You are here

Emotionally exhausted.

Lauren973's picture

I feel suspended. Powerless.
It feels impossible to me to even convey what is going on within, let alone to solve my problems or take a new direction.

The people on this board are the ONLY people who understand what I am going through. My fiance is so riddled with his own issues and desires concerning this debacle, that he both requires my input and ignores it. If you took all the time we have had together and subtracted the time/energy devoted to discussing his divorce and the custody of his daughter, we've really had very little time devoted to US.
He went and made a MAJOR decision that went against our agreement. Agreements forged over long and arduous hours. And the thing is that if it were simply a matter of him disregarding my input on the issues, I might be able to be okay with that - afterall, it is the dissolution of HIS marraige and the custody of HIS daughter. He has a right to make whatever decisions he wants to.
What makes this unbearable to me are the implications of the decisions he made. What it means for the future. MY future as well as his and his daughter.
His own attorney told him that if there would be a time to fight for custody, this would be it. BM weakened her case significantly by taking daughter out of country w/o proper immunizations. I feel he should have stood UP to her. For us all.
Instead, as the agreement stands, his daughter will reside with her mother and my fiance will have the option to see her whenever he is not working so long as there are no extenuating circumstances. Added to this is the right of first refusal for both BM and BF. All communications are to take place through email.
I go over this again and again in my mind.
The tricks here are manifold. What does it mean? It means she got away with her antics again, without a fight. It means all the hours we spent talking about it were wasted. It means she will simply need to come up with excuses when she wants to refuse him his daughter. It means constant email communication whenever mood and whim strike her, and her communications are devistating to him. It means she now has a legal vehicle for her veiled thhreats. The right of first refusal protects her more than him because daughter doesn't tell us when she is with a sitter or a friend, but reports to mother when she is left with me because that is pattern forged over two years. It gives her the right to refuse that her daughter and I have ANY individual relationship, forever. It means that we will have to live near her forever now. It means that he will have to ASK HER PERMISSION for what is his legal RIGHT. It means years more discussions over her F*&%D up behavior with less chance of doing ANYTHING about it than we had BEFORE. It means suspension and powerlessness.
And he feels HOPEFUL from this. My fiance says that he holds hope that a divorce will come quicker so that it will mean we are able to get married soon. And that, he says, is why he chose this route.
he says that it is all for me. All for us. I cannot see how this could be possible. I do not understand his hope. It baffles me how he can suddenly hold out any hope at all that this woman will a) not abuse her new ability to email him - in fact she already has b ) not abuse the artful terminology needed to find an excuse to refuse him visitation and still have it be legally sanctified c) not withold information rendering the right of first refusal useless, c) find every possible way to use these new rules to abuse me and exclude me from her daughters life d) STILL find a way to prolong the divorce so that we cannot marry.
I can't fathom it and I feel distrustful. I feel suddenly distrustful of everyone. I feel I have no one looking out for me, and he claims I am the ONLY one he is really looking out for. How can either ONE of us be so far off???
And even if this is just a huge mistake on his part, how do I handle it when the inevitable occurs???? How do I proceed from this point on? What am I to expect about aggreements we reach in the future?
He can't seem to even stand for me to disagree about it, and percieves it as criticism - becoming defensive. What about when the time comes for me to say I told you so. Because I don't WANT to have him come to me six weeks from now and ASK for my thoughts on something related to them, for at this point I feel it would be a futher waste of my effort.
And if I say, "okay then this is YOUR business, and I will simply defer to you on issues concerning your wife and daughter" what is my involvement supposed to look like emotionally? financially?

It is like agreeing to love someone who you know will never love you back. Who will bring you all the heartache of fear, worry, loss... and who you have ZERO influence over, ZERO right to discipline, control, shape, or for that matter zero influence over how this person and her place in my life affects ME.
And it's not the same as making a choice to be in a romantic relationship, because there you have the right/option of asserting boundaries, and there is an inverse romance involved whereby if that person doesn't love you you have the right/option to refuse them.
I do not want to leave my relationship with my fiance. Not yet anyway. I don't really think we have even had the CHANCE to form ways of dealing with decisions. Early on, his relationship with his ex and daughter were obviously more his business. We were just forming our bond. Progressively though we have become more and more entwined, and his decisions affect me and my life more and more. Indeed there have been small compromises, but this is the first very real problem with regard to making a joint decision.
We have a limited ability to discuss this as his daughter is here until tonight and then there will be out of state work. But in the course of talking we have reached a stale mate. He cannot tell me why, in the moment when the choice between taking the route we had agreed on, and taking the one offered to him in negotiations, he did not call to consult me before making a decision.
Instead he keeps saying that he thought I would trust that he was taking everyone's position in mind.
To me, that means he ultimately decided that he was going to make the decisions FOR us and I would have to trust that he did the right thing.
When I pressed him on it, he got defensive and answered that from now on he would just take me to court or attorney meetings with him and let ME make the decisions.
In his mind, it seems that compromise is impossible, and it will either be all my way or all his.

And yet, he feels hopeful in that he has compromised with his ex.

So how do I move forward?
How do I establish a way where this can WORK in the future? How do we reach a way to compromise?
Afterall, I feel like my entire time with him has been a compromise. Other people's relationships get to start out being all about them and then move out in concentric circles. I compromised from the get go.

Comments

dbsojo's picture

I'll leave you with this for now: Why such a rush to get married?
Hopefully tomorrow I will have the time to go through your other blogs a bit, and become a little more familiar with your situation. I'll re-post to you then. In the meantime, take a deep breath, and try to find something that will take your mind off of this for a bit (if you can). These sorts of circumstances are hard enough without thinking about it over and over.

db

Krissy's picture

Lauren--I have been following your story some and having said that I admit that I really agree with the previous post. I'm not suggesting that you SHOULDN'T marry, but it's my firm belief that in an ideal world, blended families should never be created until both sides are in stable custody/support situations and that there are no outstanding issues going on. Now, I know that this seems impossible, and obviously with bad blood existing between exes, or one particularly nutty parent, the drama never ends. However, at some point there is a level of consistency with the situation. Like, the BB has been acting crazy for year and the BF has learned how to counteract that. Or the SD drops in and out of the child's life but the child and mother are equipt to deal with this type of set-up. In this way, regardless of the situation, a new person coming in can be prepared for what's coming and decide then and there if it's something s/he can tolerate.

I have found that it's VERY difficult to START a relationship/marriage when there is chaos. Blended families are tough by nature...even when things are great. But when they aren't great, but tumultuous and stressful, bringing a new person into the equation has the potential to be a recipe for disaster. The time it takes to cultivate a romance and a strong relationship is sacrificed for the time it takes to sustain and win a battle.

I am sure that you love your DF. And I'm sure that he isn't trying to disregard you. The fact may be that he cannot do any better than he is doing and that you will simply have to decide whether or not you can deal with it. If you had come into this w/ the situation being as you've descrived, and it had been set in stone and working for them, how would you feel? If all of the decisions were made before you, would you run screaming when you found out how things worked? Would you find a way to deal with it?

The one thing I warn against is going into a marriage because you think that becoming DF's wife will give you more influence on his decision-making. Don't use marriage as a tool to wield power over the situation because it just might not work that way, and then where will you be? In retrospect, I did SO many things in my relationship because I wanted control. I ignored my gut because I thought the more time I spent and the closer I got, the better I could oversee it all. And I also did NOT want to let BB win. I know now that I wasted over 2 years of my life trying to sustain something that was always doomed to fail. Why? Because we didn't have the foundation. I was never a factor in any of it. It was always STBX and his son, and me and DD along for the ride. That's not a family. That's not a frienship. That's a group of people stuck together out of convenience and circumstance. How truly sad for all involved.

I'm not saying that my situation has to be yours. But it did help to make my decision to leave by reminding myself that I didn't have to stay. It sounds so simple, I know, but after years of stress and hardship, the negativity and sadness just was ingrained in me and all of my thoughts. Suddenly I saw that it was not. SS was NOT my child, BB was NOT my ex. Once I really started to believe that I could be free of it all, I began to feel the dread dissipate and notice the veil lifting. It was amazing. Take some time and think it ALL over. DF doesn't have to be the devil incarnate in order for you to decide not to get married right away. He doesn't even have to do anything wrong. It's all about how you can deal with the situation and his way of playing this game. There are many good people out there, but I wouldn't want to be married to most of them, you know?

GOOD LUCK!
Krissy

workinonit's picture

I've been there. In that place where it feels like all of these decisions that will affect your life are being made with complete disregard for you. I remember the feeling of panic over how every part of your life seems like it will either change or forever be controlled by you know who. It's a scary lonely place and no one knows what it's like for you. Please give it some time. Once things start to work themselves out it's usually not as bad as you've pictured it. At least not if you get as doomsday about it as I used to.

What I realized through all of this is that I had no idea what it was like for my husband (then BF/Fiance). I have no idea what it is like to have children that mean more to me than anything in the world and barely get to spend any time with them. I have no idea what it is like to have my ex rip me and my new significant other apart in their eyes. While it was hard, I had to learn to try to put myself in his shoes and look at it from his point of view. That helped a little. What really helped was when I stopped blaming my husband for BM's behavior. Believe me, that took some time, OK a LOT of time.

I think that sometimes men just want to get things over with and will take "good enough" instead of what they actually deserve. Also, they probably feel that the less they have to deal with BM the better. Maybe they are scared that if they fight too hard they will wind up with less time with the kids.

As for the email communication, I would look at it in the most positive light. Now at least you will have everything in writing. She will not be able to deny it or dispute it.

Although I haven't provided any answers I hope at least this has helped a little. Just remember, you're not alone.