PanicAttack53
just popped in and saw some of your newer posts. Please take a few moments to try and calm down and relax. Breathe Smoke....breathe. Deep in and out breaths very slowly. This shit storm has a tendency to make anyone go off on overload if not checked now and then. From the biggest of bruisers to the gentlest of souls, we ALL need a respite now and then to calm down and collect ourselves. Take a step back so you can collect yours.
Well, I tried two deep breaths. Now I'm a little dizzy.
Actually, relaxing just doesn't come easy for me, and hasn't for a long time, even when I felt secure in my marriage and relationship. My employment history and finances really take a lot out of me -- I haven't really learned how to let stuff go yet....
OK, now that you've done that, let's kook again at your current situation. First, I really liked this comment in one of your posts:
And recently I cooked broccoli, which I haven't been able to do for years, since it has a terrible effect on her stomach, and I thought, "Well, that's one of the things I'll be able to do, now that she's gone." So I'm hoping that's a good sign.
That's excellent thinking on your part and you need to do more of it. Thinking this way is a start of detaching and considering a life as the new you.
Well, I also deleted all her DVR recordings and program settings....
Without this sounding too harsh, you need to understand that your WW in her current mindset is a toxin not only for your well being but also your sons. That doesn't mean you should blow your WW up to your son, just that you both need to find a way of detaching right now and moving on with your lives WITHOUT your WW poisoning you both though her actions and words.
I agree completely. In fact, I'm still waffling about sending her a text urging her to read an e-mail about how our son behaved yesterday. I mean, I know I should -- she's his mother, and supposedly she's heavily invested in his well-being too -- and I can do it in a way that doesn't sound accusing, but I know it'll break her heart to read it. Still, she has to *know*. I just haven't figured out how to handle it yet.
Here's an exercise for you to try to help you begin to redirect your thinking and detach. Grab a piece of paper and write down everything you can think of that you've always wanted to do, but couldn't when WW was living with you.
You say that you like broccoli, but couldn't have it when WW was there because it affected her stomach. What else didn't she like that you and your son did? Did you both like scary movies and she didn't? Did you always want a cat, but didn't dare get one because she was allergic? Do you and your son like hard rock, but didn't listen to it because WW was into country music? See where I'm going with this? Anything that you (or you and your son) like and couldn't do with WW there, write it down on the paper. You don't have to do this all at once. Take a few days and really think about it. When you come across something in your mind, grab the paper and write it down.
I'll try. Honestly, I can't think of a lot of things like that. She made it clear over the years that I was too heavily interested in baseball, though, and gradually, since our son was born, I've managed to cut way back, even to the point of just not enjoying it all that much anymore -- I always felt a little guilty just for watching or listening to it. It's not that she hates baseball -- she just isn't interested (even though "H" is a big fan of the same team), and, well, we all know I can get a li'l obsessive....
Then, when you think you've got most of it down on paper, read them out loud to yourself a couple of times. Let them really sink in. Then try and pick a few of them that really stand out to you. Put a check mark next to them and read them out loud to yourself again. Now take the first one that is check marked and if it is with-in your means...DO IT! Take note of how you feel while you are doing it. Was it liberating? Was it fun? Is it something you want to do again? Would you enjoy doing it with your son?
Again, I just can't think of much that would fit the bill. I'll try, though.
Smoke, this may at first seem like a silly exercise to you. However, trust me when I say that the more you do this, the more you'll begin to realize that you can in fact have a life without your WW in it. Even something as silly as laying around the house in your skivvies now because you'd never do it when WW was there can be very powerful in helping you to rearrange your thought process and begin detach.
No, it doesn't seem silly. I just really have to put some thought into it.
BYW, as for your son, I get that you are very concerned about his current state of mind. I think it's good that you are being proactive and suggesting therapy to him. Just a word of caution however. While I agree that you need to stay aware of your son's mood swings and behavior, please try to not smother him completely.
Oh, he wouldn't permit it. Maybe just because he's 18, he really doesn't go out of his way to confide in either of his parents -- in fact, he can be downright silent. But he does seem to want to talk to *somebody*. (I'm really annoyed with his ex-high-school counselor, though, because she'd always said she wanted to stay in touch with him, but now she's saying -- and he heard the voicemail -- that "he's not one of my kids anymore." Not *that* different from what his own mom is doing.)
He needs to go through his own thought process concerning how all of this is affecting him. Please don't take offense to this but a lot of that process has nothing at all to do with you, or WW. They are his personal thoughts and you can't rearrange or control them. No more than you can control WW's thought process right now. Let your son feel his thoughts by himself. Give him the space and time to process those thoughts again, by himself. I know that sounds really scary now, especially with everything else on your plate and his state of mind, but sometimes as parents the best thing we can do is back off a little. Kids, especially teens, need down time too. Be there for him when he needs you. Let him know he can always talk to you when he needs to. Then, back off a little and let him have his down time to process. It sounds like you live together in a small apartment so I realize that this is easier said than done. But please try. I guarantee you'll have a healthier relationship with him in the long run. JMO from past experience.
No offense taken, especially since I agree with you. I don't want to force him into therapy or anything -- but I do feel that this is all too big for him to handle on his own. But seeing him yesterday, unable to speak... talk about breaking hearts.
Hang in there bro and keep posting. We are all here for you when you need us.
This means more to me than you know.