Healing From Abuse and Staying Married

I spotted this post by Faith Allen on her blog recently, and have been enjoying the various comments that came pouring in.

In it she talks about how healing has become a challenge within her marriage because she is not the wife her husband expects her to be any more. She has been spending her time healing from her child abuse, and becoming  a stronger and more independent woman, and that’s not who he married. I can identify with what she is going through, because I went through a similar experience.

As I began healing, being married actually became quite a problem for me. Not necessarily because my marriage was horrible, but because trying to be the husband my wife expected me to be, and allowing myself the freedom to heal and change created a huge internal conflict.

As it turned out, in my case, that conflict became the source of even more depression and mental health issues, causing my wife to decide she couldn’t stay and watch me make myself worse. In essence, she solved the conflict for me, by filing for divorce. Not every marriage that experiences this sort of issue fails in the way mine did, but it is a challenge.

Healing requires us throwing off some of our old coping mechanisms and learn to become full-fledged adults. That adult is going to be a different person than the one you were when you first got married. It’s not that this new, healthy, person is worse, or a bad spouse or anything along those lines. They’re just different. In my case, it means wanting different things from life than my wife did. I suddenly felt pulled away from the lifestyle and views she held very dear. I was no longer what the kind pf man she wanted to spend her life with. I think I sensed that as I healed. I was moving away from the religious views that had been a very important part of our marriage, (Not religion or spirituality in general, but away from the specific church that we were heavily involved in) and away from the sort of family life that was important to her. Attempting to somehow reach a compromise within myself and heal while remaining that guy was a horrible, horrible idea!

Some marriages survive this sort of thing. Sometimes a spouse can change along with the one who is healing, and they both can become better for each other than they were before. Sometimes you just can’t. It doesn’t always mean that you’re a failure or that the marriage is a failure. It’s ok to simply want something out of life that your spouse doesn’t want anymore, and it’s ok for them to be free to find what they were looking for. I don’t resent my first wife for leaving me when I was at the lowest point in my life. I’m grateful that she set me free to heal and have the wonderful life I have now. Hopefully she has been able to pursue the life she wanted as well, the one I could no longer give her.

On the other hand, if you can heal and stay married, more power to you. I can only imagine that having gone through all of that with a supportive spouse is an amazing experience, but I also know it was probably very hard, and not for everyone!

As I’ve said many times, we’re all different as survivors, and for those who are healing, and married, your marriages are all different too. There’s no telling where it’ll end up, but know that as long as you pursue healing, you’ll be better off, regardless of what happens!

Similar Posts

  • The Cast

      I saw this over the weekend while window shopping, and it struck me as something very appropriate for my life. I spent a lot of time trying to figure out the plot, why things happened, why my childhood was what it was, why I was the way I was, etc. In all that time,…

  • | |

    It’s Hard to Have Hope Right Now

    We need each other now, as always. We need our community. We need our connections. We need to know that we are not alone in this. So, let me, in the midst of my own exhaustion, do this one thing. If you’re feeling hopeless, angry, anxious, depressed, etc. because of the state of the world, or the state of your job, the losses you’ve suffered, the issues you are fighting for, the struggle to hang on to hope, you are not alone. I am with you. I see you. I share your exhaustion, frustration, anger, and your need for rest. Whether we’ve talked about this personally, or if you’re simply holding this all in and trying to keep it together, I see you. I’m with you. We are together in this, and we should share the little bits of hope with each other. They may be hard to see, but the more of us who are dedicated to looking for them, and sharing them, the more of it we’ll draw strength from.

  • Ask and answer

    Pat asked an interesting question in the comments of the last entry, and I wanted to expound a bit further on the idea: My question is: do you find that the fact that you’re a chid abuse survivor turns people off from you? It’s not that I tell people about my past. When I encounter…

  • How Do We Get Out of the Advocacy Bubble?

    If what I do sounds descriptive of how you live your own online life, than let me challenge you. Find a post that resonates with you, on either blog, and share it with your network. Or, share this post with a personal note about how child abuse, or mental illness, has touched your life with your network. Not just with the folks you already interact with about these topics, but outside of that.

    And then continue to look for ways to reach beyond the bubble of the online survivor community. Because there are survivors and people dealing with mental health problems all around us, and there are also those who remain uneducated about those topics all around us as well.

3 Comments

  1. I agree it is different for everyone. The situation for each marriage is different. As I started my healing journey it took great strength from my husband to endure the difficulties I was facing. It was his dedication that pulls me through sometimes and if that isn’t the way a marriage is working and parties can’t work it out then such is life I guess.

  2. For 51 years, I have lived with this inner conflict of not being able to be close to anyone because my past childhood abuse from my father had caused me to fear intimacy. Evidentally, I kept this conflict and depression hidden for years until I realized that nothing made me happy. I had no idea that such a traumatic event would have such an impact on my life. My wife became very depressed because I was not the man that she had married. She soon filed for divorce. My friend had given me a book on how to save my marriage. It was not until then that I realized that it was not my marriage but my inner conflict that was causing my unhappiness.

    My wife soon realized that I am an adult survivor and needed to heal. She stopped the divorce proceedings and gave every effort to help me through the difficult time. I agree that if you are healing and can stay married, than that is the best of both worlds. If your spouse is supportive and will stay with you
    during the lowest point in your life, it will make the healing process that much faster and you a much stronger person. My wife does not know how I feel as she is not a child abuse survivor, but she understood that I was going through a very difficult time. Sometimes it is a crisis like this that brings us closer. I lived a lonely life for 51 years and now for the first time in my life, I have someone to share my inner self with and it feels awesome! I am happy with my wife, job, three sons and live a normal wonderful life. It has been 8 years now since my healing process started and I am a new man.

    Each marriage is different but if you have a spouse who will not walk out on you, that is a big plus. Your healing process will be that much faster as you have someone to support you. I was tired of being alone, scared and empty. To finally trust someone to come into my life and help me heal was a monumental task but worth every effort….

  3. I don’t think I would ever put down someone who gave up. Sometimes this represents a lifetime of healing, and some don’t heal. Some will remain in emotional turmoil and use drugs or anger or distancing or any number of things to deal with this massive and life shattering trauma. I’ve been with my partner over 10 years and she is only starting NOW to seek help. The last ten years have been a merry-go-round of all kinds of forms which the trauma took because she was not yet able to deal with it. Now that she is thinking about facing it, the depression and tension in our home is practically suffocating. I have my own issues to deal with and I am not sure how long I can support a person going through this. I really regret, sometimes, starting a family with a child abuse survivor. They’re often beautiful people I know, but some are badly damaged and some are completely broken. If you are thinking of marrying an abuse survivor and starting a family, think extra hard. Even somewhat normal people will have a hard time raising a family in this day and age. With an abuse survivor, it ultimately might be unfair to the children. I am not even sure it’s fair to me. I feel like I am ultimately paying for the selfish and sick crimes of another person. I truly wish for great harm to come to her abusers. That fantasy is the only thing that seems to give my any comfort.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)