That is my experience, which is why I was asking. For me, counselors would be the obvious choices for corroboration.
I know I could ask a priest, but I can’t, really. I’m still married, but I know, well, I am stuck knowing what is and what is not about my marriage, and I hate that. A priest cannot help if I am not divorced, can he? I agitate within myself now and then about my marriage, but I cannot divorce without “reason” like personal safety, which is not currently a big issue. I don’t have what it takes to ask my parish priest. Both my spouse and myself are very well known at the parish, and it could hurt someone. I suppose I am here on this thread because I have a chicken heart. Maybe I just need a hug today.:crying:
I kind of got that drift. I do not envy you at all; it is a tough row to hoe.
A Canon lawyer (who may or may not be a priest) might be able to help you. They might be willing to help you, or at least answer some basic questions that you seem to have.
To begin with, the Church presumes the validity of the marriage. Unless and until the evidence has all been gathered, submitted to the tribunal and they have ruled on it, no one can say with any certainty that your marriage was not sacramental. And the decision of the tribunal is automatically reviewd by a tribunal in another diocese, which could find differently; usually they don’t, but “usually” is not “absolutely”.
Someone who has been involved with tribunal work may be able to make a pretty good estimation of the probability of your case; but they may not be able to do so until the evidence has been gathered. And that is not going to happen until after you have had a divorce.
If the question you are really asking is, “should I get a divorce”, and you are basing the answer for that on whether or not you can get a decree of nullity, I would suspect (without some pretty clear evidence currently in hand) that no one involved with tribunal work is going to give you a satisfactory answer. And I would suspect a goodly number of them if not almost all of them, would not want to get too deeply into a conversation with you if they thought that their answer (“yes, you can get a decree of nullity based on those facts”) was going to be the key to you deciding to get a divorce.
If you are in what could be termed a “sterile” marriage, that is not in itself grounds for a decree (as I am sure you are aware). Help might be to go through Retouvaile, which is designed for troubled marriages. Or through more (and hopefully different) counseling, as what you have gone through seems to not have addressed the issues. It may be that you have grounds. Or it may be that you don’t.
Divorce hurts a lot of people. It hurts the parties; if they have children, it hurts and damages them; it hurts relatives and friends, and sometimes others who don’t seem to be part of the immediate circle. Rightly or wrongly, people take sides, often not the person we would suppose, and often not the sides we would suppose.
We make choices; not always good ones, and not always for what we think are the reasons to make those choices. And the results of those choices are unpredictable, and often times extremely hard to bear. The Church does not support divorce; it opposes it, but understands that at times there are no other viable answers. And one of the hardest things to accept at times is the fact that there are simply no good answers., no magic wand, no fairy godmother to put things right, no “happy ever after”, no sunsets to ride off into.
It may not be the time to make suggestions; but the issue of divorce is different from the issue of a decree of nullity, and each has to be answered in its own time and place.