Please dont assume that I made the same mistakes the second time around. I divorced my first husband for completely different reasons. Hubby 1.0 wasnt a bad husband. He wasnt a bad anything. But I married him for the wrong reasons (no, not money) In the end we realized that neither one of us was truly happy. Soon we were fighting for little or no reason and we didnt want our children raised in an environment like that. Our decision to divorce was a mutual decision and we did it as friends. Our marriage was one based on mutual respect, caring, understanding, forgiveness, and even love. It was just not the right kind of love. It was a completely different demon this time.
Trust me, Im not assuming anything. To set the stage here, you wrote this below:
So I came here seeking advice from a more neutral perspective...people who work in aviation but dont know me or my husband.
......which is fine and great. All Im trying to do is keep that neutral perspective. I don't know you or your husband (ex?). And there is already alot written here regarding what was wrong on his end, which I don't discount. All Im doing (or trying to do) is try to provide the look to the other direction....your direction. Since every relationship is a learning environment, whether they go right or wrong. So believe me when I say Im not assuming anything, right or wrong; Im just throwing out those "food for thought" ideas that you may or may not already realize. Why? Because Ive been in the same boat. And Ive repeated mistakes that I should've realized the first time around (not saying you have....just saying that I did, for sake of discussion here). So in order to be the neutral party you are seeking, thats why Im trying to bring the other side to light, if only so it doesn't "fall through the cracks" in the heat of pointing out the ex's problems/issues. No judgements being made....just retrospectives.
Regarding the top quote of this post that you wrote, believe me, I can relate. Marrying for the wrong reasons, then trying to "make things work", oftentimes fails more than it succeeds. Especially those that try to make things work for "sake of the kids", kids usually see through that; and in my general opinion, it can do worse for them for two parents who have alot of negativity between them to stay together, than for the same two parents to split. Obviously case by case, yes, but I think you know where Im coming from.
My overall point being that I learned alot of errors I made from my failed marriage, even though there were errors and fault with the other party too. I wasn't asking you to "list" anything, just asking (from the neutral standpoint) if in retrospect.....or even maybe in more time....that hopefully you will be able to see any errors on your end, whether intentional or unintentional, that were made in
this last relationship that you can hopefully learn from, as I said if only so you don't repeat them next time and/or can make yourself a better person
for yourself with those realization(s).