| Running up debt and substance abuse could also be considered "inexcusable" in a relationship. You seem to be embracing the role of The Asshole, here, where the truth is more like you were just half of Team Asshole. So get off the cross. Yes, cheating is bad. It's bad, bad, bad, and you're a bad girl. Now, moving on...
Okay. About your depression. I have some experience with this and I strongly believe you were headed in a dangerous direction. Leaving was an act of survival.
It doesn't seem to have made you happy, though. I think you were expecting that everything was going to just turn to sunshine as soon as you got out of your dead-end marriage and now you don't know what to do, but you might try seeing this another way. You went a very long way down a bad road. You both did. It's not going to be a quick recovery for either of you, alone or separate, so stop setting yourself up for disappointment.
I think both of you need a lot of work, and it sounds to me like he's not willing to go there with you. That's sad, it really is, but if he's not willing to join you on the road back to a better place, you are going to have to go without him.
Now, what's the deal with this kid of his that you were staying home with? Was the kid so young it didn't go to school? If so, I find it really odd that it wasn't with it's mom.
And why would your family disapprove? How much older than you is he, actually? And did you choose to be with him rather than pursuing your own life? Did you drop out of school to be with him? If so, maybe you were headed for depression anyway and you were hoping he could catch you, hold you up.
__________________ I think all women really want is to be proven wrong about men. |