I’m really sorry, user 4578. The continued promises and backsliding are heartbreaking, I know. You sound strong and determined. And done.
1. So your gut was right. That’s something good to remember. This is part of the watch and observe thing. You know when something is going on, even when it isn’t confirmed by proof, even when he denies. That was an important confirmation for me. You can trust yourself and your gut. Even though you may not have always been aware and he has been able to make you doubt yourself, you have been observing and understanding him for a long time. This was something it was really important for me to discover. My WH was a great gaslighter, but when you know, you know—and you can’t unknow it once you’ve become fully aware.
2. He is clearly showing you who he is. Believe him. This is also part of the stay quiet and watch what he does thing. He has no excuses now. He knows what’s at stake. He is operating in the full knowledge of how badly he can f-up. And he still does it. He does it knowing how much you’ve been hurt. He does it knowing your conditions for staying in the relationship. He is CHOOSING this. He isn’t helpless or out of control. He is embracing the worst of himself.
3. He tried to make you believe that HE was the problem, not the road, when it served his purposes of not giving up the band. The band and the road have helped him hide who he was choosing to be, and the band and the road encourage the worst behaviors, for sure, and that’s why he can’t stay in the band and get better. But in another really important way, he was exactly right. So this is HIM. This is who he is. Giving up the band is necessary, but it’s not going to fix him or make him be a good husband and dad. He has to decide to want those things more than he wants to be a weak, self-indulgent childish man. And then, he would have to do an incredible amount of very difficult work on himself.
So the question is: if this is him, with or without the band or the road or anything else. If this is really who he is and chooses to be. Will him being home make a difference to you? Maybe that’s something you can’t answer right now, especially given this new violation. He may come back and have quit the band. What then? What do you want? How much more are you up for?
We all have to reach a point where we ask ourselves what WE want, regardless of what our WS is doing. There are those of us who have ridden out horrible, continuous wayward behavior and broken promises and continued to tolerate the uncertainty and heartache. There are those of us who have walked on d-day, or shortly after d-day, or after months of trickle-truth and new discoveries. There are also those who have chosen to end the relationship even though their WS was working very hard to reconcile just because the betrayal turned out to be a deal-breaker for them. There are those whose WS really and truly got it and worked their asses off to become better humans and were able to reconcile.
You don’t have to know what you want right now, but it’s important to start exploring it. Your WS could be any one of those situations above. Whatever he decides to do and ultimately does, your choice is yours and shouldn’t, really mustn’t, be about just reacting to him and his choices. Your WS may come home decided about the band, but not ready to give up all of the unhealthy parts of himself that led him here. He may come home defiant and defensive like he did last time. He may come home a blubbering mess.
The important thing is not him, at this point. The important thing is continuing to do what you’ve been doing: stay true to yourself, stand for yourself and your kids, don’t accept less than what you need, want and deserve, don’t get sucked into his shame and weakness and start to clean up. Just keep quiet and keep watching. This is his journey to take. He has to decide the route for himself. HE HAS TO whether he’s ready or feels able or not.
So keep taking care of you, keep detaching, keep talking with your counselor. You’ve got this. We all know it sucks,but you’ve got this.