Well, unfortunate that she is dying.
Not to be ghoulish or anything but her being dead kinda solves some of the things in the bigger picture doesn't it?
You might make an exception to the "no talking for 6 mos" so he can do a goodbye call. Then go right back to the "no talking" agreement.
Your counselor has no sympathy for
death?
Or do they mean "There's always gonna be SOMETHING... so don't bend with every breeze?"
To me? He's acting like a baby and making you be the mommy. "You won't let me" this and that. Like "Wah! You big meanie!" as children do when the mom won't let them eat all the candy.
He's also sounding "revenge-y." He won't even try to negotiate with you.
You are not controlling him. They can go ahead and talk NOW. However it is he wants.
Just that if he chooses this, then you prefer to take the kids and separate. You can have a personal boundary
for yourself. That you don't want to live with him while he's involved with her. So you don't.
What was the purpose of this no talking for 6 mos thing anyway?
Is it better to just say "Forget it. Let's just go to trial separation. You talk and date whoever you want on your side. I do same on on my side. We see in counseling if we can reconcile or if this needs to part ways. The other people aren't part of what's going on in this marriage anyway."
Not sure why you texted her.
- If she's dying, she doesn't need drama from you. She wanted to talk to him, not you.
- If she's making up shit and roped her husband into doing her dirty work for her? You don't need her drama.
He can't even compromise on this PHONE thing and he wants to go revenge-y. You really want him doing revenge-y things with the chores or home routines or kid care if you legally separate but still live together?
What is the great benefit you think the kids get from the two arguing parents being under one roof?
Could just reduce what you have to coordinate together to the kids, finances, and counseling appointments. Then finish the counseling to decide if it's gonna be reconciliation or final divorce.
I think kids do better with stability and routines. If it is more peaceful/stable having different flats in the same apartment building isn't that close enough to make coparenting easier but still separate enough so you don't have to deal with him, his other dates, his sloppy hinging and oversharing, sharing chores with him, helping him with his ADD, reminding him, etc.?
His flat can be how he likes and all those chores are over there are on him.
Your flat can be how you like and all those chores are over here are on you.
He's 23 years older than you and you have to be parenting HIM? When there's actual kids around who need your attention?
If THAT is what your counselor meant -- then I'm with the counselor. Follow thru and separate.
GG