As expected, yesterday was really difficult. Honestly, it's been a tough handful of days.
BH said that he is going to take the advice of his IC and not make any decisions for 6 months instead of 3. But, he also said that if she hadn't advised him to wait, that he would have made a decision by now and it would have been for D. He said that he sees the work I'm doing, and that there's nothing else I can do. He said he knows that if there were anything, I would do it. He said his IC told him she thinks I'm "fixable".
He's concerned I'm "doing the right things for the wrong reasons", although he acknowledges that I wouldn't stop the work on myself if D was the outcome. It makes sense why he would be concerned about that, considering I've made my stance on R/D very clear.
He said he's feeling much better -- he's disengaging from me, emotionally, which seems to be helping him. It makes me so terribly lonely and miserable, but I'm truly glad he's doing better. He knows how I feel, and he said he understands some of what I must have felt when he was so upset after DDay, as he's watching me go through this.
He said he doesn't want to be the kind of person to R. That's the part that I struggle with the most. The "want" part of it. "Can't" is one thing, but to not want to... I know it's his right. I don't feel entitled, and it's not about expectations. But if I'm being honest, what I hear when he says that is "You're not enough". "What we had isn't enough." "My feelings for you aren't enough." And by God, that hurts. I struggle with those thoughts on normal days, and it's really hard to not believe them when I hear things like that come out of his mouth. It makes me severely depressed.
I'm expecting some 2x4's, but let me say: I know that's the same message he got when I went outside of our marriage. I'm acutely aware of it. Every shot of pain is doubled because it's wrapped up in the knowledge that I made him feel this way, but worse. Every hurt is magnified because I willingly caused it.
I keep hoping he'll change his mind, but he's not really that kind. I keep hoping he's truly still undecided, but I doubt it. I keep hoping if I prove myself to him, maybe he'll think I'm worth trying to make it work with...but it's not really about me. It's about him, and what kind of person he wants to be. I can't really do anything about that, just like he can't do anything to force me into being a better person. Change has to come from within. But, believing (and knowing!) that change is possible when you want it, that blasted hope is still there. The hope that maybe, one day, just possibly, he'll decide to not take the well-worn path. If a girl can dream...
As for responses:
Sanibelredfish - I can't disagree with your assessment. I struggle with struggle -- it brings up lots of nasty issues I have about worth and value, and so I'm inexperienced in dealing with it. Defeatism might just be realism, considering what I'm dealing with. I often feel that I must be losing my mind to still be hoping for anything other than an easy, amicable D. And that hope is all that sustains me, some days. When hope falters, I fall into despair.
And yes, I do hesitate to be vulnerable with him. This is largely due to 2 factors: First, I simply do not have experience with it. I have a hard time with being vulnerable to anyone, even myself, so it's a steep learning curve. Second, BH feels awkward when presented with emotions. He doesn't know what to do with them, and they make him want to leave the room.
I will say that I am far more vulnerable and emotional in person than I am in my writing -- at least, lately. I spent basically all evening last night in sobbing tears, to the point where BH came up to check on me because he was concerned. Considering his aversion to being around strong feelings, and my aversion to showing them, I think that says a lot about the state both of us were in.
I very much appreciate the words of caution. I don't believe I've done enough (I don't really believe there is any such thing), and I don't think BH is being unreasonable. His stance is painful for me, but I understand where he's coming from. I just desperately wish he would see things the way I do -- though I know he also wishes I would "come around" to his way of thinking. We're at a bit of a perspective impasse, I guess.
My biggest concern is that he won't give me the time to be able to demonstrate to him that I mean it for the long haul. 6 months of good behavior pale in comparison to 12 months of horrendous actions, especially since much of what I'm doing now is stuff that I should have been doing all along!
SilverLinings55 - I appreciate the sympathy. I have a very analytical mind, so unless I'm falling apart I come off as detached and observational. Like I'm examining, rather than experiencing. Usually I am able to overcome that perception in conversations by being a very engaged listener, but in written communication it's a challenge for me. For what it's worth, I think this is one area where BH and I aligned too well, which enabled some deficiencies in both of us. His discomfort with emotional displays gave me permission to stay unemotional, and my "even-keel" disposition meant he didn't have to grow in his capacity to handle them. I truly don't know if my emotional volatility is a result of the strength of the feelings I'm having these days, or because of the work I'm doing to get in touch with them.
HelenKeller - This is a good question. I feel like BH and I talk about this stuff a fair amount -- certainly more than we ever have before -- but I'm certain there's a lot he doesn't know. A lot of what I say here is me working through events that have happened or my reactions to things, to get differing perspectives. But I take things I learn and I either talk to him about them or I put them into practice to show him. In any case, we could be doing more. His distancing from me makes the opportunities fewer, but we discuss these things to some extent every night during our check-ins (the amount of discussion varies wildly from 30 minutes to multiple hours).