I was a lot like you in some ways, and not so much in others.
"if you leave, what are you going to do for finances?"
I just estimated child support for you. If your husband makes $40,000 a year he will have to pay you roughly $1326 a month and pay for health insurance for the children.
The state will not take your children away from you. Especially after you relate all of your husband's behavior to a lawyer. Especially with a past assault charge on him.
Now, you will probably have to get a job of some sort, but that can be worked out, believe it or not.
I can tell you a little about me. My first husband hit me, so I left him. We had been together 11 years. I was beyond crushed, didn't get enough counseling, and wound up pregnant with my current husband's child roughly 10 months later.
My (current) husband was always selfish and controlling, but he got worse and worse over time until just before Dday he was having 2 affairs, and drinking and abusing prescription drugs. he never helped with the kids.
I made a lot of bad choices, partly due to my parents just being WEIRD but mostly because I have manic-depression and I needed many years of medication and intense therapy to deal with that.
I would say that on Dday I was tremendously codependent. I actually wanted to run back to my first husband, how awful is that? I wanted to be saved.
What I learned is that you have to be your own hero.
My husband threatened to take my children away from me. The main OW (the 20 year LTA chick) was a two-faced person. I was fortunate enough to have hired her former nanny, who clued me into some of her dark side behavior once she knew we weren't "friends" anymore (and why)
I was pregnant on Dday, and my child was born disabled. I think one of the most frightening things I've ever heard in my life ... I asked nanny if she thought OW would hurt my daughter (OW always wanted a girl but has 3 sons) and nanny replied "It's just not that hard to make the death of a disabled baby look like an accident."
The stakes in keeping OW away from my children were high. She had pulled a knife on me about a year and a half before Dday, so I agreed with nanny's assessement that she was batshit crazy. Nanny also said she'd been beaten by OW, that OW hit her kids and that when my oldest DS had been to OW's house for an emergency sleepover when a younger child was hospitalized OW had locked my DS in a dark room to scream all night to teach him not to be afraid of the dark.
So, just for bonus points I was being abused by both my fWH and his AP.
I would say, in general, that it's largely useless to try to get an abuser to stop. In my case, it was critical, because fWH was trying to harm the children physically even in my presence. Eventually, my counselor called Child Services. I had to deal witht them too, mostly by making it clear that I was 100% prepared to leave and take the kids. BTW -- my husband did NOT hit our child -- I had stopped him that time too -- but he did hold him down and deliberately scare him. It was enough for us to get investigated. Emotional abuse is serious.
Counseling was critical to me. My fWH goes to counseling too. Some resources that helped me were narcissimcured.com (narcissism is not cureable, but you CAN learn techniques to deal with narcissists effectively) co-dependent no more (book by Melody beattie), lovefraud.com, The Verbally Abusive Man (book) and Necessary Endings (book by Henry Cloud). I also got support from my priest (who urged me to leave) and by being honest with some close friends and my family.
I did not expect to stay married -- what I expected was to establish some strong boundaries so that my children would be safe when having visitation with fWH.
It's baby steps. But you need free resources and that's why we are all urging you to contact a women's shelter.
You can call 211 to get information on finding a shelter near you. The 24 hour state domestic violence hotline is 888-774-2900
From the National Domestic Violence Hotline's website:
Am I Being Abused?
How is your relationship?Does your partner:
Embarrass you with put-downs?
Look at you or act in ways that scare you?
Control what you do, who you see or talk to or where you go?
Stop you from seeing your friends or family members?
Take your money or Social Security check, make you ask for money or refuse to give you money?
Make all of the decisions?
Tell you that you’re a bad parent or threaten to take away or hurt your children?
Prevent you from working or attending school?
Act like the abuse is no big deal, it’s your fault, or even deny doing it?
Destroy your property or threaten to kill your pets?
Intimidate you with guns, knives or other weapons?
Shove you, slap you, choke you, or hit you?
Force you to try and drop charges?
Threaten to commit suicide?
Threaten to kill you?
If you answered ‘yes’ to even one of these questions,
you may be in an abusive relationship.
For support and more information please call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) or at TTY 1-800-787-3224.
Honestly, it was learning that I was having a girl the 4th time that changed everything for me and "woke me up" so to speak. I knew that I did not want my daughter to allow herself to be treated the way my husband was treating me. I discovered the evidence of the affair 12 days after I found out I was pregnant with a girl. I don't want my sons to act like that either.
And of course, her disabiliy made it even more urgent to me that I "break the cycle" so to speak.
You need help. It can't be done alone. It's just too hard.
Not everyone will go for help. I used to correspond with a woman who was being abused on a due date club board for pregnant women about 6 years ago when I was pregnant with my second. A lot of people did what we've done here. Gave her resources. Urged her to get help. She chose not to. Her husband killed her and the (unborn) baby.
Abusive people are unpredictable. The escalate when you resist, which is why you need help in doing it a safe way. But it's not going to magically go away.