Okay everyone. I guess I should have made this a different kind of post. It can’t be what I thought it could be. I guess I can just have yet another post about how miserable I am in my marriage. I didn’t start this to mislead anyone about the type of conversation I meant to have. I actually thought it was possible but I can see it isn’t. I will only talk about my own marriage from now on.
He doesn’t come to dinner most nights because he’s at work until we all go to sleep. (And he doesn’t eat breakfast with us because he’s at work before we wake up.) When he’s home he doesn’t come to dinner because he isn’t hungry. His diet is also different from ours because he won’t eat vegetables or home cooked meals. Other times it’s because he goes out bowling with his friends. I know this isn’t traditional.
I have already told him what effect this has on me and the children but it doesn’t affect his behavior. He is not concerned about the children growing up without him, but they are. The little time he does get at home he usually spends with the children. It’s really our marriage that’s suffering the most…
Well, you’ve established that although marriages of convenience did exist in the past, they were never the ideal and they were never easy.
If you’re ready for actual separation, then it is time to get blunt:
A) Keep track of where your money goes, so you can show him how much of the money he makes goes to his entertainment and his other friendships.
B) Keep track of how much time he spends out with other people, even bowling, and compare that to the* zero time* he spends alone with you, so you can show him how much time he spends with people who are an actual priority to him.
Then tell him you need to talk, without interruption, and that when you are done he will have the floor.
Show him what a civil divorce, separate accommodations and sharing custody is going to cost him. Really pencil it out. Then tell him you aren’t willing to accept being treated like his full-time nanny, which is what you are getting, because full-time nannies have better benefits than you do.
Then say: OK, that’s my side of it. Now tell me your side of it, because I really do want to know. There are other ways we can do this, after all. Even if we keep doing what we’re doing, let’s decide on a way together.
The alternative is to allow him kill your marriage with the death of a thousand cuts, with a slow bleed-out. That’s not protecting your marriage. That’s standing idly by while you watch it die.
He either needs to fish or cut bait: That is, he can either be a husband in some sense of the word that makes sense to his wife or else be willing to take the consequences of having an ex-wife and child-support payment to make. He can’t have his cake and eat it, too.
I’m not a proponent of divorce. I have lived through much of what you’re living through, but there were some big differences and my husband and I made our choices together. He had me on board, and his workaholic hours did not last forever. That is very different from having it dictated to you that you’re going to be a “work widow,” whether you like it or not, when there is a choice of doing it another way.