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"I finally realized that I couldn't control him. I despaired; I didn't know
what to do." |
I remember
one rough period when I just couldn't seem to do anything to make my husband
happy. I didn't know at the time that an affair he was having was breaking up.
I just knew that he was angry with me. Underneath I felt that something was
wrong, but I just tried to cope by accepting him with his quirks.
As time went on,
though, I became more and more suspicious that he was seeing another woman. My
own "acting out" really started to pick up then. I went through his
wallet, his car, and checked up on things. I discovered the name of the person
with whom he was involved. When I found out that my husband had taken our
three-year-old son to her home, I even questioned my child and found out where
she lived. I went to her house expecting my husband to be there and, indeed,
caught him trimming her lawn. My denial was so strong that I believed him when
he told me she was just a good friend, but I got suspicious again when I was in
the hospital giving birth to our second child. His parents remarked that he was
coming home rather late, and then I remembered that the woman he had the affair
with lived across the street from the hospital. When I got out of the hospital,
I alleviated the devastating pain by checking up again. I hired detectives to
give me hard evidence that he could not deny. My obsession was so great that the
detectives said, "Don't snoop anymore. You're going to ruin things for
us!" But I couldn't stop.
I continued to focus
so much on his sexaholic behavior that I couldn't pay as much attention to my
children as I should have. For example, one time my son wanted to go to the
pool, but I was expecting the detectives to call. I told my son we had to wait.
To pass time he innocently began singing a song, but in my obsession, his
singing drove me crazy. I just lost it, grabbed him and screamed at him to stop.
My unmanageability
was growing, so I confronted my husband and served him with divorce papers. I
couldn't tolerate the relationship anymore. But he begged me to stay. I gave him
a bottom line: "If we are going to stay together, we're going to see a
couples counselor, you're going to cut up your credit cards, I am going to give
you an allowance, you are going to call me before you leave work and I'm going
to give you a reasonable amount of time to get home."
My efforts to control
the situation seemed to go OK at first, but after five months I started getting
suspicious again. I called the detectives and found out my husband had saved up
his allowance for weeks and had gone to a motel with the other woman at lunch
time. I finally realized that I couldn't control him. I despaired; I didn't know
what to do. It was then that my Higher Power entered our lives in the form of a
person who helped us find the SA and S-Anon fellowships.
I came to S-Anon hoping to find answers. I wanted to know the statistics on his chances of acting
out again and how soon it was going to be. Though I didn't find statistics, I
did find a supportive group who gave me unconditional love, acceptance and
understanding. At a gut level they understood my situation like no one else
could - not the therapist I was seeing, not my sisters, not my friends. I was in
so much pain, and I was so angry. The group helped me to see that I cannot
control a sexaholic's behavior and that I am powerless over trying to
control him. Today, with the help of this fellowship and the Twelve Steps, I am
happy. I am grateful to have this program and to be in this relationship with a
recovering sexaholic. I also am excited and hopeful for the futures of my
children, perhaps the ultimate recipients of what I'm doing today.
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