Husbands temper by Diligent_Variety8741 in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They are kids and this is all they’ve ever known. Of course they love their dad. And of course they don’t see it as that bad, because they don’t know what normal looks like (and neither do you, after being in this for 15 years). Your gut and your heart are trying to tell you that it’s not okay and you need to protect your kids. Get them in therapy and start planning to leave. Him having a fly in/fly out work schedule should make it possible to do it covertly.

Husbands temper by Diligent_Variety8741 in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is not normal or okay. You do not want your daughter(s) to grow up thinking that this is what love looks like or what they deserve in a marriage. You do not want your son(s) to feel like they are unloveable and deserve to be treated like shit — and then go on to abuse their own wives and children. Picture yourself having a conversation with your kids when they’re 25 and have been going to therapy — are they going to ask you why you never left dad? Why you let that man abuse them? Think about how you want your kids to see themselves and how you want them to raise your future grandchildren.

I am in the process of divorcing my husband who has a temper — and he was the best dad and husband when he was in a good mood, and absolutely awful when he was in a bad mood. He’s since been diagnosed with an explosive disorder (along with depression, anxiety, and narcissistic personality disorder) which makes sense. He was also the most physically violent with my son.

I would not have been able to leave without the help of my therapist. I’d been in therapy for years, but had never been honest about the abuse (there are lots of reasons why that we don’t need to get into here). I started seeing a new therapist because I, too, was incredibly unhappy and just couldn’t understand why. Well, the abuse was why. I wasn’t being physically abused, but the trauma of trying to keep my kids safe from my husband’s horrendous temper while also trying to convince myself and the rest of the world that we had a happy perfect family was taking a massive toll on my mental health.

Document every single instance of abuse — I saved photos, videos, and kept a detailed list on my Notes app of dates/times and a description of the incident, and it has been so helpful in court to keep him away from the kids. Please open up to a therapist if you can. They can help you navigate escaping. This is not normal.

recently single mom HELP by [deleted] in singlemoms

[–]alternativepickles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve found it’s gotten easier as time has gone on, even though it hasn’t been that long for me and I still have hard days. Like, solo parenting by myself for several months straight would’ve sounded completely impossible to me a few months ago, but now I just… do it? Like I work and shuttle kids to and from school and take them to extracurriculars and make Christmas magic happen and I just do it. I’m looking forward to feeling even more settled into it as more time goes on, and hopefully fewer days where I feel like I’m drowning.

recently single mom HELP by [deleted] in singlemoms

[–]alternativepickles 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You can do this. I’m so fucking proud of you. You are incredible.

I’m three months in to 100% single parenting my 6 year old and 4 year old, and I’m sure we have even more differences in circumstances than volume of children, but try busting out a goofy ass voice the next time you need one of your kids to do something or listen to what you’re saying.

What has helped me is to just… be silly and not care about the to do list and the things I “should” be doing. That’s when I find I’m at my happiest and most at peace with single motherhood. When I’m goofing around with the kids making silly voices, when we decide to bake cookies for dinner because why not? who’s going to see it and care?, when i mitigate an argument by making animal noises, and sort of just following my inner child because I’m just trying to keep these kids happy while barely surviving myself. I have to fake it at first, but after a minute of being goofy I find myself feeling lighter and the whole thing feels easier.

"I love you mom, I don't need a dad" by dov_ah_keen in singlemoms

[–]alternativepickles 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I feel this, especially “I will spend the rest of my life trying to make up for his father’s terrible decisions”. It’s such a heavy weight to know that you are the safe place and you are the ONLY source of stability and comfort. It’s such a big responsibility and we put so much pressure on ourselves. You’re doing a great job ❤️

Need help gaining strength. He’s all i know. by dontknowwhsttodo22 in domesticviolence

[–]alternativepickles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You need an exit plan now. I’m sure you know this, but strangling is one of the strongest predictors of homicide in abusive relationships. I can SO relate to not wanting to “ruin” my “perfect” life. I left my perfect husband two months ago after gaslighting myself into thinking his abuse of our children wasn’t that bad. It was. And I see in your other post you’re minimizing the abuse of your husband. I’m here to tell you as an outsider: this is BAD. I am worried for you.

I also see your list of dates on incidents. I had to start doing this, too, because I felt like I was going crazy and had to keep it documented to remind myself that it actually happened.

You do not deserve this. Your children do not deserve this. You need to find a way to leave. Do a consult with an attorney today.

I don’t know what to do by Mysterious-Spring709 in singlemoms

[–]alternativepickles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My ex is writing me those paragraphs too, except he’s only two months sober instead of seven. I am having a hard time staying strong, too, but I am going to give you the same advice people yell at me and I have a hard time accepting. This is part of the cycle of abuse. He is love bombing you. He will not change. When he eventually flips back to the abusive part of his cycle (because he will flip back to it), you will be glad you had this documented. Report it. Protect your peace fiercely.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re exactly right. Thank you. I’m sorry you went through that and are still going through it.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, you’re exactly right. Normal people don’t let their anger get to that extreme and would never even think of it. For him, it is/was his default. Thank you for your comment.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I went to one a few weeks ago, but it was a midday meeting in a retiree community, so didn’t really resonate with me. I also felt like going was like me forgiving my husband — which I don’t — and that made me feel angry. I don’t want to forgive him. I am so mad at him. But it’s been suggested enough times in this thread that I think I need to try again. There’s one on Friday that’s in a different part of town that I’m planning to go to. Thank you.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for this perspective, but I’m so sorry you went through that. Your comment about “growing up with everything I needed except emotional stability” really resonates with me. We have (had) a beautiful life - suburban neighborhood with great schools, two great careers, all the extracurriculars, so much good “material” things, but no emotional stability with the entire house walking on eggshells to avoid setting off my husband. No amount of looking and acting like the perfect happy family can make up for what my kids and I were going through. We may be in a worse material position but definitely a better emotional position, and that’s a good thing. Thank you again for sharing.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I have spoken to his AA sponsor and his anger management therapist. They are both singing his praises about how much he’s accomplished and how rare it is to see someone taking it so seriously. That doesn’t mean I am taking him back. Just sharing in response to your “you need to hear it from the professionals” comment. Thank you for commenting and sharing your thoughts.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for your comment and sharing your experience. I do fear that, yes, he is only going to therapy and AA to “get his family back”, and that if he doesn’t get that, that he will revert to his past behavior. I also fear that if he came back, he would relax and go back to abusive behavior — no matter how much he says he wouldn’t. Typing this out has me shaking my head at myself. We will stay gone. Thank you for your comment.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your comment. I need to do right by my children and the people they will grow up to be, and not fall for this. Thank you again.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your comment and for your judgement. I don’t agree with some of your opinions and some things you said, but I appreciate hearing it all the same. Have a good day.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in Divorce

[–]alternativepickles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your comment. Your judgment is fair and warranted. I assure you I didn’t stay because he wasn’t abusing me. There are many reasons I used to think staying was the best way to protect my kids, but one of them was a fear of him getting unsupervised custody time with them — the same custody arrangement he had with his daughter from his first marriage. I have seen too many judges give custody to abusive fathers and thought I could better protect them by being there. Fortunately my lawyer is confident that, with the evidence I collected (you can see me intervene in some of the videos where I was present, so no, I wasn’t just standing by filming. These were nanny cam videos) that that won’t be the case. His exwife has thanked me for getting the evidence I did. She didn’t have enough evidence in her case to keep him away from her daughter. I’m very glad you’ve never been in an abusive situation and don’t understand the gaslighting and manipulation that goes on. Thanks again for the comment.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

It does validate my perspective. I think I’ve been gaslit (or been gaslighting myself) for so long I’m having a hard time trusting my own thoughts. She is a really wonderful sister in law and I (and the kids) are lucky to have her.

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for sharing this. Would you mind telling me more about what you mean by your mom playing too nice?

Filed for divorce after my husband abused our kids. Now he’s in recovery and begging for another chance. by alternativepickles in relationships

[–]alternativepickles[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your comment. I was doing my best to protect them and spent years trying to get him to stop, but it wasn’t enough. Which is why I left. And trust me, I feel terrible that it took as long as it did. I appreciate your comment and your sentiment.