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March 15, 2017 10:26 am  #1


So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

We have been together 22 years, married for 17. We have two kids, aged 14 (almost 15) and 6. She came out to me during our marriage counseling appointment last Tuesday afternoon. She believes she has always been gay but repressed it due to childhood trauma and over sexualization in the household. She is only out to a handful of people so far. We are planning to tell the children this coming weekend and begin telling mutual friends after that.

Things are difficult and confusing at home, for obvious reasons, but still very amicable. We both want each other to be happy at the other end of this journey, and we both want the needs of the kids to be at the forefront every step of the way. At the moment we are planning to stay living together for a few months or more while we gently ease the kids and ourselves into this new reality.

Advice appreciated on the best way to approach the inevitable divorce and guiding our children through this whole process  in the least harmful way.

 

March 15, 2017 10:55 am  #2


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

zenslug, 

Welcome to our group.  I'm so sorry that you have to be here.  Please feel free to use this resource to share and journal and ask questions.  We have been through the fire and understand how you are feeling. 

Based on your brief message I can tell that you are already doing the right things.  You went to counseling and have been communicating.  You are not hostile toward either other.  You both seem to have the kids interests at the forefront.   Kudos to you for those things.   Please try to keep those priorities. 

You will need to process and go through your own emotions.  You are still in the shock and trauma phase.  Keep an eye on your own health and well-being as you move forward.  You are no help to your kids if you are not healthy.  Consider getting a therapist for yourself to help deal with the emotional roller-coaster you are going to go through.  If you're struggling with sleep or anxiety, please see a Dr and get some meds to help take those symptoms away. 

Divorce is hard, but it doesn't have to be a war.  The worst thing for the kids is to have two parents who hate each other.  I think you and your wife should sit down and start to think about whether you can handle making divorce agreements between yourselves or if you will need attorneys to facilitate.  Personally speaking, my ex and I were able to hash out 95% of the details at the kitchen table and we went to mediation without attorneys to take care of the rest.  We saved $10k to $20k each in attorney fees and I think prevented a lot of anger and hatred.   But, this isn't necessarily the best way.. it depends on your situation and the complexity of your lives and finances. 

Your kids are very resilient and will likely surprise you.  It's very hard.. but they will be fine.  I think three messages need to shared from day one.. and re-enforced regularly. 
1.)  This is not their fault.  Nothing they could do would have prevented this and nothing they can do will fix it.  Get this out of the way immediately so they don't lose sleep over it. 
2.)  You both love them the same no matter what.  The issue is between you and your wife and it doesn't change how you both feel about them.  
3.)  They are your main priority.  You may not have every little detail figured out yet, but you will be sure to limit the impact on their lives.  Hopefully no change in school/friends.  They won't be homeless.  They can keep their clothes and toys and all that stuff.    This will help their security a ton. 


Let us know how we can support you.. That's what we are here for. 


 


-Formerly "Lostdad" - I now embrace the username "phoenix" because my former life ended in flames, but my new life will be spectacular. 

 
 

March 15, 2017 11:25 am  #3


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

thank you for the message @lostdad. with my wife's blessing our marriage counselor has now become my personal therapist so i am already seeing someone i trust and who knows my whole history.

i have quit alcohol and am trying to eat healthy and exercise which is going well so far. sleep was a huge problem leading up to my wife coming out, because i knew something was coming but was expecting it to be a nasty and immediate divorce. since she came out to me i have been sleeping remarkably well, so hopefully that continues.

at first i was having one really good day followed by one really bad one. probably because i was alternating between denial and acceptance. those oscillations have evened out in the past few days and i'd say the primary feeling is confused resignation right now.

your advice about the kids is very helpful because we don't know anybody who has come out to a teenager before. as i'm sure you can imagine we are very nervous about how he will react, since reactions are often exaggerated by hormones, etc. at his age. my wife is especially nervous about how this will change his relationship with her and is already talking about putting the moment off for a while but i worry he will find out some other way and be hurt by the fact that we didn't tell him directly.

     Thread Starter
 

March 15, 2017 12:51 pm  #4


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

jkpeace wrote:

You wrote:  "She believes she has always been gay but repressed it due to childhood trauma and over sexualization in the household".    She has, most likely, suspected she was gay, her entire life.   I can understand her wanting to hide that, but childhood trauma didn't cause it.  Who is she suggesting "over sexualized" her?
 

She is not suggesting that being gay is a result of childhood trauma, but rather that the subsequent repression of her sexuality was. In her case there was sexual abuse by the father and overexposure to pornography and sexual situations in the home. She was attracted to the naked female bodies she was exposed to but also developed shame about having these feelings of attraction because they were so closely tied to her father, her abuser.

When her father died, 7 years ago, she began an internal coming out process but that was put on hold by a surprise pregnancy and the subsequent birth of our daughter, now six.

I appreciate your advice about allowing children to choose the timing and method of revealing the situation to their own friends. We go to a very liberal church, with a majority LGBTQ membership, so i am guessing that church friends will be a safe place for him to test those waters.

Thank you so much for lending an ear and advice. i appreciate that you are hurting too, and know that it must not be easy for you to open old wounds by reading and replying to stories like mine.

     Thread Starter
 

March 15, 2017 7:34 pm  #5


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

zenslug, 

Welcome.  It sounds like you are doing amazing things for yourself, your health, and your kids, by building your support fortress.   These are fantastic. 

If your church is liberal and the kids attend, it's likely they have grown up knowing a "one love" philosophy, that we are all one in the same.  That should help.  

As a former counselor to kids from age 3-18, I found that young men really struggled most with lying and who they thought their parent was, as opposed to who they are now.  With his age, he might just look forward to burying himself into whatever he enjoys (videogames, sports, etc.).  Letting both kids know you are there for them as lostdad says, and that you are both always their parents, will really go a long way for their security.    As jkpeace said, each child will have their own rules of what they want to happen.  As long as it's safe for them, let them have the controls.  It gives kids a sense of peace to control in their own way things that feel uncontrollable (like why Mom loves girls but married Dad).  It also may be possible that they feel unwanted, the case in many divorce relationships.  Again, speaking from jkpeace and lostdad, let them know they are wanted, loved, and were part of a loving relationship--that just isn't there any more.  If you feel it wasn't loving it's more difficult to tell the kids that.  

We are here for you.  Keep posting.   Keep doing good things for yourself.  

M


“Above all, watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely of places.”
 

March 15, 2017 9:21 pm  #6


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

maresyd wrote:

zenslug, 

Welcome.  It sounds like you are doing amazing things for yourself, your health, and your kids, by building your support fortress.   These are fantastic. 

If your church is liberal and the kids attend, it's likely they have grown up knowing a "one love" philosophy, that we are all one in the same.  That should help.  

As a former counselor to kids from age 3-18, I found that young men really struggled most with lying and who they thought their parent was, as opposed to who they are now.  With his age, he might just look forward to burying himself into whatever he enjoys (videogames, sports, etc.).  Letting both kids know you are there for them as lostdad says, and that you are both always their parents, will really go a long way for their security.    As jkpeace said, each child will have their own rules of what they want to happen.  As long as it's safe for them, let them have the controls.  It gives kids a sense of peace to control in their own way things that feel uncontrollable (like why Mom loves girls but married Dad).  It also may be possible that they feel unwanted, the case in many divorce relationships.  Again, speaking from jkpeace and lostdad, let them know they are wanted, loved, and were part of a loving relationship--that just isn't there any more.  If you feel it wasn't loving it's more difficult to tell the kids that.  

We are here for you.  Keep posting.   Keep doing good things for yourself.  

M

thank you so much for this post, M. it is nice to hear from a counselor on this topic. the point you make about the children seeking truth first and foremost from their parents is a good one and also the reason my wife and i have decided to be honest right away as opposed to living a lie until he leaves for college, for example.

my relationship with my wife has always been loving, even though there were obvious stumbling blocks to it ever being a successful long-term marriage. i believe if we do the separation right then it will continue to be a loving relationship, perhaps even more so because the honest truth is out in the open now.

i know there will be awkward times because in the first week we have already had our share. it is hard to be there for each other emotionally when we are both in such different and vulnerable places right now. but if we keep finding our way back to the truth, which is that we love each other and want the whole family to be happy, then i believe we can overcome the obstacles.

     Thread Starter
 

March 16, 2017 6:26 am  #7


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

Zenslug,

Welcome.

I think lostdad came here also being supportive of his loving wife.  (How many of us supported, funded and facilitated our spouses' gay destruction of the marriage).

I hope your wife continues to be loving. 

Please note though that a lot of us thought our spouses were loving but upon divorcing found them to be quite selfish and out for themselves.  For some of us it's hard to say "I support you honey" while they are asking for all our retirement money and full custody of the kids.

Just saying..your post seems to be quite empathetic for your wife.  I urge to save some of that empathy for yourself..you will need it. The kids will need a strong dad emotionally and financially.

When I first came here I was supportive of my now ex...folks here told me to protect myself.  I was like no she would never do that to me, she would never try to hurt me emotionally or financially.  How wrong I was..how right people here were.

Wishing you the best on your journey through the (gay) valley.

Last edited by Rob (March 16, 2017 6:27 am)


"For we walk by faith, not by sight .."  2Corinthians 5:7
 

March 16, 2017 9:01 am  #8


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

thank you all for the advice and words of warning. we live in California, which is a "Community Property" and "No Fault Divorce" state. my understanding of that is if we agree on 50/50 custody in a parenting agreement (that is the current plan) then all assets will be split 50/50 as well. my wife is in no rush to initiate the legal separation or divorce process and actually wants to wait on physical separation until after she gets a better job and therefore has more money to contribute towards the costs of living separately.

with all that in mind i can't see how rushing forward with separation or divorce is in my own best interest at this time. i am inclined to wait at least until her new job comes through so there will be more money for rent, etc. we are hiring a financial advisor to look at our finances, and help us develop a plan for paying off our substantial credit card debt, but are hoping to avoid getting lawyers involved unless things turn nasty. when lawyers get involved i hear that the 50/50 monetary distribution decreases to 40/40, with lawyers taking the other 20 percent. i don't like lawyers enough to enter into that situation willingly.

     Thread Starter
 

March 16, 2017 10:48 am  #9


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

zenslug wrote:

thank you all for the advice and words of warning. we live in California, which is a "Community Property" and "No Fault Divorce" state. my understanding of that is if we agree on 50/50 custody in a parenting agreement (that is the current plan) then all assets will be split 50/50 as well. my wife is in no rush to initiate the legal separation or divorce process and actually wants to wait on physical separation until after she gets a better job and therefore has more money to contribute towards the costs of living separately.

with all that in mind i can't see how rushing forward with separation or divorce is in my own best interest at this time. i am inclined to wait at least until her new job comes through so there will be more money for rent, etc. we are hiring a financial advisor to look at our finances, and help us develop a plan for paying off our substantial credit card debt, but are hoping to avoid getting lawyers involved unless things turn nasty. when lawyers get involved i hear that the 50/50 monetary distribution decreases to 40/40, with lawyers taking the other 20 percent. i don't like lawyers enough to enter into that situation willingly.

As Rob said in a prior post..  When I showed up on this board i was still very much in love with my wife.  I didn't want the divorce to happen.. i tried to keep her, but to no avail.   To this day I respect her for trying to love me for 16 years.. she did try.   But I hate that the reason she quit trying was because she fell in love with someone else... She betrayed me, cheated on me, made someone else her priority, lied to me, cut me down..   zenslug.. I hope for you that your wife hasn't done these things and won't do these things.  It's rare that they come out of the closet without being pulled there, either by their spouse snooping and finding out the truth, or because they have found another person who has given them the motivation to make the change.   But, once in a white they are good and loving people who just know the inevitable to be true and they make the journey with love and respect for their spouse.  If you have such a wife currently, then you are extremely lucky and will likely have a much easier time of your separation and divorce. 

To your points..
I am not a lawyer and have zero experience with CA law.. but it doesn't sound correct that they would base financial asset distribution on child custody.   I could absolutely be wrong, but that just doesn't sound accurate.  Child support/maintenance will be split based on parenting time, but they usually won't raid your 401k based on who has the kids more.  
I would make this recommendation to you:   Go see an attorney.  Find one who does a low cost or free consultation.  Write down a bunch of questions and fire away.  Get a free or cheap education and be sure to ask "What not to do"..  ie..  don't move out of the house no matter what because that is seen as abandonment and will kill your hopes of parenting time.  Do this in secret.  You are not betraying your wife.. you are not committing to hiring an attorney.. you are simply learning a few things so that you are prepared and intelligent on the topic. 

At some point you should realize that your commitment to your wife ends at divorce..  Your wife's friends will be very quick to point that out to her and lots of people will encourage both of you to start hiding money and starting a strategy to "take advantage" of the other party.  I absolutely don't condone this behavior.. but I do want you to be aware.. the longer you take to get into the divorce process, the longer you give outside influences a chance to corrupt your thought process    (like I'm doing right now.. lol). 


I agree completely on the use of attorneys..  if you can navigate the process yourself it will save a lot of money.  But that doesn't mean you shouldn't seek any outside help.  Some people make the big mistakes due to lack of knowledge and not due to poor decision intent.  I did a ton of homework online during my divorce and even then we went to a professional mediator together just to make sure we had an experienced 3rd party to bring up topics we hadn't thought about. 

My advice:
Do your negotiations early.. strike quickly while you are both amicable and supportive.  It's much harder to change your mind on an agreement that has already been made.   If you can agree to 50/50 custody and you are happy with that.. write it up now.  Do it at your kitchen table tonight.  Don't wait.  As you move forward your emotions will change, you will make new discoveries and your opinion of each other will change.  As that happens, your ability to be fair with your agreements will deteriorate and you'll get testy.  When that happens people act on emotions and tend to hire attorneys out of spite to "screw" their spouse.   If you've already drawn things up and agreed on 90% of the issues.. both parties will be much less likely to go back and change their mind. 

When you sit down to negotiate.. make one a huge list of all the things you need to make decisions.  Then have two pieces of paper or two envelopes or baskets..   One says "things we agree upon" and the other says "further discussion".  Do not label the second basket as a negative (things we don't agree upon or argument items).. keep it positive.  If you don't agree on the outcome yet, make an agreement to table the discussion for another time and keep the terminology favorable.  When your spouse starts to think there are some big items they will not agree upon, that is when they start to plan to get an attorney. 


Anyhow..  I've been through it.. happy to offer more advice if you wish.  

I'm still concerned about your mental and emotional health.. you say the right words.. talking about support and love.. but I know that you are feeling some betrayal and hurt..  don't sweep those things under the rug completely or they will explode and come back to hurt you later.  


-Formerly "Lostdad" - I now embrace the username "phoenix" because my former life ended in flames, but my new life will be spectacular. 

 
 

March 16, 2017 6:54 pm  #10


Re: So my wife is coming out as a lesbian...

I agree with what others have said. Do your research and get a professional opinion. It's in both your best interests, not to mention that of your kids. Get the framework in place and if anything is conditional, such as debt reduction, make sure that's spelled out. I hope you can do this together, with fairness and respect. You should also agree on some near-term arrangements. Who sleeps where, etc. When is it OK to date or do social things separately? How do you fairly set that up so it's not always one person out while the other one becomes like a live-in sitter? Overnight "guests" - none until you are truly living apart would be my suggestion. The kids will be exposed to whatever happens now, good or bad. I wish you success!


“The future is unwritten.”
― Joe Strummer
 

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