ValleyGal
Well-Known Member
- Dec 19, 2012
- 5,775
- 1,823
- Country
- Canada
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Anabaptist
- Marital Status
- Divorced
A New Dawn, thank you for sharing your experience. Thank God that you survived two terrible situations. You know abuse too well, and I pray God's continued healing for you.
You are right...typically abuse is extreme. Sometimes it's not so evident, but still a threat. Your second husband did not love you back, yet he made a vow to love you. If he is anything like my second husband, he could have a narcissistic personality disorder (not just garden-variety narcissism). They do not love anyone unless there is something in it for them, and discard people when there is nothing left in it for them. My friend warned me ahead of time that "it's all about HIM and never about YOU." We were only married a month due to the weekly beatings that came along with being an outspoken and vocal wife of a narcissist/abuser.
There is a turn to this. After I kicked him out, we went for counselling. In counselling, I talked about what my friend had said, that it's all about HIM. But that made ME come across as the selfish one, and the counsellor recommended that I go to a psychiatrist because there was something wrong with me. I did, and the diagnosis was HIS NPD. The counsellor got it wrong, because I spoke up and said something - anything - needs to be about me sometimes....relationships are reciprocal.
That is also abuse. It is the type that happens over many years of simply being treated less than human, or less than your spouse. Less than respectfully. And when it happens over time, people don't realize it's happened until 20 years later when they wake up one day and realize they hate themselves, feel worthless, devalued by the one who vowed to love them.
Where to draw the line? The person is "safe" but could be totally suicidal because of the devaluation the spouse has lavished on them for decades.
Another part of this is the reasons for divorce Biblically. I affirm the Bible as the final authority of God's holy word. I affirm everything in it is true and can be taken literally, within the context of culture, language, writing style, recipient, authorship, purpose, etc. I realize that there are many interpretations of the whole divorce subject and everyone has their thoughts. I have been divorced a couple of times as well, know the pain it causes, and do NOT advocate that people run to divorce court for any simple matter just because it's more convenient than working it out. But when I studied divorce, and see several reasons through scripture - adultery, idolatry (meaning putting other priorities above your spouse, not meaning about God), abandonment, and hardness of heart. Marriage is supposed to represent the relationship between Christ and the Church. This is mutual love, mutual submission, mutual sacrifice, mutual selflessness, mutual service. Yes, the Church violates this sometimes when self gets in the way, so there is mercy, grace, reconciliation. But the commitment is still there. There is still goodwill, affection for one another.
What happens when a believer decides to become selfish, when they do not have goodwill towards Jesus anymore, when they go their own way, when they do things on their own, when they start to disobey God? A hard heart sets in. It removes the right relationship. Look at God. In the OT he even gave Israel her certificate of divorce, but he took her back after seeing Judah was even worse than Israel. The point is that sometimes there is an end to it. Just as you are no longer with your second husband. You put up with it for many years, even though you were "safe" - you still divorced. He would not go for counselling (and even if he did, most stats show that counselling is rarely effective to keep a couple married and eventually increase marital satisfaction).
Hardness of heart is very difficult to live with - your husbands' hearts were hard, and you had to live with it. Eventually it was impossible to live with it.
There are a lot of people who turn to the internet forums because they can't afford counselling, because they are ashamed, because they are afraid, because their spouse won't attend counselling with them, and in my case because the counsellor figured I was the one with NPD rather than my husband (plus he made ME take responsibility for the beatings - if I had not done x my husband would not have hit me).
I guess I'm saying all this to suggest that maybe the policy could be revisited and maybe rewritten in a way that people can suggest divorce only as a last alternative, after every other alternative has run out, and/or in order to maintain the short and long term safety of both spouses, and to prevent direct or vicarious trauma in the children.
You are right...typically abuse is extreme. Sometimes it's not so evident, but still a threat. Your second husband did not love you back, yet he made a vow to love you. If he is anything like my second husband, he could have a narcissistic personality disorder (not just garden-variety narcissism). They do not love anyone unless there is something in it for them, and discard people when there is nothing left in it for them. My friend warned me ahead of time that "it's all about HIM and never about YOU." We were only married a month due to the weekly beatings that came along with being an outspoken and vocal wife of a narcissist/abuser.
There is a turn to this. After I kicked him out, we went for counselling. In counselling, I talked about what my friend had said, that it's all about HIM. But that made ME come across as the selfish one, and the counsellor recommended that I go to a psychiatrist because there was something wrong with me. I did, and the diagnosis was HIS NPD. The counsellor got it wrong, because I spoke up and said something - anything - needs to be about me sometimes....relationships are reciprocal.
That is also abuse. It is the type that happens over many years of simply being treated less than human, or less than your spouse. Less than respectfully. And when it happens over time, people don't realize it's happened until 20 years later when they wake up one day and realize they hate themselves, feel worthless, devalued by the one who vowed to love them.
Where to draw the line? The person is "safe" but could be totally suicidal because of the devaluation the spouse has lavished on them for decades.
Another part of this is the reasons for divorce Biblically. I affirm the Bible as the final authority of God's holy word. I affirm everything in it is true and can be taken literally, within the context of culture, language, writing style, recipient, authorship, purpose, etc. I realize that there are many interpretations of the whole divorce subject and everyone has their thoughts. I have been divorced a couple of times as well, know the pain it causes, and do NOT advocate that people run to divorce court for any simple matter just because it's more convenient than working it out. But when I studied divorce, and see several reasons through scripture - adultery, idolatry (meaning putting other priorities above your spouse, not meaning about God), abandonment, and hardness of heart. Marriage is supposed to represent the relationship between Christ and the Church. This is mutual love, mutual submission, mutual sacrifice, mutual selflessness, mutual service. Yes, the Church violates this sometimes when self gets in the way, so there is mercy, grace, reconciliation. But the commitment is still there. There is still goodwill, affection for one another.
What happens when a believer decides to become selfish, when they do not have goodwill towards Jesus anymore, when they go their own way, when they do things on their own, when they start to disobey God? A hard heart sets in. It removes the right relationship. Look at God. In the OT he even gave Israel her certificate of divorce, but he took her back after seeing Judah was even worse than Israel. The point is that sometimes there is an end to it. Just as you are no longer with your second husband. You put up with it for many years, even though you were "safe" - you still divorced. He would not go for counselling (and even if he did, most stats show that counselling is rarely effective to keep a couple married and eventually increase marital satisfaction).
Hardness of heart is very difficult to live with - your husbands' hearts were hard, and you had to live with it. Eventually it was impossible to live with it.
There are a lot of people who turn to the internet forums because they can't afford counselling, because they are ashamed, because they are afraid, because their spouse won't attend counselling with them, and in my case because the counsellor figured I was the one with NPD rather than my husband (plus he made ME take responsibility for the beatings - if I had not done x my husband would not have hit me).
I guess I'm saying all this to suggest that maybe the policy could be revisited and maybe rewritten in a way that people can suggest divorce only as a last alternative, after every other alternative has run out, and/or in order to maintain the short and long term safety of both spouses, and to prevent direct or vicarious trauma in the children.
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