I'm currently living with a man that I have been dating for over a year now. I love him and he loves me, but there's a strong underlying issue in our relationship and I feel like my insecurities are just feeding the flame.
When we met, he was married. The first night we met we talked for hours, literally, the time just flew away from us. I didn't notice the ring...I had never even really considered the possibility that this man coming on to me that seemed so perfect could have been married. We exchanged numbers and he took me out on our first date--At which point I DID notice the ring. Needless to say I was flabbergasted and hurt. What I didn't know then was that his mind was already set on being with me, and so he lied to me. He said he and his wife were legally seperated and she had moved to another state 2 months prior. He wore the ring out of habit, and he said though they had both decided to get a divorce, they had not initiated the process yet. The truth of the situation was that they lived together, had been having marital problems due to his drinking, but she had absolutely NO idea that the "D" word was on his mind. They were not legally seperated, not even emotionally seperated.
I believed him, however, and continued to date him. A (supposed) legal seperation, and a physical seperation of 2,000+ miles, made me feel very comfortable with the situation. It seemed to me his marriage was in fact over, and that I was in no way filling the role of a "homewrecker." He told her he wanted a divorce and that he was falling in love with someone else about a month after our first date, which again, I was not privy to at the time. She went to stay with family for a while, at which time I even went to the apartment they shared, still buying into his lie that she had been long gone. The same day he told her he wanted a divorce, he came into the place where I worked at the time and told me he loved me and wanted to be with me. I told him then that if he wanted to be with me, he needed to first finalize his divorce, and make a commitment to quit drinking -- because he was clearly an alcoholic. He went to his first AA meeting that day, and has been sober ever since (over a year now.)
Over the course of the next couple months, the truth began to unravel. I was on the phone with him one night and heard her voice in the background, and upon the first seeds of doubt I asked him if he had been honest with me. He confessed easily, being that he was now sober and working a program that encouraged him to take accountability for his actions. I was so hurt and confused when the truth was uncovered, it began to beg the question of whether or not I was just a crutch for him to get through this difficult time. Further more, I found out his wife was still very much in love with him, which made me feel ashamed. I would've never started a relationship with him had I know the truth of their situation! By that time though, their divorce was agreed upon, they WERE actually legally seperated, and I was in love with him.
Still, I didn't know how to handle the situation. I asked him to move in with me. (he had still been living with her! Sleeping on the couch, but in a very small 700 sqft apartment.) Once I knew the truth I became scared and very insecure. He started being honest about when he went to see her, I discovered they still shared their car, I started noticing how frequently she called him... And all the while he was reminding me that none of these things mattered, that he wanted to be with me and that yes, their divorced would take time, but when it was all over and done with he and I would have developed foundations for a wonderful relationship, much like the one we have today.
Ever since those first few months, he has always been honest with me. However it was hard to live with someone who was going through the grief of being newly divorced -- I picked up on every sign of residual emotion between the two of them, and while of course that is only natural, it hurt that he was experiencing those feelings when he was living with and loving me!
Their divorce was not finalized until 9 months into our relationship, and those 9 months were hard for everyone involved. Needless to say, his ex-wife abhorrs me, and as silly as it may seem, that hurts me because I was kept in the dark for so long about the nature of their relationship -- I genuinely didn't know! It's gotten to a point for me where I feel sick and betrayed when she calls him or he sees her. They don't have any children, they no longer share the car which is now his, but they do still have a house together in New York which they decided to split 50/50 in the divorce. It is currently occupied by tenants and they have no intention of selling, so they meet (infrequently) when something comes up on that front. I think those feelings of betrayal arise from my fears in the beginning as I was uncovering the truth of their marriage -- I wasn't sure if he was going to leave me once he was over her, I wasn't sure if he was going to go back to her, and all the while he was just asking me to be patient. "You'll see!" He said.
He's stuck to every promise he's made me. We're very happy together on most days, we're moving into a new place on which we have a year long lease, he talks about marriage and a family with me, I'm very close with his parents and grandparents (who all think I am better for him than his ex-wife), and we have a seemingly ideal relationship. He tells me I "saved his life" due to my pressures on him to quit his drinking, and he really has made a COMPLETE 180 since the day that I met him. He's a kinder, more honest, more genuine and more compassionate person -- the man that I saw underneath all the booze and the deciet.
That being said, I just can't seem to let go of all of the hurt that accrued throughout the process of his divorce. There were days, completely natural, where he said he felt like an "amputee" -- after 8 years with somebody, it's hard to live without them in your life anymore. I saw an e-mail between them at one point where he confessed he was "still in love" with her -- and while it wasn't a plea to get her back, and more of a thank you for handling their divorce so gracefully, it still hurt. Awkwardly, I caught him masturbating to (old!) naked photos of her, and it really hurt my feelings. However, I am more attractive than her and he has told me since day one I am the "best sex he's ever had," and simply said the fantasy for that particular jerk-off session was the taboo nature of him having sex with his ex-wife. Being a very sexual person myself with some horrible fantasies of my own, I can understand that. Regardless, it still hurt. There was so much pain in the beginning of our relationship, and I can see a light on the horizon, but I'm just having trouble coping with his divorce still! I feel icky over the fact that this woman in his life hates me (I want to make amends but don't know how, as to be perfectly honest I don't have much accountability in that situation), and I sometimes feel as though he is comparing me to her when I exhibit characteristics that he's not used to in his partner. (From what I understand, we are polar opposites.)
Then of course, there is the worry that I will end up just like his ex. In his "amends" stage of AA, he discovered that he cheated on her with 26 different women in the course of 8 years. (Not all sex.) She knew about some of them, and other she just chose to live in denial. Now I am the kind of person that would NEVER let that fly. With me, he has never cheated, not once. I know this to be true, as I trust him more than I trust myself sometimes, and like I said, he is very different than he was on the day that I met him. With alcohol removed from the situation, cheating is not an issue. He tells me I am the only honest relationship he has ever had, and that I've done more for him in a year than anyone has ever done for him in his whole life. But I fear for a relapse some time down the road -- I fear that if we get married he'll no longer be happy with me -- I fear I fear I fear!
And for some reason I just need the validation that our relationship is "better," or "more meaningful" or "more real." I can't stand the idea that he once committed his life to another woman -- Our wedding wouldn't be his first, and for some reason I can't just accept that. I think I need someone to tell me it's OK that he's been in love before, or something, I don't know. I need to forgive him for the difficult nature of the first 9 months of our relationship and be receptive to the new chapter in our lives. I can feel things shifting in a positive direction, but every once and a while I get caught up feeling insecure in his love for me. He is the first man I've ever loved, I've always been a very shut off person, and he's done so much for me in that department. But it's hard for me to relate to loving more than one person, when I can't imagine loving anyone else but him. It just doesn't seem plausible, in my mind!
Does anyone have any advice, similiar stories... Or just the impulse to smack me upside the head and tell me I'm being foolish?