Hey there T - I am late to the party on this one, but have skimmed a lot of this thread in the last couple weeks.
I'm reasonably pleased by my WW's response in the last two weeks since my initial post. She's gone to the psychiatrist four times and is intensively trying to get to the root of her issues. She described it as our MC and her IC were like college and she's moving on to graduate school as she tries to tackle her issues.
This is good. Mostly for your ww. Whether the M survives this or not, I would hope for her sake that she gets and stays focused on tackling her depression and the associated stuff seriously.
She's unhappy with her life. There's no question about that. We've been delving into the idea that she's in a terrible mid-life crisis. She started suffering from depression and abandonment issues as early as 4th grade and has just practiced avoidance and distraction up until now. That's what she's trying to change.
I think the key take-away in this is that SHE is unhappy with HER life. Mine was too.
I am a very caring, empathetic, and nurturing person - it is just in my make-up as a human. But I got to the point with mine that I had to recognize that there was not one thing I could do to make him be happy in himself. And all I was doing was running myself into the ground trying. It was really a hard realization for me to come to because it it felt almost.. mean? for me to stop 'trying'. But the truth of it was for me - he was never gonna be happy. It was never going to be 'enough'. And I can have empathy and compassion for that while at the same time removing myself from it. You know the ol airplane rules - I had to put on my own mask first.
As for rules, I have been very clear with boundaries and rules, she just hasn't respected them and I've really struggled with making her actions have significant consequences.
I know this was true for me, but unfortunately for a recalcitrant ws, the only 'real' consequence is separation or divorce. Just my 0.02.
That's my problem and there's an argument to be made that I'm a bit of a doormat because of it. I see that. But I still have feelings for her, we have a good life and three young kids and I'm just not ready to up-end all of our lives.
I wouldn't say doormat. Look, being a BS is REALLY FUCKING HARD. There is no manual for it and it changes SO much of your life. It takes time to really figure out a path forward. And absolutely when you have small kids around, that changes the dynamics a lot and makes S/D a way tougher choice either way. And of course you still care about her. I cared about mine right up the bitter end too, as much as I wished I could just flip a switch and not care anymore.
Among the hardest parts for me has been that I don't lean much on my family and my parents have only an inkling of what's going on and mostly just that the marriage is not well. They're in our lives a lot and have put pressure on me to stay in the marriage with little knowledge of the situation. My WW's family knows almost all the details and they think she should stay in the marriage too. It's a lot of pressure.
I know this is easier said than done, but no one else but YOU has to live YOUR life. You get to decide whether you stay or go, no one else. I hope you at least have friends that can support you in this. I had 2 that I leaned on so hard after dday. And I wouldn't have made it to the other side without them. My family too, but I didn't tell them for a long time after dday. On that... I didn't tell my fam because I was trying to work things out and I didn't want extra complications during that time. But once I did decide to tell them, I told them EVERYTHING. It felt personally disingenuous to me to be keeping his secrets about it.
"No, it's you mothafucka, here's a list of reasons why." – Iliza Schlesinger
"The love that you lost isn't worth what it cost and in time you'll be glad that it's gone." – Linkin Park