Thread: Letter to AH
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Old 11-19-2010, 01:12 PM
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crystal226
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Posts: 85
Letter to AH

I have been struggling lately with my separation with my AH and with us still fighting this battle to reconcile despite the fact the his alcoholism continues to be a problem for me and not for him. Earlier this week I had a post about therapy and about thinking about changing to a marriage counselor with addiction specialty, but I have come to the conclusion that it is pointless to keep up this fight if he isn't really trying to or wanting to recover because we are getting no where and I am tired. I decided last night that it was time he either jumped on board or we worked further towards separation/divorce. I wrote a letter to him that I intend to read in therapy, but I want some advice on the delivery. I just wonder if I am too easy on the message that drinking is a problem or if I am too unclear or non-specific. It is kind of long so thanks in advance:

Dear AH,
I’ve been doing a lot of soul searching the last couple weeks and I feel with the absence of anger between us I have finally gotten somewhere. The anger and frustration was keeping me engaged and paralyzing me in thought, but I see clearly now where I feel I/we are at. First I need it to be clear that you are my family, AH, and that will never change. I feel the connection we once had has faded on some level, but there is still love. That love will not fade away because you are a part of me and that will never change. We grew up together, we traveled the world together, and we have two children together that continue to need us both. Yes, there is blame I could place or anger I could have and you could do the same, but to me that is just a distraction from the big picture. I don’t want to hate you or be angry anymore. I don’t want to resent you or blame you for our problems. I want to love you and I want to still be your family. I am just not sure right now what kind of family you can be to me. I think for a long time we have been skating by in life unconsciously. We have had the pressures of life and our two young kids to distract us. I feel that we haven’t really been very connected; both living separate lives under the same roof. When there was spare time I would run around with my friends and you would do your own thing at home. I invited you, but you didn’t have the desire to come and I guess I didn’t see the problem until it became too big. We used to be inseparable, but now we are separate. We used to do everything together and maybe that was too much, but we have slipped into doing too little. I don’t fear being alone because I feel I am already. I think for the past year or so we did come back together a little, but I feel we came together for the wrong reasons. I started seeing my old high school friends more and they are single and like to party. That is something we used to do together…that is the “scene” we fell in love in. Mostly I gave up that "scene" six years ago when I became pregnant and I don't think you really ever did. For the first time in a few years you wanted to come along with me. My friends became your friends and that seemed so good. It was fun for a while and it was nice feeling young and carefree again, but for me it became too much and it took its toll. I lost my ability to be the mother I was, I lost my ability to take care of the house like I wanted, our finances got out of control and I started to lose my ability to keep up. I started to try to catch up, but I was so behind I felt paralyzed and I tried to get your help, but I felt resistance from you. I was frustrated and overwhelmed, but I didn’t really understand why or how at that point. Through all this new found time together I also started to “get to know you” again and I found myself not connecting with who you had grown into. I felt like who you were didn’t make sense to me anymore. At first I thought that was ok…I was not you, but the truth is that has an impact on me. You are my spouse and to me a spouse should be a complement or a reflection of you and I no longer saw that in you. I mean that not to hurt you, but it feels true to me. I don’t really feel like we have grown up to value the same things. Then things got rough this Summer and I begin to see a problem I had previously ignored and turned a blind eye and to me that problem was your connection to alcohol. I came to see you as an alcoholic and I have been trying to make sense of that. It brought up a lot of questions for me? I know that to you the alcohol is not a problem and I can’t argue with your perception, but to me it is a problem and it has contributed to our problems and my opinion is not going to change. I think at first I felt a sense of relief in feeling that you were an alcoholic. I had something to blame for our disconnect, to blame for the dishonesty, to blame for the episodes of meanness and for the difficulty I was having in engaging your support and maybe there is some truth in that blame, but it is hard to tell where one problem ends and the others begin. As I started to try and work through this problem I noticed other problems in the relationship and things started to look so big and so outside of my control. I tried to “fix” these problems. I tried one solution or another. I tried to convince you to feel the way I feel, I tried to force you to change and that didn’t work. I didn’t want to control you and I felt my attempts to do that took both of our dignity and have further damaged our relationship. Then I tried to detach myself from the situation. To go see friends when things at home were not as I wanted them to be, but that had its downside too. Continuing to run around all the time made catching up impossible. From my perspective now, though, the worst part about detaching for me is that detaching from a spouse doesn’t make sense and it has damaged the connection I feel to you and to the relationship. It became too much and I didn’t know what else to do. I couldn’t “fix” things…so I left. I thought time away would give me the answers, but it didn’t. Instead, it gave me peace and that hurts. So the next solution was the counseling and I think that has helped to some extent. We have communicated better and made better arrangements for the kids and got some things out in the open. We have found ways to fight less and that is good for everyone, but what it hasn’t solved is our differences. I would like to believe that if we could solve those differences we could find the love again, we could work on re-establishing trust, we could build a better partnership, and we could find ways to connect, but I can’t really say that to be true with any certainty because I feel there is a mountain standing in our way and until it is gone I can’t really see past it. To me that mountain is our difference of opinion when it comes to the impact drinking has on our life and our family. I feel your drinking is a problem and I want to see you fight that problem, but you don’t agree and if we can’t agree we can’t climb this mountain. I am not willing to stand behind you beating you all the way up (forcing you to do it for me). I think I am willing to climb ahead on my own and wait for you at the top with hope that the challenges after that will be reasonable, but I am not willing to wait forever and I am not willing to wait if you are not willing to start that journey on your own. I have found my clarity in this analogy and to me the choices aren’t easy, but for the first time in a while they are clear. If you are not on board with quitting drinking and starting the process of recovery for yourself with no promises of anything from me and the understanding that even after that rebuilding is going to be a challenge, then I am not going to wait for you. If we can’t reconcile our difference of opinion in some way then we cannot attempt to reconcile this relationship and I feel at this point it would be better for me to move forward with as much civility and dignity as possible.
-wife
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