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I cleaned out all his clothes, sold his model train collection, and just got rid of mostly all of his possessions within about 60 days.
He was a raging alchoholic, and I'm a rescuer and empath by nature.
Due to having a couple of family members who have narcissistic behavior tendencies, I've been researching NPD, and suddenly I realised that my deceased husband was, in fact, a narcissist. What a revelation!!
I felt nothing but relief when he died, and spent a lot of time reconnecting with my children and the rest of my family (this was a second marriage) Never did I ever mourn his loss. I still feel guilt over this.
He had two sons with whom I'm still in contact.
When we get together they have happy memories of their father, and I don't spoil their memories. He treated them well for the most part while he was living, but he seldom saw them. However he was very mean to my two sons and their families, and also my extended family.
How it took this long to realize what was going on, I do not know. I'm a retired registered nurse, I should have picked up on this, and left him, I see now.
I met my current husband in 2014. married in 2016. He is an amazing, loving, caring man for whom family means everything. He treats me like a queen, and both my children and stepchildren adore him. My husband doesn't know my history with my deceased husband (I didn't want him to think I was broken, and I always kept his behavior a secret from friends and family)
I still feel kind of guilty because my deceased husband died without being healed. I know that I tried hard, but he just couldn't see himself as having mental problems, and here I am, having a wonderful life with my current husband, as well as our two families, as I always hoped.
My question is, should I share this info with my husband just to get it out in the open? He of course can't really do anything about it, but now I feel guilty about keeping a secret from him. It's really the only thing I've ever kept from him.

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What would be the purpose of bringing that up now? Are you looking for sympathy, understanding? Is your marriage having some trouble now?

Leave it alone. If you feel you need to talk about it, there are therapists for that.
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AlvaDeer Feb 2022
PS You might want to run all this past those who attend Al-Anon. They may reassure you that there are two things you can choose to do when dealing with an alcoholic. Stay or go. You went. In that you are to be congratulated.
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I am not sure what it is you want to tell your current husband?

That your late husband was an alcoholic?

That you did not grieve his death?

That you feel guilt that your late husband died "...without being healed." You should know that no one can heal an alcoholic. It is 100% on them to find sobriety.

There is no shame in being broken. I am very up front with people that i had a mental breakdown when my marriage ended. At the time I felt shame that I had allowed 22 years of abuse. But I was not the abuser. Yes I stayed, and the marriage ending was harsh and my ex caused all sorts of problems during the separation, but that was then. Today I am a different woman.

I tell people about the mental breakdown, to help to remove the stigma around mental illness. I am a survivor not a victim.

Think about what you want to share with your new husband and why? We do not have to tell everything about our past to new partners.
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BelleMolerab Mar 2022
Tothill you are a hero! I also share with people that I take medication for depression and anxiety. I share about my difficult childhood and about my late miserable marriage. And do you know what reactions I get?
"oh, I'm also taking a high dose of zoloft....."
or:
"tell me more about your childhood, I wanna know if you experienced what I did...."
BEING OPEN IS A BLESSING
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I think this falls under the expression "let sleeping dog lie."

Your post sort of concerns me. You say you are now happily married to a wonderful man. Why would you want to potentially ruin it with details that 1) don't seem to concern your current husband and 2) are really, when you get right down to it, not his business?

Do you possibly, on some level, feel you are undeserving of your current happiness? It seems like you were, at the very least, borderline abused by your deceased husband...it's not an uncommon condition of people who are chronically abused to come to feel like they deserve the abuse, and they are not worthy of love and happiness.

Before you start berating yourself to your current husband, please find a therapist who specializes in abused spouses and lay this all out to him/her. You might get a better perspective on what's really happening with your emotions.

Good luck.
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AlvaDeer Feb 2022
I think this is such a good possible point in all this. If on some level the OP is feeling undeserving of all this happiness she may be unconsciously sabotaging it. It isn't fair to spread our private burdens that cannot be changed nor altered onto an innocent.
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W.hat exactly is it you are "looking for" from your current husband?
Your "grieving" your former husband, what does that "look like" for you?
No, I wouldn't put this baggage down in front of your husband; it isn't his to deal with, it is yours.
If your husband has not asked you anything about your former husband at all it is my opinion that it isn't relevant to him. With my own partner I know he would simply shrug and say "Well, that was then and this is now. If there's anything you need from me as regards all of this, do let me know. If there's anything troubling you about our own relationship, do let me know. If you need me, do let me know. " And on he would go.
If you feel you have "grief work" to do (and don't mistake GRIEF for GUILT. You aren't a felon. You aren't a God. You are a normal human being with limitations, just like everyone else. Were you a felon (who can use the word guilt) you wouldn't care.
If you need to see someone, then see someone, a Licensed Social Worker who is trained in dealing with counseling on life transitions, or a psychologist. Tell your Hubby you have things in your past you would like to comb through with someone, if he asks. Most men are just concerned with "fix it" work; if you don't have something they can fix they aren't that much into it. Tell him that you are very happy with him, and it isn't about your relationship.
For the most part I would be somewhat interested, were I the shrink, in knowing why you are wanting to sabbotage TODAY, a day in which you say you are very happy, with YESTERDAY, which is done and gone and not a thing can change a second of it. What is it you can imagine you can change for the better in all of this.
I sure do wish you the best. You are with a good man. I think that he would be extremely supportive of you. Mine sure would be. Just see to it that you don't punish him with a whole bag of garbage from the past that isn't his to deal with would be my advice.
And, if it would make you feel better, share it. You value his opinion. I am certain, after thinking on it, he will have one for you to consider.
Best out to you, and I am so happy you have found happiness and a new life.
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No don’t burden your husband go find a therapist or grief counselor. Sometimes all you need is a few hours with a grief counselor who can help you Let Go .
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Please just get some help with this--I think you grieved, you grieved while he was alive. A lot of us are in that position. Our marriages are far from what we'd want and we grieve, for lack of a better word, for what 'might have been'.

You've got a second chance to be happy. Grab it with both hands and don't let go.
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DebCianciosi: Wherein lies the purpose of telling your husband of your late husband's alcoholism and narcissism? Perhaps there is none. One recourse for you would be to seek talk therapy via a counselor about your late husband since you are troubled about it and asked us here on the forum. Good luck.
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BurntCaregiver Feb 2022
Amen to that.
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There’s nothing to feel guilt or shame about in your past. How much you do or don’t want to share is completely up to you. Very glad you’ve built a new and happy life
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I just read a passage that says "Those who reach for the past may loose the future". This applies to any guilt feelings you have about your late husband. I suppose a counselor could help, but nothing helps more than moving the past, good or bad, to the past. Do you lament that three quarters of a good meal has been consumed...or enjoy the remaining one fourth. A vacation with only a few days remaining, do you stand on a balcony and be miserable that its only a few days OR enjoy the day and what is to come. Seek counsel if you feel it will help, but its easy for anyone to see that you are having guilt feelings, unjustified, and dwelling in the past, when your future is now with a good husband. Why do you even consider the balance of good/bad about the past concerning whether you did enough. This is for YOU to resolve. If your husband is aware of how your past relationship was troubled, I fail to see the point of making him wonder if you simply miss him..which doesn't make sense. I have a feeling that its actually not a big secret with him, but he might wonder why you are still dwelling on it instead of your current life. To an outsider, it would seen your only regret might be that you didn't get to spend all your past with your current situation. Start today and see the glass half full, not half empty.
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DebCianciosi Feb 2022
Rick, you hit the nail on the head for me! i do regret that I don't have more future with my present husband. his wife died 8 years before we met, and sometimes I think about how different it would have been if I had left my alcoholic sooner and I had met my current husband in2006, when he lost his wife to brain cancer. That's pretty unrealistic, and from now on I'm going to treasure each day in my life......thank you for your insight!!!!
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Do what you feel is best but keep this in mind. Once you tell him, you can't take it back. If it causes or does any damage to your current marriage, it's on you. You could just say you have never been this happy in your life as you are now. Let current hubby know he is your one and only and don't burden him with your burden. I would seek counseling first and talk your situation over and ask the counselors advice. It sounds to me it's not so much grief, but guilt because of the way your children were treated. You can move on with not grieving the abuse in your life but the guilt of how he treated your children is another matter. Their scars are still with you. That is every mother's nightmare.
You can also ask yourself if it is worth letting your abuser come knocking on the door of your current happy marriage, or put his memory in a box, lock it down tightly, throw away the key and never open it again. The abuser isn't worth your current time it in my opinion.
My abuser certainly isn't either.
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