|
Edited on Tue Jun-26-07 12:46 PM by jobycom
First, your feelings and thoughts are understandable, justified, and probably even praiseworthy. You want to do more with your life. You want the feeling of confidence you've seen the spouse achieve. And I suspect that somewhere inside you are worried that he is growing past you, experiencing things you haven't and can't understand. That's just a guess, but we've all been there.
So, there is nothing wrong with what you are feeling. Now, you must act on these feelings, or they will become resentments, right or wrong. Not just resentment of your missed opportunities, but resentments of him, and worst, resentment of your decisions, of your life. Maybe even, in a way, of your kids for holding you back.
You need to address that. You don't necessarily have to go to school and get a degree, and you certainly don't have to tell Spouse that he has to quit school so you can do something (sounds like you don't consider that an option anyway). But you need to address what you are feeling, and get a handle on it, for everyone's sake.
I would suggest a couple of things, just as thoughts. First, talk it over with Spouse. Don't accuse (though he will probably get defensive anyway--that's human nature when someone feels they are doing their best). Just tell him how you feel. And of course, listen to him, because he will fear you are trying to derail him, and will want assurances that you aren't. That way you won't start harboring a grudge against him, feeling like he doesn't understand you. Who knows, he might have something constructive to say. If nothing else, you won't be going through it alone, and better, you'll be going through it with him, so you won't resent him. And he won't have to wonder how you feel (Trust me, I've been in his position, and I have felt tremendous guilt over it).
Second, draw up a goal sheet for yourself. Figure out what you really want most to do and to achieve. make it a multi-stage thingie, where you say "Next year I'd like to be 'X,' and within five years I'd like to have achieved 'X.'" Do NOT worry if the goals are attainable, just list what you'd really like to do. Write a novel. Become a lawyer. Retire to the Caribbean. Next, write down what it would take to accomplish each of these. You'll see that some are exclusive, some are beyond your reach. Some are easy if you focus, and some you can attain if you really work on it. Make that your wish list. Then figure out which things you could actually achieve, and which you really want to achieve within the context of your life. What I mean by that is, maybe you'd like to become an architect, but you'd also like a family with a certain level of savings within a few years, and you know you could not achieve both. Dream, but be realistic. That will help focus you.
Third, when you've got a list of wishes, set a real goal for something you really want, that is just beyond your reach, but that you could accomplish within the parameters that you've decided you can't change. That can be different over time. For instance, you could write a novel at home, but you could not earn a degree, realistically, while your Spouse is in grad school. Once he's out, though, the parameters have changed, and maybe you could go to school.
Fourth. Go for it. Do the thing you know you can do if you try. Prove it.
In other words, you need to do two things. You need to give yourself a sense of the future, before you become depressed and resentful. Second, you need to go after what you want, rather than just being content watching him get what he wants. The second part is key to what you are feeling. It is beyond question that you will feel happy for his success (that's not a gender thing--my spouse worked her way from the bottom to a bank VP without any degree, and I was happy to see it, even though we split up). But you have to feel successful yourself. Your children will give you that feeling, but it's more vague, not as direct, and make years to blossom. (It also may lead to resentment from them, or at least pressure on them, if they feel you want them to be your success.) You need to worry about you. Not selfishly or exclusively (and that doesn't seem to be your problem at all). But you do need to worry about you, or you will undermine your life and the lives of those you are trying to sacrifice yourself for now.
Just my advice. I was a grad student while my spouse worked. She tried school, but dropped out twice. We always agreed she would go back when I was done, but in the end, she didn't want to. She's done very well choosing her own path (makes a lot more than me). Ironically, I've never done anything with my degree, and the tables have turned. She's confident and upwardly mobile, and I'm down on myself (at 42). Who knows how that will be in two years? For what that's worth.
Sorry to go on so long. :) That's what I do, I ramble. Bottom line, take charge of yourself. You feel stalled and directionless. Give yourself a direction. You may change it once you head that way, but at least you will feel you are going somewhere.
Oh yeah, and happy birthday. Don't let birthdays get you down. Henry Miller was 44 when he wrote his first novel. F Scott Fitzgerald was dead by 44.
|