘Thank you for helping my cousin.’ And left it at that.

 Has she really changed? Can someone change so dramatically? I still exchange e-mails and texts – social and professional - with the friends that she might suggest I have a soft spot for but I am careful to delete them. Will it just take one of those – harmless though it will be – to take her back to her old place? Is she just bottling everything up?


But there are also improvements. The other evening I had gone to bed before her and our son. He snuggled up to me as he was about to go to bed and, when asked by her, said that he wanted to stay with me. She gave us both a kiss and went to sleep in his bed. In a previous incarnation I would have expected great anger and an insistence on him going back to his bed.

Monday 12 December 2016

105 - Regression and Return


Well, that was a strange week.

It did not begin well. There was certainly something wrong but I could not figure out what?

On the Sunday we had gone to visit my new nephew. My cousin – the mother – liked a handbag that my wife had bought (on a discount) and asked my wife to get it for her and that she would pay her back.

While walking back to the car, my wife asked me whether we should give my cousin the handbag as a gift? My response was that she (my wife) had suggested a certain amount of money for gifts for the child and so, that would be fine as we were still within budget.

A week later, I now realise that that was probably the wrong answer. Because there was immediately a coldness and something wrong with the mood. A day later  she mentioned that she could not find the bag any more but that my cousin’s husband would buy it for her at full price. But then, perhaps he would buy her something more extravagant like a diamond ring as another husband was known to have done for his wife on the birth of their baby.

This was a direct reference to the – probable – fact that I had not bought anything specific for my wife when she gave birth. Rightly or wrongly, occasion related presents have not been ‘me’ but there have been lots of presents and holidays and spending over the years. What I should have said was, ‘No, she can pay you back; our budget is for the baby.’

(we happened to be watching a baby DVD the other evening and  in it I say, ‘Oh, look, mum’s first cooking for four and a half weeks.’ So, I guess, I would have been doing all the cooking and everything for a month as we had no parents nearby. And then many weeks more and night feeds and much, much more. Not a compensation for a diamond ring but something?)

With Christmas coming up, on the Tuesday I was walking past a shop and saw a cheap  Pokemon rucksack which I know our son will enjoy. I texted a picture to her. Immediately she called back.

‘No, you will not buy that. It is totally chav (trash). He will NOT be taking that anywhere. You might as well buy something from SportsDirect as a gift. How could you? If you want to buy a rucksack then it should be Superdry or another good brand. It is rubbish.’

I did not react. I simply said, ‘Ok. I will return it.’ It was The Voice and Attitude that I had become accustomed to.

A few hours later, presumably having calmed down, she texted to say that I should not return it to the shop.

Over the week, the behaviour improved.

My cousin requested her help in bathing the baby – something they were struggling with as new parents – and my wife, in addition, offered to cook food and take it over. As this was a ‘special project’ and she loves special projects that will show her in a good light, she did a significant amount of work in cooking and travelling over and helping. I offered to do everything but this was declined.
I have thanked her and will buy her some chocolates tomorrow. I have also booked a very expensive restaurant for her birthday in early January and have offered to go Christmas shopping with her tomorrow.

Friday 2 December 2016

104 - A Common Story again - link to newspaper article



A really interesting article on 7 ways to tell if you’re heading for divorce – was in the newspaper very prominently and I wonder if she read it.

Not having enough sex. Unless there’s an underlying psychosexual or medical reason, a lack of sex is usually a symptom of a deeper relationship problem rather than the issue itself. (ok, so we haven’t since August 2015 and nothing happens the few times we have tried since the summer. She has never been keen anyway – generally after sex the remark has been, ‘satisfied now? Can I go back to sleep?’ I have to say I am not particularly bothered – if the mental / emotional connection is not there – and, for me, it is still not - then the rest is just going through the motions.)

Spending time together. Date nights are not necessary unless you want them to be. But not having them does not mean your relationship is doomed. However, if we replace “date nights” with “spending time together”, that is important. It can be going for a walk, watching a film or cooking together. (Over the last few months this has improved – perhaps better than before. I am getting home earlier, I am being ‘allowed’ to cook again, we spend time in the kitchen, have gone out to films and meals – a level of friendliness which is good. Less temper displayed and less lecturing and criticism. Her relationship with our son also seems to have improved.)

Appreciation and gratitude. These are really important and if they go (or were never there in the first place) this can start to lead to one of the four bigger warning signs below. It’s not about the grand gesture, but small, everyday signs of appreciation. Saying, “I really appreciate how hard you are working for the family,” or even just doing things like making someone a cup of tea. (This is just the hubbub of everyday life though I am not sure we have ever said, ‘I really appreciate …’ – I make her coffee in the morning before going to work for example and, recently, she has been making me orange juice.)

However, in couples therapy there are the Gottman Institute’s “four horsemen of the apocalypse” signs, which are good to know about and look for. These are warning signs that we would look for in therapy that may signal a relationship where the problems go a little deeper and is in trouble, unless the couple are prepared to recognise and work on these areas.

Criticism. If you or your partner criticise each other habitually, you are attacking their personality. Over time, this will breed resentment. If one person is constantly criticising the other partner this can become a huge problem. (As this blog make clear, this has been a HUGE issue – both for me and our son. It is much improved but I wonder if everything is just being held in. But, in the past, the carping has been continuous and vicious.)

Contempt. This is the hardest to work with but not impossible as long as it’s named, recognised and both of you are prepared to work on it. But if one consistently looks down on their partner, is dismissive, constantly rolling their eyes at what the other says, mocks them, is sarcastic (and not in jest) or sneers at their partner, then they are seeing them as “less than”. Contempt can closely follow behind loss of respect. (‘don’t kid yourself that you could have got a job elsewhere’, ‘are you a Head of .. or just a Manager’, ‘should have told me you are impotent’, ‘hope your friend dies’, continuous diminishing of almost everything that I did while at the same time wanting great appreciation of everything that she did.)

Defensiveness. If you can’t talk to one another because one or both of you are defensive, this can be a problem. Communication is key to working on any relationship problem – without that you can’t get anywhere. Defensiveness can lead to “blame tennis” where each person is just lashing out in defence: “You did this.” “Yes, but you did this.” (we never really played blame tennis as I never attacked and rarely defended myself – I tried to be accommodating enough to try and find a way out.’)

Stonewalling. This is when one person retreats, won’t talk, and will block the other person. It usually happens if the person stonewalling doesn’t want to hear what’s being said, either because they are afraid of it or can’t deal with it, or both. This can result in the person being stonewalled desperately trying to talk to the other; they may even try to trigger a row to get the stonewaller to react and talk. (did I stonewall over a period of time because I did not react to what I considered to be significant provocations? Possibly. From my side, I was afraid of reactions and if I did face silence, that was good – it meant there was some peace!!)

Comments from readers below-the-line were really very interesting and shows how common my story is:

Well those four horsemen have been a constant in my marriage for over half a century. They only finally cantered off when security was guaranteed and experience coped with any worries. Following the advice of all those TV therapists to know what the other was thinking and doing through 'talking', was well and truly ditched when revealed as a posh form of nagging. Silence in its place is golden.

Contempt is always a show-stopper. If it manages to creep into a relationship -and not just a romantic one- it will surface over and over again on the tiniest opportunity despite the best of intentions. I believe it is impossible -baring extraordinary circumstances- to make a person that has felt contempt for you even once forget the experience and not feel it again anytime you do something even slightly out of their taste. It is like broken glass or crumpled paper; it will never be perfect again.

Stonewalling may be the result of an over-persistent partner that refuses to put themselves in your shoes and give you any leeway whatsoever as they invoke everything from social norms to their "feelings" to convince you that you are indeed an elephant. After a point it is the only way to keep some semblance of self-respect (it is unbearable to have to accept that you are always wrong) or even sanity in extreme cases.

What about the feeling of happiness when she decides to go out for the day and leave me to myself.


I also have a "controlling and abusive" partner. If she was a well balanced person I might just consider leaving him (their child) with her - of course if she was well balanced I would have no reason to leave. But neither would I risk leaving him with a controlling abusive person. People like this need to control and abuse - and if you are not the target he might be.

Stay together for the kids. Which is what my parents did and I'm so grateful for it.

If they can just cooperate as friends living in the same house then fine. If there are fights or stress and tensions in the household (even if hidden) then the children will suffer for it and a separation may be far better. I've seen healthy separations from the children's point of view. They just need to clearly understand the new arrangement and how it will work from their point of view, and to feel that they still have security and that there will always be someone there for them as they grow up.

One of the difficulties with marriage is the number of different functions it is expected to perform. Marriage as source of personal emotional and sexual fulfilment isn't the same as marriage as stable environment for loving and raising children. I think the latter can be possible even if the former fades, providing the husband and wife make it their priority. This would of course mean maintaining mutual respect and willing cooperation.

Every family is different. I know those who have divorced and regretted it, others who have no doubts that becoming a single parent was the right route to take.

Very well said. The stay together for the kids or to keep the family together line- sometimes seems more about self deception, or possibly selfishly deflecting away from the possibility of change. And as you say kids always know when their parents are just existing with each other or are unhappy. Sadly, I suspect some kids whose parents use them as a way to hide away from facing things as they are, will grow up and be more vulnerable to putting up with problems instead of tackling them as they arise.

If you ARE having kids - have 'em when you're in your twenties - preferably early twenties. You'll still be (to a 50 y.o.) young when they've left home,  and you'll have the energy to deal with all the challenges, and the flexibility to roll with the punches. And once you HAVE kids - commit to it, read up on it, do everything you can to give those kids a happy childhood: nothing is more important than that, even your own so-called happiness. Any problems you have with your partner are just gonna have to wait (beyond abuse, of course).

Stonewalling - my experience is that this is usually caused by one person feeling that dialogue does not work - not because they are afraid or don't want to hear what is being said but because repeatedly their past dialogue and discussion is ignored or not taken on board so they end up shutting up shop because there's clearly no point continuing to communicate with someone who talks the talk but doesn't walk the walk. They then get blamed for stonewalling when the issue is actually more complex than it first seems.

 What a vexed world we live in ….

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