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Last edited by MJM017 (July 12, 2021 5:31 am)
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MJM017: I completely get the meditative benefit of the rosary. It's a beautiful prayer. I'm going to start using that myself, again.
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Thanks for posting this. I'm not particularly religious -- but my husband is (like you) a very liberal Catholic, and when we married I'd agreed that we'd raise our daughter as a Catholic. So it was something that she and her father used to share, although she's happy to attend Episcopal services with me. In fact, I even started taking communion, just because she was doing it and wanted me to join in.
When we first made this discovery about my husband, he had made some cryptic remarks about not taking communion. Our daughter was still deeply upset by the new revelations, and as I was planning to fly out to be with her over Christmas, he wanted to join, and our daughter said she would be willing to spend Christmas with him only if he would take communion with her. I think what she meant was, he'd have to go to reconciliation first, and she had been up against his defensive barricade when she tried to get him to acknowledge the damage he'd caused. So I think she wanted him to basically confess to a priest.
Anyhow, he didn't. So I spent Christmas with her, but he stayed back.
I've tried to get him to address the issue of his compulsive sexual behavior, but you can't force-feed someone reality. He wouldn't see a therapist, and I thought maybe if he addressed it as a spiritual matter it would make it easier, but as far as I can see he has not attended Mass even once in the past year and a half.
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walkby:
"you can't force-feed someone reality"
Wow. You nailed the truth in one pithy statement.
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MJM,
Yes, its a scary thing to go through. The psalms gave me great comfort and I highly reccomend them for those going through this. I recall hiding n my "safe spot" clutching my bible as my GX raged in her violence. I recall be mocked. I recall thinking this was a person that thought she was morally right to treat me like that...she still does to this day.
Today, years away from TGT I can practice my faith without fear and ridicule. I thank God for helping me.
God sometimes sends angels but they do not necessarily have wings and halos; sometimes they take the form of priest, therapist, friends, family.
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Rob, as I said, 'm not particularly religious but definitely psalms during the worst of the worst. I remember thinking over and over, what it really means to "walk through the valley of the shadow of death". Those words really came alive for me.
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I'm new here -- I'll be posting more later. I just wanted to say that I keep a rosary by my bed. and when I wake up after about three or four hours of sleep and can't get back to sleep because my mind is torturing me with fear and sadness and uncertainty, it's a comfort to reach out for it. I get through the days OK, but nighttime is terrible.
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I think cultural aspects of my religion caused me to not realize how destructive my marriage really was. Marriage and family are emphasized so much, and personal responsibility, and looking to my own faults instead of finding faults in others. I wish my church had emphasized “healthy relationships” in the youth lessons on marriage.
I am glad I discovered TGT, because although I had finally realized that what I was experiencing was the cycle of abuse, TGT made it clearer to me (more confusing in some ways too!)
Religion, though—the real foundational aspects of my beliefs—TGT has caused me to really focus on these, to clarify what I really do believe, what is essential and what is not. And I have had to exercise faith in the sense of not knowing, but hoping. Faith as a comfort. The beautiful and mystical things that can nourish me.
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Great thread! I love that we can talk about this topic with love and support and understanding. In most places it only leads to division and argument.
Well done my friends!
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This, too, has been one of the biggest hurdles for me to overcome. When I said forever, I meant it. I took my wedding vows very seriously.
My clergy reached out to me saying that he could sense something was "off" with me, that I just didn't seem like my old self anymore. We went out for coffee and a three hour deeply theological and philosophical discussion brewed :-)
He explained to me that, in his opinion, God never intended for us to be miserable. Like people, relationships can die. "Til death do us part" includes when the relationship is broken beyond repair. In the case of an unintended MOM, when the straight partner realizes that they were duped and that the foundation upon which their marriage was built was a lie or at the very least an error of omission, often times that is the death of the marriage.
I was anticipating a judgemental position from my clergy, one that might infer "I didn't try hard enough" etc. But instead I was met with great compassion and understanding, and a promise of love and support within my community of faith as I progress through my own journey.
Having spent so many years internalizing these things, I have tended to beat myself up over the things for which I had no control. I often looked at myself like the proverbial kid who's mother had to tie a steak around his neck so the dog would play with him. I have been starved of love and desire throughout most of my marriage and have always been made to feel it was all my fault. I was too fat, worked too much, too angry, too depressed, not fun enough, <insert every other excuse here>, to be desired. I have for decades felt that I was somehow undeserving of true love and affection. Now that I have finally learned the truth, I am resentful that my wife could so easily overlook my feelings in order to achieve the picket fence nuclear family facade that enabled her to lead the life she wanted to project to the world.