Your resentments sound like you’re doing things "for her" rather than for yourself which will only keep building more resentments.
I loved Maise’s whole post of course but I stole this snippet to pose something to you.
It’s the doing all this "for her" talk.
First of all this in itself is a fallacy. You wouldn’t be trying to do this "for her" if it wasn’t because she is who you want.
You want to be allowed to stay married to her. And even that isn’t enough to quell the unfairness you feel/felt (I realize this post is a few months old)
I personally think recognizing we change for ourselves can be a powerful thought.
You want to be the type of man that deserves your wife. You haven’t lived up to that. And it’s hard work to get from the shameful, worthless feelings into stepping into your power.
You don’t think you can be that on some level, so then instead of recognizing the vulnerable feelings, you get angry with her. You are shielding all the vulnerable feelings with these stronger feelings such as anger because somewhere down the line you learned vulnerability is weak. Your pride is in the way of becoming the man you could be.
Somehow you need to change the narrative. Admitting you are not where you want to be. Fear of never getting there. These are the things you are actually angry about, but you make your wife the scapegoat in your war with yourself.
Maybe there has been movement in these areas but I am still responding this way because I don’t think you still see it.
A strong man loves and protects his wife. You have this image that a strong man protects himself. Think about what things have taught you that. Think about how those ideas aren’t serving you. And then become mindful of your self talk. Keep correcting your flawed thinking until you have programmed new responses to it.
All that is happening here is you are clinging to thoughts and beliefs that do not serve you and not relating it to how that comes out in your behaviors. Change your perspective of strong, of becoming the man you want to be, so you can be in the marriage you want to be in. Recognize the ways you believe that could make your life better. Be thankful each day over the little things. Before you know it your behaviors will match your new way of thinking.
It’s hard work being mindful of the ways we need to change. But if instead we frame it with where we want to be and we have distinctly compelling reasons why we want that, it’s not as hard to make our thoughts line up with our desires. Become intentional each day. Before long you will find that you like yourself better. And when you don’t hate yourseld, you will find so much more space to make the amends and be who your wife needs.
Remove the framing in which you don’t have choices. Because you have lots of choices. Your wife isn’t holding you back, you are. The truth is you want this marriage and its possible benefits, but you don’t want to give the vulnerability to be in it. Work on removing the fears of that vulnerability, because that is the way.
And I will leave with the book recommendation I make to everyone who is wallowing in shame: rising strong by brene brown. You need to read this book and start practicing your bravery as a result.