I think you guys are taking me less seriously than my wife.
This0is0Fine,
Apologies if that is how it came across. When I wrote my post, the question of your seriousness or intent did not cross my mind.
What I did, and do, take seriously is the lengths that a wayward spouse will go to to remain in contact with their affair partner, and the convoluted logic they will apply to justify that continuation of contact. There are sadly way too many stories here of what that can lead to, so when people here see that happening, they ring alarm bells, raise red flags, fire distress flares, and call 911.
It is not about taking you seriously; it is about taking your wife seriously, based on her past actions.
I told her she is choosing her job over our marriage. She doesn't see it that way. She sees it as giving up her individuality and value to save a relationship.
I am not expecting you to answer this - and I apologise if any of this sounds like I am getting on your case, because it is not meant that way - but why does your wife find no individuality and value in being a person who makes their marriage their number one priority?
All she is at work is a number. An easily replaced cog in a corporate machine, who is - according to what both you and she have said - undervalued.
In the marriage, she is the most important human being in the universe to another individual who will sit by her bed every day for six months if she is hospitalised, who would give her his kidney if you are a match, and who until recently was probably keen to look after her and protect her until the day that she dies. I would say that is treating her as the ultimate individual, and the most valuable person on the planet (to you).
And yet she perceives herself to have less value, worth, and individuality in that scenario than in being an anonymous, replaceable, underpaid corporate drone, rolling along a conveyor belt with all the other anonymous, replaceable, underpaid corporate drones, all of whom will be 'downsized' in a nanosecond if an accountant identifies that a cheaper option is available elsewhere.
Maybe it is worth asking her why she believes she has no value or individuality in the marriage. If she put the same amount of effort into her marriage as she puts into her job, she would get the benefits back in spades, and the whole - created by both of you - would be more than the sum of its parts.
Maybe her IC needs to focus on why she believes her job is so critical to her existence and sense of self-worth. It is not healthy psychologically for a person to give one particular job such existential significance in their life, because if they lose their job, they may feel like they have lost their value as an individual.
I am saying this gently, but her mother pinned her reason for living on her marriage. Your wife should not go down the same road with her job.
I touched on this same theme earlier in your thread, but is your wife scared of the same thing happening to her as happened with her mother if she makes the marriage the most important thing in her life, so she is fixated on having some kind of identity and value (at least in her own mind, if not in the corporate accountancy department) not involved with the marriage?
Only she can answer that, but she seemed to withdraw, implode, and almost attack the marriage after her mother's post-divorce suicide. That is another rich seam to be mined in IC, because your wife, in her trauma, may have drawn some strange conclusions about marriage, and be somewhat ambivalent about it now.
[This message edited by M1965 at 3:16 PM, January 9th (Thursday)]