Robin, I love what you're doing. I know it's difficult and painful, but you are experiencing exactly what it takes to get to where your heart and soul are telling you that you belong.
Several random thoughts about things you said here...
Quote from: Robbyv213 on Today at 01:19:34 PMMy wife said something the other day and it's been something that is 💯 accurate. I feel like everything I do has to be a secret. I don't know why. Why I need to keep so many things about myself and who i am a secret. Even stupid little things that would not cause any issues good or bad if I told my wife, I keep secret.
From what you've said, your wife has repeatedly punished you (harsh word, but accurate, I think) for sharing what is possibly your greatest truth about yourself. That doesn't build intimacy or trust in a relationship. It conditions a person to keep things to themselves. Is it still your choice to do that instead of overcoming it and saying it anyway? Of course, but that's effectively saying that it's on you to be stronger than she is to compensate for her fears and insecurities. I personally reject those kinds of demands.
Quote from: Robbyv213 on Today at 01:19:34 PMI know I do it because I don't want rejection, I know I do it to be accepted and to experience love and or other things from being something I'm not in order to have a relationship or a friendship etc.
But... If you're being something you're not, are you being accepted? I mean, really? At that point, isn't the whole thing basically a performance? You pretend to be something you're not and people pretend to love you for being something you think they want you to be - but nobody ever talks about the fact that that's what everyone is doing? How does anyone know what part of it is "real?" And it's not all on you, because the other people are almost certainly doing something very similar.
In addition to the feelings that you just can't keep doing it, don't you have a desire inside you to find out what
is actually real?
And I don't assume that your relationship with your wife is where your hiding yourself began. My bet is that it began in childhood, just like it did for 99.999% of us, being told by our parents what we could and couldn't do/say/think/believe and naturally wanting to comply as best we could. That's a lifetime of conditioning that is really, really difficult to unlearn. And yet, I think it's quite possibly our most fertile path to self-growth as adults. We have to learn to disappoint people and be OK with it.
Quote from: Robbyv213 on Today at 01:19:34 PMIs being totally brutally honest the way I move forward.... Being completely transparent open and honest about everything, will certainly cause many of my relationships to end, and at the very least cause drama, and trust issues, and I'm getting to the point where I want to soak it all in gasoline and set it on fire.
Like I don't care who I lose anymore if it means I have to continue to play this role that isn't me.
"Brutally honest?" "About everything?" No. Gently and compassionately honest about the things that really matter. Lori wrote a lot
here about what I thought was phenomenal advice about inviting your wife to have a
calm but direct conversation about where you are in the relationship and what you want and need. It doesn't have to be about going separate ways; it could be more or less what you've said in this last post of yours - that you just can't do this anymore. Doing that
before you want to set everything on fire is critical. The calm and compassion are essential not only for maintaining some hope of the relationship surviving but also for your own sense of well-being. We need to learn to say that something isn't working for us before we reach our breaking point. It's hell on the psyche. We don't wait to eat until we're malnourished.
I wish you could see yourself from where I do. You are at a critical inflection point where something has to change. Your world can absolutely open up for you in fantastic ways that I'll bet you can't even imagine - but you have to walk through a very uncomfortable gauntlet to get there. Staying where you are somehow feels "safe" and "more comfortable," but that's an illusion that prevents you from stepping into the unknown. It's the classic human problem of accepting change only when it has become to painful not to.
I'm sure it feels impossible, but you really do have within you the capacity to tell your wife calmly and lovingly, "This is who I am and what I must do. I would absolutely love for you to join me on this path, but if you find in your heart that you cannot, I will understand. It will break my heart, but I will have to move forward without you." And you can do this with everyone you know. Some people will surprise you by being unbelievably supportive, and others will surprise you in the other direction. But then your life will be real and you will be free to be who you truly are.
I'm genuinely excited to see that happen.