Posted by:
fiyero
(
)
Date: May 11, 2012 06:55PM
I obviously late to this thread, but I think I might have some insight to offer. From my experience, the answer is: Yes
I stayed in a loveless marriage for almost 14 years. She was content with the arrangement and didn't want the divorce, but I could not do it any longer. I left everything behind to follow my heart, and am so much better for it today, 4 years later. I am married to the love of my life, I experience the thrill of that true soul-mate love "feeling" on a daily basis, and my life finally feels like it is finally being lived to the measure of its creation.
I was terrified to think about the enormous pressure to conform, and worries over the backlash I knew would come, but I was more scared to see myself finally divorcing 20 years in the future once the kids were all gone. I saw her parents do it, and it was like a crystal ball into my future. I announced my intention, and 4 months later the divorce was final.
Some lessons I learned along the way which might be helpful:
1. Mormons tend to be extremely unforgiving. Leaving a marriage and the church at the same time is unconscionable to them. There is generally no forgiveness for this offense and you must be prepared to lose all of your ward family, as well as the majority of your immediate family.
2. TBM Ex-wives become even more hyper-Mormon once you've left the marriage. The adversity of the divorce is seen as the ultimate trial, and you now replace Satan as the adversary. It will be ugly and continue to be ugly so long as you continue to "sin" and she continues to grow ever more self-righteous.
3. By leaving the marriage, the fault for the "loveless state" becomes 100% yours. She is guiltless, and you are the one who chose to selfishly break sacred eternal covenants. In that context, how could any of it be her fault?
4. The divorce is far from the end. When kids are involved, you have no choice but to be "linked" to her whether you like it or not. The kids are taught that what daddy did was against the commandments. Daddy will not be able to be part of the eternal family with them and mommy.
5. Money is very tight. The law is not kind to fathers with lots of kids, and mothers who choose to earn near minimum wage. The child support calculations can be enormously unfair and unyielding. Court costs will mount and the next legal battle is always on the horizon. Punishing you will take precedence over any pursuit of her own happiness or perhaps a better paying job opportunity.
6. Stress levels will rise. All of the stunts, games, and acrimony that will define your relationship with your ex will eat away at the inner peace you will feel. She will see your happiness and will be confounded because wickedness never was happiness. Her cognitive dissonance will consume her and she will make it her mission to enforce that edict. You must be made to feel the pangs of your wickedness.
7. The divorce will definitely affect the kids, but not debilitate or ruin the kids. There will be some incredibly difficult growing pains on both sides, but they will soon lessen their focus on the way it was, and focus more on the way it is. At that point, your example is more important than ever. They can see through motives, and will begin to make their own conclusions as to why daddy left the marriage. What those conclusions ultimately are is up to you.
I didn’t mean to run on like that, but I know exactly what you are facing. My two oldest children now live with me (their own choice), in addition to my wife’s 2 kids from her first marriage. We have amazing lives together and life is always an adventure, but it is just that… LIFE! We love each other with an intensity I never knew I could feel, and each day is now welcomed as a gift I almost turned away. To experience the highest of highs, you will most likely have to reach the lowest of lows at times during the journey. The alternative is to take the safe route and stay on Mormon autopilot with minimal risk, and a familiar comfort zone. In short what you are proposing is definitely the road less travelled by, but it made all of the difference for me. I hope you find what you’re looking for.