You know what? I think you have said all that needs to be said about that Dude. You don't like him for a whole mess of reasons. You don't like that she blabbed private info about you to him without asking you first if you are willing for her to do that. It cannot be undone. But he's out of the picture, so best set firmly aside. He's a back burner thing for you at this point. At this point just hold the boundary. Don't repeat it all over again. Just hold the line.
Tell you patient wife what to DO. Not go on and on and on about what not to do. Move it
forward. Especially if she's having a wonky brain day, she might be looking for leadership OUT of loopdeloo thinking.
If she says she misses him? Say "I see. I'm sorry." and let it end there. Simple acknowledgement and no more. "Want some tea?" Change the channel.
If she keeps bringing Dude up and going on about him and your temper is starting to rise? Reaffirm the boundary, then check out to attend to YOU first.
"I do not talk about Dude. I am sorry you miss him. If you have other feelings to process about Dude right now? You have to find someone else to do deep Dude talk with. That person is not me. Excuse me, I need a break."
And then leave the room. Let her deal with her feelings herself. Otherwise she's triggering you. And you are allowing it.
I have a patient person in my life who has a Super Crap "Friend." I don't want to hear about them. I told my patient person so ages ago. I find Super selfish, annoying, and user-y. Nothing at all like a real friend.
If they tell me they attended Super's birthday, I say a mild "That's nice. Glad you had fun weekend" and let it go.
If they want to go on and on about it? "Super said this at the party, and Super did that at the party. Super wanted blue balloons but they were out and then Super had to ..."
I hold the line. I say things like
"STOP. Super is not my friend. YOU are my friend. I am not here to visit Super. I am here to visit YOU. I do not do deep detail talk about Super. So we can either change the subject or I just go home and visit you another time when Super isn't so heavy on your mind. How about some tea?"
It probably took Patient Friend something like 3 years to understand that really,
I mean it. I just do not like Super and I do not talk about Super. And when I put the brakes on I can watch their face struggling with their brain. The ritual of making tea helps them change tracks and figure out something ELSE to talk about.
Over years Super has done things that were mean to my patient friend, made fun of them, borrowed money and not repaid, they've had fights and all kinds of drama. I don't get what my patient friend gets out of it or what they see in Super. Me? I don't care to know. I don't want to hear about it.
If my patient friend keeps picking out Super Crap Friend, keeps interacting with them? Any drama Super Crap Friend does? It is all their problem. Go vent elsewhere about the latest hooha. Not to me.
If I let patient friend babble to me about Super? I'd be up to my ears in Super. My Patient Friend has
no sense in that area, so it's on ME to hold the line if I want our interactions to be pleasant and not turn into the Super Crap Friend Show.
We have been not talking about Super Crap Friend for 30+ years. So it may take a while for a patient person to get it, but they eventually DO get it if you hold the line. If you keep changing the line around? They won't.
Just call the line done, and leave it be.
Even if you feel different later? Be ok feeling different and NOT changing the line any at all. Let it be DONE done.
I think you are at that place with your wife. Just tell her "Nope. I do not talk about Dude." And firmly set it aside. Leave the room.
Hold the line.
It IS hard. Because you no longer have a healthy functioning partner. You have a PATIENT partner.
There will be things you never get to talk about or express to your patient person because it is futile, goes over their heads, or doesn't really do anything to improve quality of life or daily living with a patient person. That's what counselors and support groups are for. To get to air that stuff out there.
And sometimes mental health patients push your buttons on purpose to see if you still will hold the line. You holding the line firm helps them feel safe. But it is irritating as heck to have them poking over and over. Healthy people don't do that. But... that's the thing. They are not healthy. They are mental health patients.
I hope you are able to determine that with your counselor. You are having to change your whole view of yourself, your wife and your marriage as you see her more clearly as "my PATIENT wife" and no longer "my wife."
Hang in there.
Galagirl