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Both MJM and OnMyOwnTwoFeet have written before about Pauline Boss's concept of "ambiguous loss," a term Boss coined to describe the grief of those who have lost loved ones and have no closure--soldiers MIA, runaways whose fates remain unknown, etc.
I am currently reading the book "Soul Broken: A Guidebook for Your Journey Through Ambiguous Grief," and thought both the concept and the book might be useful to others. "Ambiguous grief" is a concept that builds on Boss's work, but in this case the loved one is alive but there's been a change or break in the relationship, whether from dementia, mental illness, a disclosure or discovery of a competing sexuality and/or gender identity. We have "lost" the person we knew, and grieve the loss, but the person remains. (Women in my situation--husbands who declare they're women in men's bodies--are even known as "transwidows," because it's as if our husbands have died, even though they go on living, but not as the husbands we knew them as.)
It's a pop psych book, but I'm finding it helpful nonetheless. She highlights ideas of the "activating event" (the discovery or disclosure, which is the beginning of the rupture), and guides one through useful strategies for dealing with the loss, including "intentionality," and the different aspects hope, wither internal (self-directed and healing), which we can control, and external (other directed, futile), which relies on the other person to change, with helpful suggestions for exploring one's feelings and circumstances. I thought it might be helpful to others, too, whether you're just starting out, navigating a MOM either willingly or not, or have divorced.
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Thanks OoHC. I’ll try to track it down. Hope you’re doing okay.
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Thanks OoHC. I’ll track it down. Hope you’re doing okay.
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Thanks, Toward the Light. As it happens, today is the fourth anniversary of the date of my divorce. I was just thinking today that today is far better than anniversaries one and two. It's been a bit of a struggle in the last six weeks, since, when returning to my home after four months away helping my mom, who died in mid-September, I was told by several people that my closeted ex has taken up with a new woman--who believes him when says he no longer "needs" to cross dress (he never told her he considered himself trans). I realized that at some level after thirty-six years of marriage although I am no contact I still felt connected to him, as if there were a transatlantic cable connecting our two continents, even though no messages were being passed between them.
Hope you are doing well.
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Can't believe how much "Soul Broken" hits home. Thank you for the suggestion. The chapter on hope particularly resonates. It's painful to read, though. Makes me realize what I've been doing wrong for 16 months.