Thanks for your reply.
I am well aware of how my FOO has shaped me....alcoholic father, sometimes violent. Codependent and quite reserved mother, but also the one who worked like crazy to protect her six children.
I met my first wife when I was in a Christian phase of my life. She was an incest victim in her childhood, raised in an environment of drugs and gambling. She turned to the Church, and stayed faithful through several miscarriages, our separation and her eventual death from breast cancer.
I learned so much from her about kindness, and forgiveness, and gratitude. I never stopped loving her, but living with her became too difficult. We were arguing a lot, we were deep in debt, she had not worked for several years and there was a cycle of increasing violence that needed to be interrupted. We never had children, which was a source of great pain for her. The truth is that the most painful part of the miscarriages was seeing how much pain it caused her.
After I moved out, I lived alone for more than 10 years. I was able to rediscover some of the things that I had let go of, like skiing, and camping, and I had a couple of meaningful relationships with women that helped me gain confidence in myself but ultimately failed. I also did a lot of work on myself during that period, with help from authors like John Bradshaw, Robert Bly and Joseph Campbell.
Years later, I left the US and started over in South America. I met a wonderful woman who I eventually married. Her childhood was marked more by neglect than overt abuse. She was (and still is) a hard worker, supporting her mother and her daughter. She has always had a turbulent relationship with her daughter and more recently has had some serious emotional outbursts at work. She has been in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for more than a year and practices mindfulness exercises.
I am not considering separation, but I do want to develop and practice better strategies for managing my own emotions and also supporting my wife on her journey.


