I am actually a frequent poster on these boards but have come in under an alias to ask this personal question. I'll get right to it. When DH and I got married, I knew that he was a drug abuser years ago in college. We talked about it extensively and he assured me that it has been long since out of his life. Well, about a year after we were married, I noticed that about once a week he would act really strange (I'll spare you the details), sweat alot, be twitchy, and have really clammy hands. Long story short after several denials, I found physical evidence that what I had strongly suspected was true. We worked through it over time things were ok aside from the trust which was starting to mend. A year later, same thing happened again. Only this time, I was wiser and could recognize the signs much faster without doubt of being paranoid. Again, we worked through the bulk of it but the whole trust thing is harder to re-obtain. I told him that I would not live in this situataion (even though it only resurfaced on rare occasion). Now, 4 years later, I come home last night and I noticed the same symptoms again although not as strong as usual. When I got home today, I searched the house (he's not home yet) and found some pretty darn suspicious physical evidence. I'm heartbroken! I feel I need to stick by my guns and leave as promised but I'm having a hard time sucking it up and doing it. Is this an occasion where I need to seriously consider breaking up an otherwise wonderful marriage (yeah, I know, this is a big kink), or is there someway that we can work through this, end the problem somehow, and over time regain my trust. I feel I'm way too emotionally involved to make this judgement call right now. Thanks for any advice---good or bad.
It isn't easy living with an addict of any kind. The emotional toll on you is much greater than you realize at this point. Just know that you can't fix him. Nothing you say or do can make him get through this, no matter how hard you push or how much you love him. For me the most difficult thing was not being able to fix him. I'm saying this so that maybe you won't put so much of yourself into trying to fix him. All you can do is support him and be there for him - and that is pretty darn difficult to do.
Good luck to you!