I’m basically copy/pasting from General. Want to add though that threatening and demanding divorce is not the same as DOING divorce. He can threaten and demand all day long, but it becomes reality when he walks into an attorneys office and does the necessary paperwork.
I’m guessing he hasn’t done that, and that’s because he isn’t really threatening to divorce... He’s demanding you a) don’t intervene in his drinking and b) don’t expect him to discuss the affair.
As long as you do nothing, he will be fine. You can have him around and have the kids all the time. Only be prepared to a lot of that time go into being disrespected and protecting your kids from their dad. With time they might get used to stuff like him missing pick-up times, missing PTA meetings, being late for dinner and being passed out on the couch.
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This is the copy/paste part...
I think you need to remove his threat. He doesn’t get to threaten divorce. You don’t even threaten divorce. You tell him that until he gets some control of his drinking – for example by committing to AA and sobriety for 6 months – there isn’t anything for you to "save". Divorce isn’t a threat – it’s an inevitable consequence based on decisions made – his decision to drink – your decision that active alcoholism will inevitably have you crashing into a wall. Might as well get off the ride now.
It's a process. Nothing happens instantaneously. You could ask him to go to couples therapy with you again to address some fundamental issues. No – not the affair.
There – in that safe environment – you tell him that his threats of divorce make you understand where his priorities lie, and that you would rather accept it’s over and get it done with rather than wait and allow him to sink deeper into his addiction. That he has a choice between sobriety or you moving further and faster away.
This isn’t a threat. You don’t just say this and hope he sobers up. But you don’t have to file today or tomorrow. You start right away learning and understanding the process, and you gradually move along on your path. If he responds positively you can slow down. But you always move on... His actions can impact the pace – but you are the one that decides if he’s done enough or not.
[This message edited by SI Staff at 7:04 PM, Monday, November 18th]
"If, therefore, any be unhappy, let him remember that he is unhappy by reason of himself alone." Epictetus