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February 1, 2017 2:23 pm  #291


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

jkpeace wrote:

Even in no-fault states, TGT could be used as leverage.

In my state, the lawyers who wrote the "no-fault" law left enough wiggle room to keep themselves busy and rich in contested divorces. I did use the "L" word as leverage, as the law allows for "spousal behavior" to be taken into account when determining alimony. I asked the mediator what would happen if I brought her orientation in front of a judge, other than having it on the public record. He said "She would get no alimony". She then asked "How much would it cost him?" $20K was the answer. So we divided $20K by 7 years times 12 months and determined a very reasonable number which was much less than the state guidelines.

Other no-fault states and jurisdictions vary on how much leeway you have.

 

February 1, 2017 2:27 pm  #292


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

I would imagine that you could use the TGT to help your own spouse treat you fairly in case of divorce but..I've heard that even if adultery is grounds for divorce in your state, which it still is in a few; that "TGT" does not constitute an adulterous relationship before the law.. as ridiculous as it seems.

So adultery is still the joining of two heterosexual individuals in the act of intercourse between male and female. The laws need to change as the laws are being changed in favor or upholding the rights of Lgbt individuals. Cheating is cheating iow's.

 

February 1, 2017 2:35 pm  #293


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

The law has changed, mostly as a result of gay marriage, in a number of jurisdictions. In British Columbia, it was actually changed as a result of a divorce suit by a straight spouse, who with the help of a lesbian lawyer, chalanged the definition of adultery and won.

 

February 1, 2017 4:19 pm  #294


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Rob wrote:

Nurse33 wrote:

He does travel frequently for work, but that is part of his job. I know where he is going, I see the flight and credit card receipts. He is actually gone now. I did ask him, if he was. His response was Wow. No I'm not gay. And it actually bothers me that you ask. You could certainly ask anyone I know.

Do you believe what he says?  Does he seem emotionally distant and always texting and talking to guy friends ?
I would say snoop.  You gut is telling you something.            

He is vey emotionally distant, always texting guy friends. He is very secretive about his phone and computer. I will try my best. I'm going to bring the topic up at therapy and see how he reacts when we are face to face. I just don't see why it would bother him, if he wasn't. This is all making me depressed and sad. He tells me I'm the reason we don't have sex, or it is because he is too depressed. Even at the high times in our relationship, he hasn't wanted/initiated sex. I don't think he is being honest with himself or me, while this self destructing me :-(

 

February 1, 2017 5:40 pm  #295


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thanks for sharing Nurse33. I'm sorry you're going through this painful experience. You shared:

1. I'm going to bring the topic up at therapy and see how he reacts when we are face to face.

I hope you get honest answers in therapy. Given what you described, he'll likely get defensive, blame you, or simply shut down. You should be prepared for an intense first session.  

2. I just don't see why it would bother him, if he wasn't. This is all making me depressed and sad. He tells me I'm the reason we don't have sex, or it is because he is too depressed.

​There is absolutely nothing wrong with you. If he's depressed, it's his fault and his problem. He's likely depressed because he's been hiding his sexuality since he was around six years old and the weight of the secret is making him angry, defensive, and abusive. Narcissists always paint themselves as victims but please keep in mind that he can't abuse you and ​claim to be a victim at the same time. He can't have it both ways. 

Feel free to ask any questions Nurse33 that come to mind. And please check back in with us once you've had your therapy session.  


 

     Thread Starter
 

February 1, 2017 9:15 pm  #296


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Sam, I am glad the laws are finally changing, I am so grateful that things are moving towards this, slow as they may seem.

Jkpeace, my husband has done the same. His stuff, his cell phone, his PC, His time, his friends and on and on. I also would ask my friends/family if this was the way their marriage was, and invariably,  they would say NO it was open to one another, their was no private in marriage. He was always secretive and hated when I tried to penetrate his walls they HE had put up in all ways. This was NOT a marriage I now realize but it took me forever to put two and two together. We weren't' unionized but single..everyone for themselves...except I didn't know it for years. "He who has nothing to hide, hides nothing" What a mindf*ck!

 

February 2, 2017 6:15 am  #297


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

.."my husband has done the same. His stuff, his cell phone, his PC, His time, his friends and on and on. I also would ask my friends/family if this was the way their marriage was, and invariably,  they would say NO .."

Right they suddenly  they take their cell phone with them to the bathroom and you can no longer see or use it.  For me it had horrible evil stuff on it..whatever I thought about my gidx the phone revealed the horrible truth.

I could not live with the distrust and low opinion of me.  I am so happy to be away from that..no more wondering if she is cheating. I am away from such an immoral person.


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

February 2, 2017 7:24 am  #298


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Thank you everyone for sharing. While in the closet, I too was defensive, angry, and made my (then) wife feel like everything was her fault. Looking back, I was simply doing what narcissists do (whether gay or straight): projecting my self-hatred on others. It was cruel, terrible, and I wish I could take it all back. I agree with foreverfooled that me acting this way for so long isn't part of a healthy marriage. It's abuse, plain and simple.

​I'm not bisexual so I can't comment on bi/straight marriages (or mixed orientation marriages), but I did have a gay/straight marriage. And I don't see how any gay/straight marriage, however accommodating or loving, can work. As a gay spouse, I simply wasn't attracted to women and yet chose to marry one. While I could try to 'fix' my marriage, no amount of therapy, nor inventiveness in the bedroom, could change the fact that I am a gay man attracted to men. What I lived and what I read about time and time again in this forum are straight spouses who suffer mightily because we gay spouses deny our true sexuality. Our marriages are therefore a lie.

​Turning now to the issue of couples therapy, which Nurse33 and others hope will resolve their relationship issues, I think counselling is a necessary step in the breakup of a gay/straight marriage. People like me have the advantage of hindsight in thinking, "Couples therapy never works!" But I can't forget that we're talking about the death of a marriage and, quite often, the breakup of families. So it's natural that we do everything we can to save our marriages, however broken.

​What creates false hope, however, are gay husbands like me denying their homosexuality, lying to our wives about affairs, and pretending to want to remain married to women while doing absolutely everything (like hookups and gay porn) to demonstrate we don't. This is what's so confusing for our spouses who we've manipulated for years if not decades. 

​So what's my point? My point is that all marriages are work, yet some are doomed to failure. In order for a marriage to work, both partners have to want the relationship yet the gay husband wants intimacy with another man. As I've read time and time again in this forum, it's as if the straight spouse were living the relationship for two. My (then) wife spent the final years of our marriage carrying me and all of my emotional sh*t around, ​all while I criticized and emotionally abused her. ​It must have been unimaginably painful for her. And when we went to therapy, all I talked about was how much I'd suffered. ​I'm ashamed to share that but it's true. ​I'm surprised she didn't stab me to death with the psychiatrist's letter opener. 

​I'm sorry for rambling and writing so much about myself and my former marriage. Getting back to my point, short-term defensiveness, anger, and secrecy happen in any relationship. But they should never be the foundation of a marriage. Kel often shares about the differences between her former gay husband and current straight husband. The difference is night and day.  My hope is always that counseling will help all gay/straight couples work through their issues so they can heal. But no amount of psychotherapy can turn a gay man straight. I know from experience.

​I hope that helps in some small way.

Last edited by Séan (February 2, 2017 7:26 am)

     Thread Starter
 

February 2, 2017 8:08 am  #299


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

Sean,
   Far from sharing too much of your personal story, you made me both laugh and nod my head in agreement and understanding.  
  I've always believed that no marriage has failed until a spouse gives up on it.  And as many problems as there were in mine, between me and my husband, I always believed at a deep level we could together fix it, or I could fix it (by what you called "carrying" my spouse).  I vacillated many times over many years about leaving the marriage, but could never do it--I could just never give up on it.  
   When my husband came out to me two years ago, telling me he had decided he was transgendered, his disclosure changed the terms--voided the marriage contract, so to speak--and I felt freed from the obligation to continue to try to make our marriage work.  He said to me, "We have a future together to the extent you can enjoy me as a woman (he meant sexually)," and I tried. But the more time I have spent occupying this new reality, the more I have come to find it insufficient (I am hetero; he dislikes his male body and now eschews male sexual response) as well as objectionable (all that adopting of feminine stereotypes).
   Although it's very painful to move toward ending a marriage I've lived in, sometimes happily, often companionably, for thirty-five years, a marriage that produced our son, and largely determined the contours of my life outside of work, the huge burden of trying to fix what I now realize isn't in my power to fix has been lifted from my shoulders.  I've also felt that lifting retroactively, so to speak, because now that I've realized why his attention was always divided, why he was more inward looking and focused on himself than on me and our marriage and family life, I've begun letting myself off the hook for not being able to fix everything all those years.  
  I'm not out of the woods yet.  I'm now in the mixed state of seeing clearly what is and what I want, still finding myself resisting what I know to be the right action, looking forward with enthusiasm to what kind of life I will be able to create for myself, grieving the losses and the necessary disillusionment, and too often bitter, resentful, and angry even over things I know are no one's fault. Some days I cycle through all these feelings; often it seems as if I feel them all simultaneously.   I've been humbled, I've been made a little bit wise.  What I'm sure of, however, is that I didn't do it, and I can't fix it.  And I have to get out.
 
   

Last edited by OutofHisCloset (February 2, 2017 8:19 am)

 

February 2, 2017 11:25 am  #300


Re: A gay ex-husband answers your questions

jkpeace wrote:

Nurse33:  My husband was extremely secretive about his phone and computer, too.  He said, "I deserve privacy."

I asked too many married friends to count:  "Do you hide your passwords, phones, computers from each other?"  All of them, every single one, said, "Of course not.  He/She knows my passwords."

I never felt the need to hide anything from my husband (STBX).  I have absolutely nothing to hide...never did and never will.  In a trusting relationship, nobody feels uneasy and nobody hides what they are doing.  There is only one reason for him to be secretive about his phone or computer:  He knows there is something on those that will upset you.  He has something to hide.  That's for sure.

This was a huge issue between my wife and I for about 6 months leading up to her admission of TGT.  
She would hide her phone, change her passwords, change the notifications on her phone screen, only check messages when I wasn't in the room, etc..   I would get so frustrated because I had huge suspicions.  I would tell her that if she had nothing to hide she wouldn't feel the need to hide it.  This simple stance was enough for me to know that something was up.. yet she continued to lie to me and mess with my head..  "if you loved me you would trust me."  "You're a bad husband because you don't trust your wife".   "why do you need to know every detail of my communications.. do you really care about what I think about my co-workers hair or what color i'm going to paint my nails"?     I would reply.. "No I don't care about those things, but if you have nothing to hide you won't care if I have access.. your requirement of privacy is telling me that you have something you need to hide". 

I'm still just fuming mad about how she lied to me so much and for so long..  GRRRR!!!!
 


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

 
 

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