I filed for an order of protection after that and was granted. Then, filed for divorce about a week later.
Now I'm having second thoughts... I feel like we tried everything, except he did beg me to go see the pastor for counseling.
He is finally seeking treatment and to my knowledge is still in therapy (4 days/week) and taking medication.
He is a work in progress. At this stage, you can't be confident how much progress he's making. Be aware that of course the spiritual guidance is to keep on trying. (That too is a goal when a couple begins couples counseling.) But you have to also remember that you are being hurt, the children are being impacted as well.
Only you can judge whether or how much you can risk yourself and the children on a clearly iffy outcome.I can't shake this feeling in my heart that maybe I should have done therapy with the pastor. He is seeking help which is more than most can say, and we were in a really good place last year before the triggering event.
Seeking help is one thing, how much impact it has on a serious behavioral disorder is another. The resource you're pondering could very well be helpful but it's probably not your complete answer. Although the Bible touches on many aspects of life, sciences, morality, spiritual aspects and so much more, but it wasn't written to be all-needs mental health guide.
I came from a very religious background, a religious volunteer for 25 years, I even met and married during that time. To make a long story short, we later had a child which made her childhood (FOO - family of origin) fears even worse. I recall one time our pediatrician recommended counseling to her, she retorted, "I have the Bible!" Sadly, that resource wasn't enough. One elder who happened to work in emergency services shared with me, "She needs a psychiatrist."
I do think separating has done us lots of good, we have been together for so long. I obviously cannot communicate with him so I don't know if he would even want to try again. My heart says yes but my brain says do not be stupid.
Yes, we hear that thought here too... trust your gut. The emotional tug of war is tremendous. Listen to your brain - and what you and the kids are experiencing - and give your heart time to catch up eventually.
Many others here tried to make their relationships work, somehow, again and again. Eventually they realized they were harming everyone involved when the dysfunction was just too much.
Is it time to cut my losses and move on? fI'm scared for my kids. He's trying for 50/50 custody. I asked for majority parenting time and he get supervised visits.
You are seeking what is practical and reasonable, considering his clinically recognized issues. He, on the other hand, is asking for a "pie in the sky" outcome. With all of his mental health issues and history, such as a current OP, there's no way he will get 50/50.
No one can predict the future, yet you have extensive history to rely upon to be exceedingly cautious want any hopes and promises. He may have improved some, but likely not nearly enough, since relapses are still a real concern.
Sufficient recovery for him to make the marriage functional and healthy... that's a stretch.
Back when I joined here long ago, just after I had separated (I called police, ended up with a protection order too) the focus on WHAT IS, not on hopes or dreams. If you do divorce and in future years he attains
significant recovery then you always have the option to ponder remarrying.