Frita’s Lost and Found

Where are you and where are you going?
Frita
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Frita »

7Wannabe5 wrote:
Sun Jun 02, 2024 3:09 pm
I think we’re on the same page. Just because he’s depressed and anxious—due to his genetics, family programming, or social bare-minimum-for-men-conditioning—doesn’t mean I want to continue like this. Recalibration is more being able to see things clearly without this cloak of fatigue, to be able to take life-enhancing action, than “I will rest up and be ready for more BS.” (I frontloaded that latter strategy more than I care to admit.)

Headed on a solo adventure in a few days…I appreciate you sharing that spouse-free time shifted things for you and curious what I discover.

Frita
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Frita »

Update: A week ago I left to crew on a tall ship on the East Coast. It’s been a lot of work, definitely a learning experience. There’s a two week trial period, so far so good. I may be out and about the whole summer.

I am letting my spouse fend for himself. My life is suddenly quite a bit easier.

ertyu
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by ertyu »

The ERE trophy's been won for the month, folks, everyone go home :lol:

Hope you have a blast Frita! Can't think of a more badass course for you to have taken

Laura Ingalls
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Laura Ingalls »

@Ertyu
I totally agree.
Have fun Frita

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grundomatic
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by grundomatic »

Hell yes! Have fun on your adventure!

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Ego
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Ego »

As I read though this it came to mind that he is creating a system to foster negative serendipity in his life. You are showing him how to do the opposite. Good for you.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTrk4X9ACtw

J_
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by J_ »

Frita wrote:
Thu Jun 13, 2024 4:07 pm
Update: A week ago I left to crew on a tall ship on the East Coast. It’s been a lot of work, definitely a learning experience. There’s a two week trial period, so far so good. I may be out and about the whole summer.
Well done Frita! Sailing can be a healing experience. And sailing tall ships are extra adventurous. 22 years ago I have "crewed" on a tall ship too, sailing from Penzance in Cornwall (most south-western part of UK) to Rennes in France. I found climbing in the ra rather dangerous, but it was quiet weather, and I still fondly remember it.

Henry
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Henry »

When drowning at sea becomes preferable to drowning at home.

ffj
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by ffj »

Bravo! A toast to calm seas and new beginnings.

7Wannabe5
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

Yes!

Riggerjack
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Riggerjack »

@7:
I read Riggerjack's post as coming from a man who has evolved enough
...

Yeah, this happens quite a bit. I post a wall of text, and you react to it. Thank you, I have learned a lot from your reactions. My understanding of, and relationship with my mom has improved as a direct result of your writing.

But I have to admit that I'm often disappointed by your reactions. I keep finding my wall of text posts reinterpreted in ways that seem to round off the parts I consider most elegant or relevant, leaving a much simpler context, that requires no contemplation to integrate.

So I'm wondering what happens when you reread my post with a different mindset. Rather than assuming that I'm:
abstracted nod towards revitalizing her own feminine energy and empathizing further with her husband's ego butt-hurt in terms of "expectations." Blah, blah, blah...


Maybe think of it as I meant it. Something like "assembly instructions" for the mental scaffolding necessary to gain a perspective to judge where her vector of personal growth would be, from where she is.

I only posted here because Frita's writings here, and elsewhere on the forum have emphasized personal growth, and the advice she was getting was about personal recovery.

I agree personal recovery is the is first order of business, but recovery works faster/better when associated with a known growth path. Resting to prevent exhaustion when lost, is a different experience from resting to prevent exhaustion, knowing where one is, and where one is going. The circumstances are the same, but the experience isn't.

But I an INTJ among intj's, trying to give advice to an ENTP. I can't give emotionally valid terms to a framework I developed for myself. You have the right personality and history to give a relevant emotional interpretation of my framework in a way that could be useful to Frita. So I was hoping you would maybe flesh out:
1. Be fully charged, with maintaining that charge as first priority.

2. Be protected. Shitty people do shitty things. Expect dealing with shitty people to be unpleasant and messy. Refer back to 1.

3. Get the help of the personality gurus on the forum to get a good feel for the rewarding parts of experiences that fit your husband's M-B type/Ennigram type.

3. Find a personally rewarding activity your son and you want to do together. It doesn't need to appeal to your husband, nothing will. But if this activity is done in his presence, where he has to expend energy to remove himself...

4. Strategize with your son to find ways of introducing your husband's rewarding experience opportunities into your daily life. Success here won't be pleasant or fun.

5. Repeat, in hopes that your husband gets charged enough to begin searching for rewarding experiences on his own before you lose interest in supporting him.
into something more "ENTP/depressed introvert facing divorce" relatable. I was hoping some of Frita's mental work of navigating out of her current circumstances could be offloaded to the forum in this way.


@ertyu
OK but, what is this teaching the son? "When you have issues, swan around like a melodramatic diva and expect the women and the children to fix you?"
I imagine that could be one lesson. I was thinking something more like

"Your father is having a real hard time, right now. So, when your father swans around like a melodramatic diva, we try to smother our laughter until after he leaves the room. But sometimes laughing earlier is OK, too."
Beyond that, the setting yourself up on fire to keep others warm and the can't fill a leaking bucket quotes come to mind.
I agree. And I agree with your sense of urgency, though for different reasons. I think your advice to leave immediately is going to be hard for her to take.

The relationship between a child and a depressed parent is less voluntary on the part of the child. The child has a "script" for leaving that easily includes cut and run. Personal growth from here is nearly inevitable.

The relationship between spouses is negotiated, and often renegotiated. It's a dance. One spouse steps left, the other follows. By the time this dance falls apart this badly, there have been many mis-steps by both spouses. There are 30 years of adult choices that led here.

The easiest, simplest, quickest, and probably most likely to be successful solution is to stop dancing with this partner, and pick a new one, now knowing which direction to watch out for. Perhaps knowing this so well, one becomes hypersensitive to it for life. Growth from here, is far more chancy than growth from a child leaving home. The examples of divorced spouses repeating unhealthy patterns in future relationships are well known to us all.

Or, one could start to really look at that dance. Watch for where expectations diverged from results. Look for patterns. Look for the conditions that led to agreeing, allowing, accommodating, compromising, and cooperating in ways that ultimately allowed the dance to get here. These are the circumstances and expectations that will highlight a path out of where one is.

Viewed this way, changing one's environment, actions, and reactions to get different results is all within one's own hands. No cooperation required.

Then being stuck with a depressed person in a rut, could be viewed as a personalized mental/emotional/spiritual gym. A gym run by "AI, set on evil", that knows all your personal history and how to push your buttons.

One wouldn't go to a physical gym and pump weights without a goal or purpose, 24/7. One shouldn't subject oneself to a depressed person 24/7 without goal or purpose, either. One should engage such an experience, recovered, energized, knowing the results one wants, with a plan to get them, and awareness of which results to be wary of.
You can only change a dysfunctional dance by doing something completely different. Not by doing the same old thing again, but with revitalized energy.
I very well remember the day when at the suggestion of my support group, I self-aware simply stopped responding to my exes' "Where's the Kleenex?", "What's for dinner?" etc. requests. He had a complete melt-down and yelled "I will not tolerate being ignored!" at me, and although that was unpleasant, it was also a bit of an "Ah ha" moment for me.
Yes!!!!

Now, how about if we try to create these "Ah ha" moments? Maybe we strategize on how to create them, and set them up. There are lessons to be learned, and changes to be embraced. It seems like it would be easiest to take the input of other dancers on tactical maneuvering?

Extrovert stuck with a depressed introvert doesn't seem like such an uncommon problem. Maybe hints from both sides of that dynamic will be helpful in Frita developing a strategy to move from where she is, to where she wants to be.

@Frita,
Not successfully modeling a marriage of mutual love, care, trust, and respect, yet, is my largest failing.
Fixed that for you.

I don't know if you get divorced. That is independent of you choosing your best path forward. But I do think that as you review your dance moves that led here, you will find that you have artificially constrained your choices based on inaccurate expectations of where you were, or where you were going.

Maybe just reviewing all of your degrees of freedom by expanding your awareness of the "edges" you have imposed upon yourself. Are those edges valid? What new possibilities open up as those edges expand?

You have done the things you were supposed to do, and didn't get the results you were supposed to get. One can adjust both expectations and results.
In my mind, there is a huge difference between expectations and agreements.
@7 often references something about contract includes enforcement costs. So her solution to this issue is to track enforcement costs of agreement back to the agreement making. This helps her align enforcement costs within the agreement process.

My own solution was to let my freak flag fly, and part of the package of better mental health practices my wife brought with her was a near alignment in what is meant by agreement. I'm an INTJ married to an xntj. We don't think alike at all, but we feel very similar. What we mean by agreement is very similar.

One strategy helps make up for a personal values delta, the other minimizes a personal values delta. I don't know which is right for you.
@Jackrigger offers insight of how depression affects an individual and those around. (This expands on @Jacob’s take that one becomes more of true self away from work/retirement.)
This is certainly not the impression I wanted you to leave you with. I would describe a state of depression such as you describe, as being what is left after anything like a true self has burnt away. What is left is no more his true self, than today's wet ashes are the truth of the wood burnt in last night's campfire.

All that's left are his personal demons, and every way that he interfaces with his world feeds those demons. From the outside, this may appear similar to the personality changes one expects in an exorcism movie, for similar reasons.
The other behavioral programming I observe is hating work and wanting the relationship to end. My spouse doesn’t want to return to work, rather has shifted me into the avoidance target. Combined with the above, it becomes a vicious cycle.
Yeah, that seems accurate. I hope I have shed some light on why this could be. He won't (can't?) change this pattern. But how you participate in this pattern is entirely up to you.
Anyway, I can’t care more than my spouse does. I have made it this far by honoring my marriage vow and commitments. Until I regroup with myself and am on solid ground, I don’t know that I am capable of making a skillful decision.
I couldn't agree more. If I haven't been clear enough, I don't disagree with any of the advice given so far. Recovery and Growth are a step function similar to to the models jacob references for Theory and Practice. My focus may be on helping your identify your path to Growth, but others have given very good advice for Recovery. You will need to plot a path between the two, according to your own needs and resources.

ETA: Congratulations! This sailing adventure seems exactly right! Charging for yourself, and breaking interpersonal patterns with him. Progress on both fronts!
Last edited by Riggerjack on Mon Jun 17, 2024 8:02 am, edited 1 time in total.

Western Red Cedar
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Western Red Cedar »

Frita wrote:
Thu Jun 13, 2024 4:07 pm
Update: A week ago I left to crew on a tall ship on the East Coast.
Sounds like a great solution to some of the issues you've been dealing with! I hope the open water and fresh air lift your spirits.

7Wannabe5
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

@Frita: The below is mostly 59 year old me projecting a tough love talk back at 39 year old me. Take with huge grain of salt and the knowledge that although we have never met, I absolutely believe that you are almost certainly a stunningly attractive woman stuck in a bad circumstance.

Riggerjack wrote:Yeah, this happens quite a bit. I post a wall of text, and you react to it. Thank you, I have learned a lot from your reactions. My understanding of, and relationship with my mom has improved as a direct result of your writing.
I was vibing reactive on this thread, but it actually didn't have that much to do with your post (I'll explain a bit downstream.) I don't recall feeling reactive when replying to many other post you have made over the years. Usually I'm just thinking that you have a unique perspective to offer here, and I'm the sort of human who finds reading/writing quick and easy, so if others don't have the energy to reply to a "wall of text", I will make the effort in order to keep you coming back.

Before Frita started this thread, revealing the problems with husband/relationship, my very rough assumption would have been that they were towards being a power couple around my age. However, as soon as I read this thread, I realized that I had been fairly oblivious to the fact that Frita had made several comments on my journal thread and maybe elsewhere about how women our age start feeling "invisible" and how men our age don't have that problem. So, then my "reaction" reading this thread was that I became angry at Frita's husband for making her feel "invisible" or "unpretty." And I can't think of a nice way to explain this, but it seemed to me like your advice was like telling the Donna Pescow character in "Saturday Night Fever" to keep offering the John Travolta character all the blow-jobs he wants as a path towards personal growth. So, I am thrilled that she chose to go off sailing on her own, and I hope there are an abundance of sexy sailors in her crew.

Also, I don't think her husband is depressed, I think he's just exhibiting Summer-of-George behavior in a particularly azzhole manner. Here's a not entirely unrelated statistic from "The Evolution of Desire."
A man's age has a strong effect on his preferences: men in their thirties prefer women who are roughly five years younger, whereas men in their fifties prefer women ten to twenty years younger. ..American grooms exceed their brides in age by roughly three years at first marriage, five years at second marriage, and eight years at third marriage.
Since, like Frita, my first marriage was at a young age to a man very close to my age, I know how this dynamic can play out a couple decades later. Your husband starts behaving like a teenager living in a boardinghouse you are running and because you are stuck in this terrible monopolistic sexual economy of a too early marriage with kids in the mix, there is no way for you to gain valid perspective on the outside market. Frita noticing the kid at the hotel noticing her on her road trip is the first step towards getting her groove back on. And getting her own groove back on should be her one and only personal growth directive at this juncture, as a member of my marriage support group said when I was at similar juncture, "Keep focusing on your own self-improvement. If he doesn't notice, somebody else will." Word.

ETA: The book "He's Just Not That Into You" is kind of basic, but it does a pretty good job with helping single women with the task of no longer making excuses for the men choose to remain with in less than functional relationship. There should be a book for married women entitled "He's Just Not That Into You Anymore" to offer similar basic-but-true advice along the lines of :

1) He's just not that into you anymore, if he locks himself in his bedroom doing who knows what for hours."
2) He's just not that into you anymore, if he literally informs you he no longer wants a wife.

Holding the perspective that crappy behavior like that is due to "He's depressive" is like holding the pespective that the reason a boy is not asking you out on a date is because "He's shy." And in either case, even if "depressive" and/or "shy" are true, your best practice is still to assume "just not that into you." and move on, because his own problem to fix.

Frita
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by Frita »

This being more on my own has been an opportunity to reconnect with myself. I feel quite a bit happier alone and being around more vibrant people than my spouse.

@7W5
So, last night there were three of us with the night off, starting at 10 PM. The Argentine guys, L (33) and P (27), insisted I join them at the bar. Our first stop was a dive bar in a creepy basement, had a beer, and played darts. Then we went to an Irish pub (I was done drinking by that point.) and went to a rooftop dance club (Afro-fusion) until 2 PM. It was fun to go out as I actually like to dance and haven’t gone out since before I got married.

I think we might have been at a gay bar at the rooftop place. Some gal with a mohawk dressed rather masculinely hit on me, and some other guy built like a linerbacker was hitting on me and rather aggressive about me dancing with him. I told him I was with those two ( both quite attractive, actually). He replied, “Oh, that’s what your into.” Kinda weird, kind of fun to be a fly on the wall and observe whatever it is that singles do these days.

Since I speak English, they were wanting me to be their wingman. The thing is is that American women don’t quite get the inner generational thing, though I look younger than my age. (Yeah, I am not some random middle-aged woman at this club to translate strangers’ conversations.) On the boat, gender and age don’t matter so much. It’s more about following the rules, working, and getting along.

@Jackrigger and @7W5
It could be my disdain for black and white answers. I think that you could both me right. Whatever the cause of the shenanigans, I don’t have the energy to play along and find no benefit to doing so. Of course, my spouse can choose to blame me regardless, not my business.

Getting married straight out of college is a very bad idea unless considered a possible starter marriage. I didn’t have that insight until recently.

Note to self: You are gaining weight because of the change in diet (significantly less legumes and veg). Consider what full feels like when eating less fiber. Keep drinking water! Floss your teeth even though no one else does.

AxelHeyst
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by AxelHeyst »

The turn this thread has taken makes me so happy I can't even tpye right. Hell yeah, Frita!

UrbanHomesteader
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by UrbanHomesteader »

I'm so excited to hear about the sailing adventure!

My wanderlust feels hampered by my relationships currently, so I'll be living vicariuosly through you!

mathiverse
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by mathiverse »

How did you find the job sailing on a tall ship?

It sounds really cool and like a fun adventure.

7Wannabe5
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

Fantastic! The only possible thing that could make your adventure better for this reader would be learning that you posted photos with your bar buddies on social media venue to which your husband has access. I agree that black and white answers, reductionist thinking, should be disdained, but at the systemic level, "selfies with hawt Argentinian and/or Mohawked youths" could very well constitute a small lever towards large change. ;) :lol:

Actually, now that I think about it, your moves thus far are very much in alignment with the military strategy of John Boyd, as described in the "Certain to Win" book recommended elsewhere.

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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by jacob »

7Wannabe5 wrote:
Sun Jun 23, 2024 9:56 am
Actually, now that I think about it, your moves thus far are very much in alignment with the military strategy of John Boyd, as described in the "Certain to Win" book recommended elsewhere.
Yeah, maybe rethink that one ... because that particular military strategy is about sowing chaos and confusion in the mind of an adversary in order to create a reactive mindset thus destroying their will and capacity to fight.

7Wannabe5
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Re: Frita’s Lost and Found

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

@jacob:

No, I don't need to rethink. Only difference would be that in this case it would be "destroying his will and capacity to continue his (theoretical but likely) online relationship with 19 year old Romanian dancing-for-tokens girl."

According to the research in "The Evolution of Desire" and in alignment with my own semi-self-aware experience, the middle-aged modern man only has so much energy to exert walking the fence while "mate-guarding" and middle-aged men are much more likely to "mate-guard" younger female partners. Ergo, by behaving in a manner that signals that, although older and previously so strongly committed to relationship could be taken for granted, yet now clearly in danger of being pursued by virile others in distant location, Frita will force a divertment and extension of "forces" that will likely rock her husband back into the crucible of relationship with her.

It is also important to understand this for your purposes of promotion of frugality in the general population, because the well-known tendency for men in phase of middle-aged dominance/high-resource-availability to acquire younger second wife/mistress/similar often semi-consciously drives first wives to spend/demand more money in primary relationship in order to preclude this from happening. For example, an ENTP friend of mine who is a stunningly beautiful Nordic type M.D/PhD was actually married to an INTJ who was a physicist. Then they had two kids and she got an important promotion simultaneous to her husband losing out on an important promotion, so then he was stuck being the one to give the kids dinner, etc. which made him churlish, so he had an affair with a younger Asian woman who worked at a nail parlor, and my friend then made him buy the second most expensive house in the town where they lived as retribution, even though she is somebody who is concerned about climate change, etc.

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