Yes my my father died in feb but I didn't immediately withdraw. It was a buildup of things (in regards to him). His insurance didn't come through. Mom was left with nothing. Had to sell things and move out quick. Come to find out my mom has been having medical issues that she stubbornly won't talk about. She can't drive now.
My wife lost her past husband to cancer. According to her brother, he had cancer going into the relationship and didn't tell her until after they were married. According to him, her previous marriage was abusive. So me saying what I said was definitely magnified. I left this all out because I don't want to take the blame off of myself as it was wrong and I'm ultimately seeking help for MY actions.
we have been married a short time, yes. 4 years. Her mom is saying she will take me back and yo just give her time.. I'm not so sure about that. Whatever lines people have used since the dawn of time, this is not one. I'm truly seeking help for myself.
i know the orihional post was corney and winey but that was how i was feeling and i just let it out i guess.
I left because she asked me to. We have a dog and my friend/neighbor said she hasn't been back. So I sneak in to take care of the dog and leave. I can't have her (the dog) in a hotel.
I also reacted to your post the way Miri and Lynn and others did. Because, as someone else said, if your wife had been writing your OP and subsequent posts from her POV, I would have been advising her to leave, too! Or at least get into marriage counselling, and you into personal counselling.
But when I read the bolded part above, that was the icing on the cake. She was abused before. So, obviously, she is overreacting to your abuse? NOT!
There is a problem called "Battered Wife Syndrome." This means, a woman who has been abused in one marriage, will likely be abused in the next marriage. I don't know if it is because the wife picks a partner who will abuse her, or if it is because the husband senses her weakness, or more likely, a combination of both. But a woman who is battered, whether verbally, financially, sexually or physical is fragile, and will end up walking back into the same situation over and over again. Those are the sad facts of domestic abuse.
So, where does that leave you? It leaves you as an abusive person, that she is willing to leave. It leaves you idealizing her as the "perfect wife." And when she is not perfect, it leaves you back abusing her, at least verbally, and the cycle of abuse. It leaves you blaming your work, your father's death, and not admitting what went on before your admitted change to this mean bully.
No one is saying you have to be perfect either, but reading a few books, without intensive therapy is not going to change the way you react and respond to her. She's been lied to, and abused. She has trust issues. And then, when you turn out to be cast in the mould of her ex, she rightfully wants out.
So what can you do? Well, leave her alone. Get counselling. And not from some Christian organization that tells you the problem is that your wife is not submissive enough. That is just from the pit of hell! Instead, find a secular counsellor who will help you understand what you are doing. Learn about the Cycle of Abuse. I'll bet my bottom dollar you have been in it in one form or another since you met her. And do seek God, on your knees and in the Word daily. And give up thinking that this time, somehow, you can stay in the "honeymoon" phase forever, when you will just slip into calm, and then tension building leading to an incident or "acting out" stage.
Cycle of Abuse
God wants us to be a servant of all. He wants us to love others before ourselves. See if these things apply. If they do not, then my apologies. But too many red flags for me!