TonyAsh wrote: Mon May 24, 2021 11:26 am
About three months ago, my partner/soulmate/bandmate of nearly eight years, and wife of nearly three, had "the talk" and eventually came to a mutual agreement that we needed to separate and file for divorce, the reason being that she wants to have children and settle near the area where we currently live. While I had never wanted kids before, at some point in our relationship the prospect of having a family with her started to sound like not such a terrible idea (if you've met her, you know she's an amazing woman and I'm sure she'd be an awesome mother), but ultimately I reverted to my original position and decided against it for numerous reasons. Not to mention that I have no desire to settle in rural Wisconsin. I realize that this is the kind of stuff you are supposed to figure out BEFORE marriage but, what can I say, we were in love. It was a mostly amicable split initially, though there have been some major hurdles between then and now. As it stands now, we have filed the paperwork and the ball is officially rolling. The handful of interactions we've had since splitting have been mostly pleasant, if not a little awkward. Anyway, I know that she grieved very strongly in the beginning while I was somehow able to keep my shit largely together. Currently it seems to have flipped, with her seeming to be totally in acceptance and at peace with the whole thing while I spend most of my time dwelling on the whole situation wishing I could make things work out, wishing that she still loved me like she used to and so on. Honestly, it's eating me from inside. I try to put on a brave face daily and get out, be among friends, attempt to live some sort of normal life as a newly single almost 41 year old man in a super strange and bizarre world, but instead mostly feel like a total failure. I often drive around aimlessly, imagining what would happen if I just swerved off of a bridge, or parked my car by the lake and just ended it all right then and there. Would any of it matter? Would she even care? Would anyone?
Hey Tony,
I'm so sorry to hear this. For what it's worth, I had a very similar situation come up last year, resulting in the end of a decade plus relationship with my partner/bandmate.
The most important thing I can say is that there's no reason to feel like a "failure." I remember having similar thoughts of "Man, I should have figured this stuff out years ago" - but years ago, I thought I
had. In 2010, I had no interest in having kids and would say as much. As time went on, my stance on that changed - and that's fine. As another FM told me at one point "If you were the exact same person you were 10 years ago, that'd be kind of fucked up."
In your case, it seems like your stance stayed the same, but you were able to move through this critically and thoughtfully - and I'm sure that you were able to look at it through a different lens than you would have when you first got together. Also know that this could have ended in a way that had so much more resentment/anger/etc. between you and your partner. I think the saving grace for my deal was that we had been doing couples counseling for a while and were really able to work through a lot there, allowing us to really come out of this with as much respect for each other (maybe even more) than we did while we were actually in the relationship.
It's fucking hard, and it's really weird to have someone that was part of your daily life not be there anymore. Sometimes you have to "wallow in that weirdness," as another friend would say, but you'll figure out how to move through it. Know that you've got folks you can always connect with no matter what.