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August 10, 2019 2:25 pm  #1


I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

The whole concept of forgiving the GIDXH is causing a lot of turmoil for me. Does anyone else feel this way?

I hear from every advice channel - from secular to religious - to forgive asap.Some dire consequence will occur to me if I don't.

However, forgiving the unforgivable is making me really angry at him and everyone.  It's keeping me tied to the situation that's come nd gone.

I've come to the conclusion that I want to forget what he did. The debt that he owed me of being a loving husband and offering a sincere apology for his deceptions is no longer needed. I've erased the debt.

I will never forgive him. It's not in the cards. I don't want this to happen again. I forever renounce what he did.

Only God has the power to forgive. In the Catholic Church, God forgives you only if you are truly sorry. I leave it up to God's discretion.

Sorry if this sounds odd. I am thinking how destructive the misuse of this word is. I see friends and family who have forgiven horrible behavior -- they tend to be bitter and judgmental for the rest of their lives.
 


No - It's not too late. It's not hopeless. Even there, there's something I can do. I just have to find the will. Ikiru (1952), film directed by Akira Kurosawa 
 

August 10, 2019 4:30 pm  #2


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

MJM,

I totally get what you’re saying.  You and only you can process your feelings.  I don’t post very often anymore.  Even removed “my story” for personal reasons.  BUT, I do read posts every so often.  But your post struck a chord with me.  It’s been four years since I left my GIDXH .  I have not seen him in a little over three years (the day he tried to kill me, AFTER our divorce ). I don’t ever expect to see him again, we didn’t have any kids (although I helped raise his for 22 years).

I lost those “kids” and my “granddaughter” plus live every day of my life living with pain from the attack and an ohh so lovely scar and chunk of flesh missing from my forearm (he should be in prison , but hey it is what he is).  So for me, forget ?  I wish!  But since that is impossible.  I am remarried now and re building my life.  With a man who loves and actually WANTS me.

But forgiveness.  I struggle. Yes I’m grateful to be alive and still have an arm , which ohh so many people have told me to be.  I guess the bottom line for me. I know he hates himself.  I can truly look back and say that I understand his reasons for hiding.  I can look back and see that he “tried “ to be a good husband in the beginning.  So I guess most days I forgive him for that beginning.  But the second decade of our marriage. No I can’t forgive him.  All the gaslighting, absolute mental cruelty I let myself suffer.  In denial of the real problem , being deflected by his drug addiction.the last four years as I started to figure it out and his denials about everything.  I too just wanted that apology.  As I figured it out slowly and so many times confronted him and begged him to just admit it (I finally found proof after I left him).  Then the very end, I’ll never know if his attempt to take my life was a psychotic drug induced rage or planned (our house was sold and closing in a week, we had rite of survivorship on the house in the divorce decree)

So for me, forgiveness is for me and all my mistakes.   I’ve put HIM in God’s hands.  I try and focus on gratitude for what I do have.  One of my favorite new things I just read.  Talks about dwelling in the past.  Think about how small a rear view mirror in a car is, vs how large the windshield (ie future) is.  I really try and focus on that , when I’m wallowing in sorrow or anger (like today over the pain in my arm or everything that I worked most of my life for and lost).

I wish you all the best.

 

August 10, 2019 7:43 pm  #3


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

Oh my goodness, I am sorry about that horror of a person. I hope he never returns.

Mine stalked and harassed me (200 calls and emails in total for each week for a bit) after the final decree. I believe he could not find another beard or gay sugar daddy. I was granted a restraining order. He died and put himself and me out of misery.

You put it so well about understanding the first part of the marriage and how it totally fell apart later. Again, wishing and praying you never see that brute ever again. Hope he's a million miles away.

Best to you as well


No - It's not too late. It's not hopeless. Even there, there's something I can do. I just have to find the will. Ikiru (1952), film directed by Akira Kurosawa 
     Thread Starter
 

August 16, 2019 7:42 pm  #4


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

I meant to come back to this post after I gave it some thought. I have struggled with it too. I think it's about the expectation that they deserved it that burned me up. That I was struggling and in pain but that I was obligated to offer it to them. Now that I am starting to heal I still get irritated with that idea. It mattered. How they treated me mattered and I don't owe them anything. I may give it to them anyway at some point but I don't owe them. They owe me. People get that so backwards. Forgiveness is a gift from the injured party and not an obligation. Forcing someone to give a gift cheapens its value to both the giver and receiver. It's that forced devaluing of the experience that creates the resentment I think. At least for me. No one gets to decide the 'cost' of that gift and whether I give it or not but me. I hope I get there honestly but this hurt was expensive. It's taking me longer to forgive that debt.

 

August 16, 2019 10:44 pm  #5


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

I agree the problem is the expectation, and how twisted it is.  I got at this somewhat in the thread about Ed Smart.  But my therapist says it this way:  "It touches all the compassionate in you and absolves him of any compassion."

 

August 17, 2019 10:16 am  #6


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

Yes, the anger of the injustice will never go away. His behavior was totally disgusting. I am never forgiving that. 

I was a great, loving, honest, self-sacrificing wife.  I erase the debt of his abject failure to reciprocate because the rage is eating me up. I feel constantly upset— am unable to do normal life-affirming activities. It’s like letting the GIDXH win again to mess with my head. No, you lost. You’re  being forgotten.


I’d say drop dead, but he did it to himself with bad habits.  He thought he would live forever. Such an entitled creep. Glad he’s gone.

Last edited by MJM017 (August 17, 2019 10:17 am)


No - It's not too late. It's not hopeless. Even there, there's something I can do. I just have to find the will. Ikiru (1952), film directed by Akira Kurosawa 
     Thread Starter
 

August 17, 2019 12:46 pm  #7


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

OnMyOwnTwoFeet wrote:

But my therapist says it this way:  "It touches all the compassionate in you and absolves him of any compassion."

This is so very wise. And so aggravatingly true! Thanks for sharing. I still have a struggle with this topic so I love this.

 

August 17, 2019 1:02 pm  #8


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

Once, during a therapy session, I was very upset with my ex-spouse. My spouse, once again, did something that did not take me or the kids into consideration. The only consideration was what was best for hir and to hell with the rest of us. I was hurt because, once again, my ex (still married at the time though) showed what little regard ze had for me - what little value I had to hir. Here's the thing though..... I could have avoided it. I could have gone to the attorneys, but I didn't. My therapist asked why I didn't avoid it, and I told her that I wanted to give my spouse a chance to do the right thing. I desperately wanted my spouse to show that ze still cared for me and was (possibly) even a little remorseful for everything ze had put me through. It led to a great session about the importance of me accepting the truth of my ex's character. And it was hard to accept, but I married a skillful manipulator. A liar who will say/promise anything and be super kind and generous in order to sway things in the direction ze wanted them to go. That was the character of the person I married. I had been fooled for decades, but the mask was off and now I could see clearly. In accepting that, I also had to stop giving hir an opportunity to "do the right thing" because ze has shown me over and over that ze won't, and it hurts me every time. Anyway, after that, I stopped giving those chances. I started to assert myself more, and instead of asking what my ex wanted to do, I started stating what I was going to do. (If that makes sense.) Anyway, and this is where the forgiveness part comes in, as I began to accept who ze is and began to plan and act as I would when dealing with someone who is selfish and deceitful to the very core, my anger lessened. Ze no longer angers me because I don't give hir the chance to hurt me anymore. Also, as my anger lessened, I was able to think about forgiveness and consider extending forgiveness to my ex.
 
So, for me, forgiveness has been about accepting who my ex is and acting accordingly. It is not about being okay with the hurt and pain ze inflicted. It is about seeing what an ass ze really is and knowing ze will always, always, always put herself before me and the kids.

I hope that all makes sense.

 

August 18, 2019 12:28 am  #9


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

Yes Stronger, you make sense, I could have written every word you wrote myself.  Thank you MJM and yes, we now live on opposite US Coasts.

 

August 18, 2019 7:24 am  #10


Re: I Am Getting Off The Forgiveness Hamster Wheel

I’ve been reading the posts on the Ed Smart letter (the posts have been enlightening and very well done) and reflecting on the anger both there and in this thread and reflecting on my own frustrations and anger in dealing with my ex. 

I’ve posted this before but will post it again in a different context. Early on, post D-day, my therapist once used a metaphor on accepting that my wife is gay...if you leave the steak out to thaw, and the dog steals it, are you going to get angry at the dog, he was just being who he is.   

After months on Chump Lady and months here, and knowing gay people who did not chose the MOM route, and knowing that Western Society is more open to LGBQT than ever, I believe there is a character disorder in GID spouses that is beyond anyone’s control, and getting angry hurts us more than them. I don’t know if accepting that fact  is forgiveness, but it is liberating. It does not mitigate the emotional pain of the lost years or the grief of a farce marriage but does mitigate the anger in them not meeting expectations in the present. In my current coparenting arrangements, independent of TGT, by accepting these narcissistic tendencies, I can spend my emotional and intellectual capital on getting what I need out of the interactions. (Mainly schedules and finances).

I also shared before that I had a colleague I’ve known 40 years that came out to his wife the same year my ex came out. He was tormented and conflicted for months prior. He had also struggled with depression and contemplated suicide.  He had also fit the GID profile... same sex experiments in adolescence, years of gay porn since the internet, 3-5 years of hookups prior to disclosure, etc.   I learned of the double life in 2010.
He came out in early 2014 and yes it blew up his marriage and life. Ironically, my knowledge of his inner turmoil up to and during my divorce probably enabled a better settlement for me because during mediation I had some empathy for the inner  conflict my ex must be facing. I was so stoic during the divorce my therapist chastised me for NOT being angry.  I didn’t really get angry until after the divorce and had to live all the financial and scheduling challenges post divorce.

So I have been thinking about the patterns of my colleague and my ex, the patterns here of GID spouses, the Ed Smart letter, etc.,  there is just something absent in their acknowledgement of their culpability that infuriates us. In the simplest terms they lacked courage to examine themselves prior to entering a MOM, and they were narcissistic to use another to lie to themselves if not to lie to society,  and they hold external forces more accountable than themselves.

I believe the only path past the anger is to stop expecting that to change in them, to continue to anticipate that narcissistic tendency if we still need to interact with them and to rebuild from the ruins they left as best we can. (With all we know here on this site, is Ed Smarts letter really a surprise or exactly what we would expect from the GID profile - if the latter then why get angry? It’s predictable.)   I can NEVER condone my ex’s lack of courage in waiting so long to come out, and her bringing me along, and especially her bringing  children into it when the years of infertility we experienced presented a great opportunity for her to leave, but if I accept her disorder as unchangeable,  I can navigate her narcissistic tendencies, especially her tendency and skill at bringing others into problems she’s accountable for but cannot or will not handle. At least it releases anger at her if it is not forgiveness.

All the best,

ADSJ

Last edited by a_dads_straight_journey (August 18, 2019 7:46 am)

 

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