fixer
12-24-2007, 12:53 PM
I'm a mess....total basket case.
For background, I've been married to an alcoholic for 17 years, the last 6 of which she has been sober. I have been to Al-Anon in the past, and thought I had a handle on my program. There are few meetings in this area, so I stopped going, having seen the same people and heard the same stories over and over again. All this time, I am still having issues of my own, which I don't fully understand.
This past year, I got what I percieved to be the dream job. I'm a computer tech, and this was working in a field that I has always wanted. I got fired. Shortly after that I was in a motorcycle accident and ended up with one leg burned fairly bad, needing 3 surgeries and 3 attempts at skin grafts before I started healing. Terrible amount of physical and emotional pain. Meanwhile, my wife gets her own "dream job". So now I'm unemployed, injured, and jealous. More pain. After many a screaming match with God, wishing he would kill me and get it over with, I bottom out. I realize that my life is screwed up and that I need to make some changes to get back on track.
About this time, my therapist wants to explore the effects of childhood sexual abuse that I suffered, and it's effect on my life as an adult. In the meantime, I get a job, it lasts 3 days....and I get fired. Now I really know that I need to make some changes. So I start in earnest, working some therapy to put my CSA behind me, and looking at my co-dependent behavior.
Now I get another job, a good one, at a good company. I'm going to therapy, get involved with an online CSA recovery group, and think things are coming together. :29:
Until I walk past my wife sending an email to her AA sponsor and pick out the word "lawyer". Seems she wants to file for divorce. I fell through the floor. Now what. I know I need to continue my own program and my own recovery, but I don't want to lose my wife and family. I know I'm co-dependent, but how can I not be co-dependent, and want with all my heart to keep my marriage? I love my wife dearly, and my kids are great, any parent would be proud to have kids like mine. I just can't let go of this, and leave it up to God.
She says that whether we stay together or not is not up to us, but is according to our Higher Power's Will; that I need to surrender my will to His, and take what comes. Only problem is, I feel like her sponsor has crossed the line in becoming involved in our marriage. She has acted as a sounding board and advice-giver regarding things that I feel fall outside the 12 steps of AA, and I resent the hell out of that. Who the hell is she to point out all the areas where our marriage may be unsatisfactory. I know there have been trouble in the past, and I have admitted to my wife that I acknowledge responsibility for my behaviors.....that in many cases they were reactions to her drinking, and the pain it caused me.
What I didn't realize at the time, because I couldn't see past her drinking; I couldn't separate the person from the disease; was that my behavior was painful to her as well, and that she resented me for it.
So here we are......been together for 20 years, and I am desperate not to lose those people who are so dear to me. HELP!
Dave
For background, I've been married to an alcoholic for 17 years, the last 6 of which she has been sober. I have been to Al-Anon in the past, and thought I had a handle on my program. There are few meetings in this area, so I stopped going, having seen the same people and heard the same stories over and over again. All this time, I am still having issues of my own, which I don't fully understand.
This past year, I got what I percieved to be the dream job. I'm a computer tech, and this was working in a field that I has always wanted. I got fired. Shortly after that I was in a motorcycle accident and ended up with one leg burned fairly bad, needing 3 surgeries and 3 attempts at skin grafts before I started healing. Terrible amount of physical and emotional pain. Meanwhile, my wife gets her own "dream job". So now I'm unemployed, injured, and jealous. More pain. After many a screaming match with God, wishing he would kill me and get it over with, I bottom out. I realize that my life is screwed up and that I need to make some changes to get back on track.
About this time, my therapist wants to explore the effects of childhood sexual abuse that I suffered, and it's effect on my life as an adult. In the meantime, I get a job, it lasts 3 days....and I get fired. Now I really know that I need to make some changes. So I start in earnest, working some therapy to put my CSA behind me, and looking at my co-dependent behavior.
Now I get another job, a good one, at a good company. I'm going to therapy, get involved with an online CSA recovery group, and think things are coming together. :29:
Until I walk past my wife sending an email to her AA sponsor and pick out the word "lawyer". Seems she wants to file for divorce. I fell through the floor. Now what. I know I need to continue my own program and my own recovery, but I don't want to lose my wife and family. I know I'm co-dependent, but how can I not be co-dependent, and want with all my heart to keep my marriage? I love my wife dearly, and my kids are great, any parent would be proud to have kids like mine. I just can't let go of this, and leave it up to God.
She says that whether we stay together or not is not up to us, but is according to our Higher Power's Will; that I need to surrender my will to His, and take what comes. Only problem is, I feel like her sponsor has crossed the line in becoming involved in our marriage. She has acted as a sounding board and advice-giver regarding things that I feel fall outside the 12 steps of AA, and I resent the hell out of that. Who the hell is she to point out all the areas where our marriage may be unsatisfactory. I know there have been trouble in the past, and I have admitted to my wife that I acknowledge responsibility for my behaviors.....that in many cases they were reactions to her drinking, and the pain it caused me.
What I didn't realize at the time, because I couldn't see past her drinking; I couldn't separate the person from the disease; was that my behavior was painful to her as well, and that she resented me for it.
So here we are......been together for 20 years, and I am desperate not to lose those people who are so dear to me. HELP!
Dave