Friday, April 23, 2010

Family history

I reconnected with my ex-sister-in-law this week courtesy of Facebook.  We hadn't talked for something like six or seven years.  I think the last time I saw her was when I went to her father's funeral.  We talked about our kids and the usual.  But then we got down to the really interesting stuff.

My sister-in-law (we'll call her J) is quite a lot younger than I am.  She married my ex's youngest brother when she was just 16 and he was 18.  Yes, she was pregnant.  They had met in elementary school and he was quite the charmer then, as well as an entrepreneur.  Sadly, things do change; today he's on disability and is addicted to a variety of substances, most of them illegal.

I told her the Reader's Digest version of my story ... the suspicions and the final outing of my ex.  She listened intently and then she said, "I guess I'm not surprised."  I told her about how my ex's aunt, before she passed away, talked to me about how the entire family had been positive that my ex was gay from the time he was 8 or 9 years old -- and how they all breathed a collective sigh of relief when we got married.  

J and I talked about all the red flags we had seen before our respective marriages.  Granted, she was a baby having a baby, but she said she was always afraid of her ex, even when they were dating.  He tried to control her, and the attempts to control escalated into the marriage until there was violence.  This sounded a bit familiar, too -- the control and the abuse.

And then she told me about the porn.  She told me about when they were first married and incredibly broke, and yet her ex would somehow find the money to rent VHS tapes of porn and make her watch them with him.  She said they made her feel dirty, but there was the fear, again, of standing up to him.

This time, it was my turn to be shocked and yet not surprised.  Some time ago, my ex confessed to a huge porn problem stemming from the time he was a young kid.  Apparently the family of origin was rather careless with their "entertainment" and sometimes left things lying around the house.  Could create some curiosity as well as desensitivity, leading to the desire for more and "better" stimuli.

Sex was a big deal in that house.  While the kids weren't provided with the "facts of life," there was the porn, as well as randy parties with other couples, lots of off-color comments and jokes and then, there was their mother.  J and I talked about that, too.  As the story goes, the mother-in-law was raped by her younger brother-in-law.  J wonders, as do I, if it was really rape, or more a Mrs. Robinson kind of thing, as the younger brother-in-law was about 16 when this supposedly happened.  This is the same guy, by the way, who molested my ex when he was a child.  And later, this uncle's son was arrested for sexually assault and attempted murder.  He has a life sentence in the state penitentiary.

What J doesn't know is that her ex is actually my ex's half-brother, because their mother got pregnant from another man.  This was confirmed by my ex's aunt and was one of the big family secrets.  

No, I am not making this up.

The issue here isn't so much with sexual orientation, as it is with sexual addiction.  My former brother-in-law (straight) is a sex addict.  My ex (gay) is a sex addict.  It's fair to assume that the middle brother is, too, given his track record.

The real tragedy of this all is, again, our children.  And grandchildren.  J has several grands already, even though she's still in her 40s.  None of them have a relationship with their granddad.  Her kids have taken her maiden name and dropped their father's surname.  My kids have talked about doing the same.  They are all ashamed and they are angry at their fathers.  What a horrible legacy.

In the Old Testament, there is mention of generational curses on families.  While I'm not owning that for me and my kids (or J and her's!) I must admit that there is something that rings true about the curse of addiction and dysfunction, whatever the type.

That's why even while I vent and process, today all I can change is me.  So, I pray:

God, grant me the serenity
 to accept the things I cannot change,
the courage to change the things I can,
and the wisdom to know the difference.

Amen.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Working Through the Shame

Part of my personal recovery process from being a "codependent" to a sex addict has been looking at patterns in my life.  Early in my recovery, I was astounded to see how many men in my life had characteristics of a sex addict.  For instance and probably most notably, the guy I was head over heels with in my early 20s is now considered a leader in the BDSM scene and has recently come out as bisexual.

What alerted me to this pattern was not so much the overt behaviors of these individuals, but instead the "toxic tango" in which they engaged with others, specifically me.  There was an overriding element of "come here/go away" that undoubtedly keyed off something within me since both my parents tended to be either emotionally unavailable or quite needy.

But I digress from the real point of this post.

Early this year I lost my job.  It had been a good job in terms of income, responsibility, autonomy and prestige.  But the truth was the office was nothing but chaos.  I could function within it because of many of the coping skills I had learned in recovery, and I remained lovingly detached from the insanity about 95% of the time. To make matters worse, it was a small business owned by a man who figured his daughter was his heir apparent.  But in that dynamic was the real insanity, because she didn't want to wear that mantle, at least on his terms.

When I took the job, I knew it was God's provision for me in the midst of my divorce and financial devastation.  And, indeed it was.  The marital debt is now paid off.  My credit rating is decent and I own my own place.  I was able to buy a car on my own.  It afforded me independence.

But, the dirty little secret is this: when I took the job, I had, only the year before, learned that the boss was also a married gay man living life on the "down low."  I learned this because a potential client took me out to lunch and at the end of the lunch, blurted out that the boss had propositioned him.  I was astounded and surprised and grossed out and devastated for the boss's wife, who I have great respect for.

That night, I told my then husband the news.  He seemed very nervous and tense.  He didn't want to talk about it and tried to change the subject very quickly.   (In retrospect, it's kind of ironically humorous ... and, also in retrospect, it was only a few weeks later that I caught him in the act of looking at some really nasty gay porn.)

So.  I took the job knowing the boss -- who I had then known for about a decade and done work for off and on all that time -- was probably living a lie.  Now, I didn't know for certain, but I couldn't imagine why this client, who I trusted, would lie to me about such a thing.  I tried to put it out of my mind.  One day, the boss's daughter and I were in the car on the way to a client and started talking about my divorce.  I decided to come clean and tell her why I had filed.  She seemed blown away.  She told me later that the entire year I was going through the divorce, she had finally gotten enough financial evidence to confront her father about his extra-curriculars and then told her mother.  At that time, she also started confiding in me -- without telling me her concerns about her dad's sexuality -- and asking about how to deal with his crazy-making behaviors.  Whenever I'd come back from counseling, if there was a particular nugget of wisdom I'd learned, I'd share it when appropriate.  So maybe all things work together for good, as St. Paul assures us in Romans 8:28. Maybe instead of parsing through the whys and wherefores of this particular situation, I should simply look at the fact that she and I were of support to one another during a very difficult time.

I should add that by the end of 2008, I was pretty sure that the boss really was on the DL.  Needless to say, that was uncomfortable at best, but I was able to work around it using my recovery tools.  I titled this post "Working Through the Shame" intentionally, because one of the biggest things for me when I learned my ex was gay was shame.  I appropriated his shame and put it on myself.  I was ashamed I had been married to a gay man.  I beat myself up about all the red flags I'd seen and ignored. I was ashamed to go to my first COSA meeting; scared silly I'd see someone I knew. But, by working my own recovery and working day by day, side by side, with another gay or bisexual man who was living a marriage of (his) convenience, I began to work through that shame and see that my ex's sexual orientation (and addictions!) wasn't about me at all.  It wasn't because I wasn't pretty enough, or young anymore, or skinny enough or whatever.  It is what it is, and it took all this time and pain to get there.

I think that for men who are over 45 or 50, it's much harder for them to be out or come out.  If they've been raised in the church, or otherwise deeply involved in it (as was my husband) it is likely that much more difficult.  (I have a gay cousin, by the way, who was raised a Baptist ... we've had some interesting talks.)  For many of them, I think they got married because they did love their wife and they thought being married would "cure" them of their attraction to men.  Guess what???  The issue I have is when the man knows what he's attracted to and can't have enough integrity to own up to it.  Is that an easy thing to do?  I cannot begin to imagine that it is.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

What About the Kids?

As an adult child of divorce, I was always determined that mine wasn't going to be one of those marriages that ended up a statistic.  Too bad I married a gay man.

Any healthy relationship must be built upon mutual trust and respect.  So, by definition, if your spouse is lying to himself and you about who he is, trust goes right out the window.  Same with infidelity, whether with a man, a woman or an eggplant.

As an adult child of divorce, I also knew firsthand the difficulties children experience when their parents split.  I didn't want my kids to experience that -- I wanted to break the cycle of family dysfunction, the gift that keeps on giving.

My poor children -- both young adults, now -- grew up in a home where verbal and emotional abuse were fairly common.  It's interesting that their grandfather -- my ex's dad -- was a very good and attentive father when his children were infants and toddlers, but as soon as they became school age, the relationship became one of power (his) and control (his) punctuated by verbal outbursts and some violence.  The apple didn't fall far from the tree.

When my kids were born, I was heartened by my then-husband's care of the babies.  He was great with them.  He walked them into the wee hours of the morning when they were colicky.  He had no issue changing them, feeding them, bathing them ... he was extremely nurturing and gentle.  You could tell he loved them and loved being a father.  But as they began to grow older -- by mid-elementary school years -- he seemed to lose that deft touch and began to try to control their behavior, much like his father did with him and his siblings.

To be sure, I didn't model good emotional health, either.  I had anxiety issues galore, for which I was finally medicated.  (Zoloft is a good thing!)  My external boundaries weren't the greatest and my internal boundaries were virtually nonexistent.  I had lost my voice at some point during the marriage -- probably in an effort to keep the peace as it seemed we were always walking on eggshells -- and so tried to be the peacemaker in the entire family.  I only started modeling healthy behavior with good boundaries after the elephant came out of the closet, as it were, and I began working a 12-step program and getting intensive counseling.

Today, I worry about my kids having healthy relationships as they move into full-fledged adulthood.  Both are in their early 20s.  My son -- the oldest -- seems to have the hardest time of it.  He's shy and introverted and has a reasonably bad body image (much like his mother!  He was in denial about his father's sexuality for quite awhile and it took my ex actually coming out to the kids to make it real.  This only happened last year.  I believe my son is somehow worried about any potential impact his father's "gayness" might have on him, although he knows that he is strongly attracted to women.  (As a kid, my son was often called gay as a perjorative, and still wonders if it was because of his dad; shame in these situations, is almost genetic.)  Certainly, his father didn't model for him what a heterosexual man behaves like.  While my son doesn't act effeminate, he is unsure of himself and how he "should" act, which makes him self-conscious.

My daughter was in her mid-teens when it all hit the fan, and it was a crucial time in her development to learn her father was unfaithful, had based his life on a lie, was a gay man and -- most importantly of all -- disowned her two times.  She already struggled with catching him in lies.  She was very aware of the emotional abuse.  But, still -- even as now -- he is her daddy.  And that's the hardest part.  She has lost all respect for her father.  (I reminded her today that her dad loves her and she said: Yeah, but he doesn't count.  I told her that it does count, even though she doesn't believe it now.)  Of all the tragedies, this is probably the biggest.  Yes, my son has lost respect for him, too, but not all respect.  He still has a relationship of sorts with his dad. My daughter, not so much.  I hope that changes in time.

While my ex hasn't been a stellar parent, he has at least been more of a stand-up guy than many men, straight or gay, after a divorce.  He always paid his child support, and he has kept both kids on his health insurance.

So, what about the kids?  For me, they are the absolutely best thing to come out of that failed relationship and marriage.  For them, they've asked me why I stayed so long, a question which I've discussed with them (especially my daughter.)  It may be easier for younger children to accept that their father is gay.  It hasn't been for my children who, while they long suspected a porn problem, did not suspect that their dad was homosexual.  However, it's reality.  The thing with reality is that it is what it is.  And the longer they live with it, the closer they'll come -- hopefully -- not only to acceptance, but to integrating it into their lives.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Made Him Gay?

This blog, while titled "Musings of a Straight Wife" has a URL of madehimgay.blogspot.com.

Why on earth would this be the URL?

It's actually a bit tongue-in-cheek, reflecting some of the ignorance that's out there, probably spurred by subconscious homophobia.  Let's begin to talk about that homophobia, and the shame that women, unwittingly married to gay men, are often asked to bear.  Talk about rubbing salt in a wound ...

The same kind of poison was spewed by some when the news broke about Ted Haggard and his long-suffering wife, Gayle.  Now, why Gayle has chosen to stay with Ted is beyond me.  I'm not sure if her spiritual explanation as given in her recently-published book is really what it is, or if it's more economically expedient for her to stay with the guy (who, by the way, looks quite gay to me and always has.)  Tell me: what is it that Gayle Haggard supposedly did to drive her husband away from her arms and into the arms of a male prostitute who provided him with meth?  Likewise, what is it that I supposedly did to "make" my ex-spouse gay?  The notion that a wife hasn't been sexy enough or loving enough or fill-in-the-blank enough and so is responsible for turning her husband away from women to men is ludicrous at best.  And yet, there are some people who believe this. 

My prolifically promiscuous former spouse compartmentalized his life so very well that he had a "nice guy" identity, at least among those who didn't know his proclivities.   He was an elder in our church and the music/worship leader.  But then he had this secret gay life that involved sadomasochism, "muscle sex" and lots and lots of porn.  I liken it somewhat to the cartoons that show a devil on one shoulder and an angel on the other, both whispering into the cartoon character's ear.

Even though I longed to be physically intimate with him, he most often turned away.  When I asked him why (or cried or raged about it) he would tell me it was his rheumatoid arthritis, or the stress from our money problems (most created by him, but which he perennially blamed on me) or the way that I talked to him and how it made him feel like less than a man.  So 2/3rds of the time, you see, the lack of sex was "my fault"  -- just like the Spanish Inquisition, Hurricane Hugo and the Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand.  (That's a joke, by the way ...)

It took some almost harsh talk from a counselor trained in sexual addiction (and codependence to sex addicts) to rouse me from my stupor.  I'm very fortunate.  I never got an overt STD, although I did contract bacterial vaginitis a couple of times.  And once, I found pubic lice on myself.  Imagine the denial of finding these little beasts, knowing you were monogamous and when asking your spouse, he tells you that it must be from the gym -- and you believe him! In fact, I believed him to the point of reporting the gym to the Board of Health.  The guy taking the report must have thought I was nuts.

I was.

(And I can tell you I didn't get the lice from having sex with him.  Nope.  It was from sharing a bed with him after he'd gotten the crabs from some nice little anonymous, equally promiscuous guy in a park or a bathhouse glory hole.  At that point, we hadn't had sex in about two years.)

Made him gay?  Are you kidding me?  That's like saying I turned my dog into a cat.

Let's be honest: sexuality is somewhat fluid.  Almost ever straight person I know who has a shred of honesty can admit that once or twice in their life (or more) they've experienced a fleeting attraction to someone of the same sex.  Does that make you gay?  No, it simply means that your sexuality is labile enough to register something biochemical with someone who is similar to you.  Now, if that's all you're attracted to, then yes: you're probably gay.

Here's what I believe: nearly every woman I've ever spoken to who was married to a gay man believes that he was her best friend and genuinely loved her when they got married.  Certain behavioralists now believe that as a man with same-sex attraction ages -- and it takes more to get them stimulated -- they begin to fantasize more about gay sex.  The fantasy, and eventually the act, gets them off in a way that they used to be able to with their wife.  Sometimes, far better.  This enhances their feelings of sexual prowess.  And, for the sex addict, arousal and the orgasm are the things.  The biochemical rush created is what they're hooked on.  So more and kinkier and ...

My ex now swears that he was never a sex addict and that I was the one who insisted that he go to therapy and a 12-step group in a feeble attempt to save the marriage. Au contraire.  I insisted that he got help.  During that process, he admitted that he became hooked on porn by the time he was 9 or 10 and stayed hooked ever since.  Are all gays sex addicts?  No.  Plenty of them are, but plenty of straight people are, too.  Saying that is as ridiculous as saying I made my husband gay.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Ripples

It's been nearly five years since I found out that my husband is gay. Well, should I say, my former husband ... my children's father. Funny, isn't it, how we deny what's right in our face? As my daughter said to me not long ago: "Mom, your gaydar has been broken for a really long time."

Like many of the several million women who discover that their spouse is gay or bisexual, I found out sort of like Chinese water torture -- drop by painful drop. That is, until the day that my entire world imploded and my random questions and online searches finally bore painful, poisonous fruit.

Within 18 months we were divorced. With the house of cards collapsed, there was no room for civility or rationale behavior. We both behaved badly at times, but his anger at being found out was immense. He realized that he had played with fire for a very long time and had deluded himself that either I was so stupid or he was so clever that he would never be caught. Unlike some former spouses, we really can't be friends. He's uncomfortable being around me and I don't particularly care for being around him.

Beside being gay, he's promiscuous. He lies. He gets off on having a double, triple or quadruple life. He's been through two long-term boyfriends that I know of and each of them broke it off with him because of his infidelity and verbal abuse. Sounds familiar. Additionally, he's narcissistic.

It's difficult for me to separate what is his sexuality and what is his pathology. In his case, they may be inexorably intertwined.

I can remember telling my children when they were young that their actions always would have an effect on other people, and to consider what they chose to do by how that choice would impact themselves and others. Now, five years later, my former spouse still considers me the "bad guy" in the relationship and blames me for his financial problems and more. It's curious to me how this could be. I've worked hard and repaired my credit and bought a townhouse. He's still overdrawing his bank account and living in a ratty $600 a month apartment in a not-so-great part of town, while earning $90K+ in his job. I know this because our son, unfortunately, lives with him right now and makes the occasional comment.

So, the ripples continue. I watch on the sidelines as my former husband -- the person I thought was my confidant, my lover and my best friend -- devolves. In the past year he's wrecked his car, been diagnosed with secondary syphillis and broken up with his boyfriend. On the plus side, he came out to our children and is living a more integrated life in terms of being truthful with them. When will the ripples stop for him? I hope they do. As for me, the ripples continue, too. I still wonder why I married him when there were red flags galore. I wonder why I didn't leave him early on when he was verbally and emotionally abusive -- forget the sexuality. All the counseling and 12-step groups I've participated in, the immense emotional growth I've experienced and still I struggle. The ripples continue.