Hi Littlegreen, Your post said so much to me and my first reaction to when I finished reading it was that if you re-read it in 6 months, maybe longer, so much of what you need to understand is there already written out.
You are not mad, you are sad, very very sad. You are a woman full of love for your husband and learning that love is not enough to hold someone who wants to go, and that is one of the most painful emotions someone of our age has to face. And you are alone, you can have lots of friends, but even so you are alone, and that''s horrible (but you will discover, that is OK, not frightening at all). And you are right at the beginning of probably the most difficult emotional journey of your life, and it just isn''t one you want to take but are being forced to - and although it gets easier, you will even a long way down the road sometimes look backwards and hanker for what you had - I know, I''m speaking from experience. But here''s the upside, along the way you will reconnect with you, you will look at situations in your past from a new perspective, and here I should just say I agree and support everything that FairyLT wrote, including her practical advice.
Right now your husband is confused, he doesn''t want to be with you and will definitely be exploring other possibilities - horrible to say so, but I just couldn''t believe the possibility when it was put to me, dismissed the idea as complete rubbish, until of course I found the evidence and damn near imploded with the horror of it. At the same time a part of him doesn''t want the change either. Over 2 years later, divorced for 6 months, my ex has no interest in pushing the sale of our
marital home, even with me in it, but not selling because of the market conditions - he prefers to borrow to finance his new lifestyle, rather than discuss dropping the price. That is the last part of his guilt, but it will change and I anticipate some pressure will come just because of the passage of time will lessen the residual feelings he has for me. Because even when he left, I knew he still loved me, but he loves himself so much more, and wants the excitement of living like a young man again and I represent restrictions. (Please please look to separating and safeguarding your finances, when they go this route at their age, they often go reckless with money and you can end up paying for it)
And then there is the control, keeping you down, and making you walk on eggshells so you don''t upset him in the desperate hope he will come back to you, and you don''t want anything of your behaviour to make him think that he''s better of without you. Well honey, ''it don''t work!'' If I had my time again, I''d have shocked him by clearing out his clothes (that he still refuses to take and by now the mice in the garage will have made beds in them). I would have treated him as meanly as he treated me, but whilst I remained standing still with my arms held out to him imploring him to come back to me, he felt safe to continue being outrageous.
You strike me as a lovely person, and if you want to make new friends, it will happen. Before, you were such a unit with your husband you probably didn''t give people much of a chance; by and by and like many at Wiki, you will in times to come be telling newbies how that part of your life changed so much for the better. Right now you know you have the very best friend with you, she''s right there in the mirror, smile at her, she deserves that, give her a hug too, cry with her, she''s sad too, and above all don''t criticise her, she''s had enough of all that, tell her her good points, keep reinforcing them until she at last believes them too - write them in a letter to her. And if all that sounds barking, so be it, but try it first and when people look at you and tell you that you seem so much more open, that your appearance has improved immensely - you''ll realise I''m very very sane, even though my ex has told me on numerous occasions that I''m mad, that I am everything low, useless, stupid and ugly, and I believed him.
Oh and it''s OK to still be working at 70, preferably part time, good for the brain and it is all part of a healthy balance.
With love from a friend.