So the pressing question of the moment is now, what to do? We need to come up with a concrete separation plan so that we can finally talk to the kids about all this.
Just yesterday I composed a long post about one direction, but we spoke again last night and I realized that plan wasn't going to fly, so it's already obsolete. The main needs we need to satisfy are:
- Sheila needs to have physical and emotional space of her own, so she can get on with her life apart from me
- We don't want to go bankrupt buying another house, but we may have to buy or rent something
- Sheila's parents have a largely unused condo nearby that we can use for the next year or so
- We could add onto our existing house -- either another bedroom, or possibly a small in-law unit (BR/LR/BA, but no kitchen). In this case, we would still share meals together and be like roommates, which at first sounded okay, but on further consideration Sheila thought that would feel too close
- Although neither of us plans to start seriously dating anytime soon, inevitably we will, and we will need our own spaces to make that work
- We want to keep the boys in the family house for as long as possible
- We both want 50/50 access to the kids, minimum. No way does either of us want to be a weekend parent -- it would be too easy to lose touch with the kids.
- We want to stall the legal divorce as long as we can, to avoid the financial/legal issues that accompany that step
So, lots to consider. We both need to balance access to the kids with our own privacy needs. Timeframe-wise, in 10 years our youngest will be out of the house (presumably), but we would like to keep the family house at least until then. In the nearer term I want to spend most of my time on myself, and with the kids.
My therapist proposed a straight 50/50 split, the "nesting model", whereby each of us stays alone in the house with the kids for half of the week while the other is in the condo, and then we switch. At first Sheila didn't like that, since it would be a such a radical change, but I think it's the best plan and expect she will warm up to it. We could ease into it over the course of a few weeks, with each of us spending a night or two a week up there, and then eventually settle into the full-on separation mode. It's not that I don't want to be around Sheila, but I don't want to aggravate things any further, and I want to meet her on her needs. The only way Sheila will ever be able to take a fresh look at our situation is if she is finally in a peaceful place, without the feeling that I am sitting on top of her or pursuing her. Although I am careful to keep things very platonic and unobtrusive, she clearly needs to establish herself in a new routine, with me out of her day-to-day life.
For my part, once the dust settles a little, I am going to want some time to myself, too. I need to get my head back into work, and into the work of knowing myself better with the help of my therapist. In many ways Sheila has done me a huge favor by forcing us apart. I am starting to see myself as an individual for the first time in a long time. For ages I have really defined myself as a husband and a father, and while I've been self-indulgent about my immediate needs and desires, I haven't given any serious thought to what I want from my life, much less how I should go about getting it. Stuff of another post.
