The comparison game will kill you - the faster you find a way to move beyond that the better you will be.
My lifestyle downgraded when I left but I'm no longer being abused or having to worry . . .Sure it's difficult I struggle as a single income but I am at peace and happy. I no longer have the ups and downs I did when I was with my ex.
Think about it for a moment: Your lifestyle versus the absolute and utter hell you lived before? My lifestyle financially also downgraded significantly. When I lived with him I never worried about money and even paid off a bunch of stuff and managed to save. Now, although I am a relatively high income earner, I live paycheck to paycheck like I did in college. I have nicer things than I did back then but from a purely financial standpoint I am MUCH worse off that I used to be. Yet, I am so much better off in every other way.
But I will give you a more personal example of why outward comparisons are cheap, easy, and pretty much worthless that is likely more comparable to yours:
My mother had an A with a married man when I was younger. My parents divorced as did her AP when my mom turned up pregnant. My mom and AP married so AP became my step-father, and he and my mom are still married some 30+ years later. My mother is definitely better off financially than my dad is and in part because she married her AP. AP had a successful business and my mother has a knack for real estate investment. Between the two of them they are VERY wealthy now. They live in a $1m+ home and own multiple other properties which probably value over $15m in total as well as stocks and retirement accounts.
My father on the other hand never remarried. He dated a lot for awhile but never settled. He also had a horrible accident which rendered him partially disabled when he was in his late 40s (many years after their divorce), right after he was laid off from his job, and due to some health insurance issues, ended up losing most of his savings due to medical bills and never was able to return to full time work again. He does have a retirement and social benefits that allow him to live, but it is not a spendy existence by any means, and my sister and I both supplement his income and he lives in a moderate rented home we help to pay for. He probably has in total, $20,000 worth of things to his name including his car. He is fortunate that we are able to help him as he could not afford to live where he is now but for that help (and that is part of the reason why I live paycheck to paycheck now - when WH and I were living together I spent what I would usually use on housing for me for my dad - so now I pay for my household and part of his).
Which one seems better off? Financially, my mom, hands down. No contest. But which one is actually better off? My dad, times 100.
What the financial balance sheet does not tell you is that my mother's marriage to her former AP has been a shit show. He has had multiple affairs and she has had all kinds of outbursts about him moving out over the years, and honestly their relationship seems okay about 50% of the time and strained and astoundingly awful for the remainder. Sometimes they are not speaking to each other aside from yeses and noes, and other times they seem very happy together. My mom has spent countless days, nights, weeks, months alternating between crying and being hell-fire angry. In other words, she has been living in infidelity limbo for the better part of the last 40 YEARS.
The financial balance sheet also does not show you about her relationships with her kids, especially me, which has been less than stellar. We are not close, which I am fine with. My sibling is a bit closer but neither of us have the relationship we have with her that we have with our father. I see her about once a year on a holiday. My sister sees her a bit more than that as she lives very close, but not much more.
My mother's life has been, honestly, a bit empty, and I think at times very very lonely. My Dad, even though he never remarried and remains single even now, has had a much fuller life. He managed to shoestring travel around the world, house sitting for people and staying with friends and family. He has lived in some fascinating places and he has seen things most people on this Earth never will. He has gotten involved in community volunteering and some other clubs making things like furniture for people struggling to get by as he loves woodworking and can still do it, although to slow to do it as a job due to his injuries. He and I have traveled to six of the seven continents and he made it to the final one himself last year.
So while my Dad's life is far from perfect - I'm sure he wishes he had full use of his body the way he used to, and I know he always wished he would have met someone, if not to marry, than to share his life with, that didn't happen (and while it still could he is running out of time for that as he's getting a bit long in the tooth) - it is profoundly better than my mother's in all the ways that matter when you reach the end. Even with all her money I think her life has been much less than she had hoped it would be and it's a lot less fulfilled than my Dad's.
So chin up - really and stop the comparison game - it's only hurting YOU. To steal from that amazing opt ed piece that Baz Lundgren turned into a song: The race is long, and in the end, it's only with yourself.
[This message edited by ThisIsSoLonely at 8:34 PM, Friday, June 14th]