,
Thank you to everyone for sharing their personal stories. I believe I am exactly where many of you have been, but I have mentally and emotionally reached the end of my journey with my ADHD husband.
I have for way too long made excuses for my partner and his behavior. I recently came to the realization that life is short and passing me by.
My story began about 4 1/2 years ago, when at the age of 40 I made the decision to continue in my current relationship, despite the constant roller coaster of ups and downs.
I grew up in an abusive home, with an unstable father that might himself have had adhd had he been diagnosed by today's standards. My entire childhood and teenage years were spent trying to regulate his moods and emotions along with my mother and siblings. It seemed normal that we had to behave and do everything in our power to not set him off; except most of the time it did not work.
I never understood what exactly would make a grown man have meltdowns the envy of every toddler, or what his uncontrollable rage was all about. When he was finished acting like a lunatic, we would hesitantly pick up where we left off, grateful that things were back to 'normal'.
Up until I met my husband, my partners were usually independent and emotionally disconnected. It worked because their lack of emotionality gave me the illusion of stability and I never had to worry about maintaining anyone else’s equilibrium. I could focus on keeping my overdeveloped and over active central nervous system dormant.
That changed when I met my husband, suddenly everything became complicated, offensive and stress inducing. He was charming, great looking and he needed me in a way non of my other partners ever had.
His life was so disorganized and chaotic I instantly took on the role of personal assistant, cleaning lady, gourmet chef, psychologist... (the list goes on) and got to work. It felt gratifying to serve him; little did I know that it would never end, it would never be enough or ever to his liking.
We had constant misunderstandings about trivial things that were made into a huge deal and were also my fault. Every social outing was like a battlefield my stance was always "hold your fire" while he was always ready for battle. I never understood why everyone and everything bothered him, why he had such a difficult time getting along with others and how he never lasted at any of his previous jobs. He was fiscally irresponsible and bought things impulsively. There was no intimacy. Our sex life was what I could do for him to get him off and then the act was complete.
Doing for him and regulating his moods was so familiarly ingrained in me, that it felt normal.
Suddenly I had turned into my mother and every minute of my waking day, and plenty of my nights (that he woke me up looking for something without any regard) were all about him.
About three years in I completely shut down, I was depressed, exhausted and had completely forgotten what it was like to live my life for me and not constantly taking care of someone else's.
I'm in individual therapy and we also went to couples counseling where after hearing about ADHD, it all made sense. He never committed to taking any responsibility for himself or his treatment plan. His goal was for me to go back to how I was before I stopped managing every aspect of his life and focused on mine.
In February he took a two week business trip and in those two weeks the constant chaos that made up my days and nights was gone. Suddenly life was easier, quieter and I had nobody yelling at me. I felt relieved, at peace and not on constant guard. I was officially done.
I'm in the process of looking for an apartment. I worry about him alone but I also know that I don't want to waste my life fixing someone else's. I will continue my therapy and work on some of the underlying issues that led me on this journey.
I feel scared but hopeful.
no matter what YOU do, there is no 'fixing' possible.
Submitted by Will It Get Better on
'... I also know that I don't want to waste my life fixing someone else's.'
You may have accepted that, no matter what YOU do, there is no 'fixing' possible. God bless you and may the removal of the constant chaos provide you a positive way forward.
Bravo.
Submitted by AdeleS6845 on
Happy to hear that you are taking care of yourself.
It is always scary do something new and different. After 17 years of marriage to my abusive ex-husband it was scary for me to be on my own with two children. It was the best decision I could have made. I know that you are worried about your soon-to-be-ex. That is understandable given your upbringing and your relationship dynamic. However, you don't really need to worry about him. He is a grown man and should be able to take care of himself. Without you around there's nobody he can blame for his problems or shortcomings but himself.
Wishing you the best.
Adele
Hope
Submitted by Lowered_expectations on
Thank you for what you wrote about it being the best decision you ever made. My ADHD spouse wants a divorce. I'm uncertain about the future, but one thing I always thought was that if I got divorced, my life wouldn't really be that different. My expenses would be about the same (maybe just a little more), I would still be doing the bulk of the childcare and housework, I still wouldn't be having sex (my choice - at least this way I won't even have to do it out of obligation) and I would still be the responsible one. I just found out about the divorce a couple of days ago, so I'm still pretty raw, but your note gave me light at the end of the tunnel. Thank you.