UPDATED FOR 2024. Editor’s Note: Lovefraud received the following story from a woman about a “good guy” gone wrong. She went public with her experience in order to draw attention to the terrible problem of domestic violence. The name she uses on Lovefraud is “Tormented.”
In 2008, I divorced my husband of 18 years due to differences that unfortunately we couldn’t work out. We have three amazing children together and remain good friends in spite of our divorce, which has made things much easier for all of us.
Just five months after the divorce, I met a man who charmed me from the very beginning. I thought he was wonderful, and I quickly fell head over heels for him. A former county deputy sheriff, presently working as an Air Marshal and in the Army Reserves for nearly 20 years, he seemed like one of the “good guys” – a really good, down-to-earth person with a lot going for him. In his early 40s, he had never married and had no kids, which I thought was a good thing because I figured he lacked “baggage.” He seemed to love my kids, and when we married six months after we met, it felt natural and right. After all, I was 43, had been married for nearly two decades and knew exactly what I wanted.
What I didn’t realize was the fact that there were glaring red flags all over him. I guess I was either too naive or too trusting or both. For one thing, he had never been in a long-term relationship. And a few months into our marriage I discovered a box filled with photos of him with many, many different women over the years. Also, he had only one close friend. This friend of his attended our wedding, but only because we paid for the airfare and hotel. No other friends or family from his side bothered to attend. And the only wedding gift we received from his side was a $50 gift card to Pier 1 – from that one close friend of his.
Soon after we married, my new husband’s facade began to crack, and lies started to show through. Such as the fact that he had told me and my children that he had a college degree in Criminal Law, when in reality he had only taken a few online classes.
“Honeymoon” in Maui
When the verbal abuse started, I was not only horrified, but ashamed and embarrassed. I couldn’t believe the violent language that so easily flew from his lips, directed straight at me. When we went on our honeymoon to Maui, I ended up catching a flight home by myself two days early. I couldn’t begin to comprehend how a man could possibly yell at his new bride for hours on end, repeatedly calling her a f–king c-nt and scaring her to death while on their honeymoon. And his anger came out of nowhere, for no good reason. One night it was because I didn’t want to eat ice cream with him for dessert.
At this time, I was in between jobs and freelancing to keep some income coming in. I had the opportunity to work on a large, potentially lucrative business deal that I was very excited about. Out of the blue, my husband called up my potential client and accused him of having an affair with me. I was horrified and of course, lost the deal.
It became very apparent that I had made a terrible mistake, and yet I remained in a state of denial for several months as the wonderful man I thought I’d married simply faded away. I no longer recognized my husband through all of the degrading name calling and emotional manipulation. I cried nearly every day of the ten months we were married. My heart was bludgeoned, my self esteem utterly destroyed.
Domestic violence
After the disastrous honeymoon, I insisted on marriage counseling, however our psychologist gave up after only four sessions. She said she was unable to help us work things out unless he received individual counseling first. When she mentioned the words “domestic violence” to me, I was stunned. I had no idea that verbal abuse was considered domestic violence, and I couldn’t believe that I had entered this devastating realm that I’d never imagined would be a part of my life.
Ten months after our wedding, I finally found the courage to ask for a separation. I told him that I needed two months of peace, to think about our relationship and where we should go from there. I realized that another divorce was most likely on the horizon for me, however I still held out hope that he would miraculously change and the abuse would end. I was desperate for that man I fell in love with in the very beginning to reappear. How could that good man have been replaced by this abusive, violent monster who obviously hated me?
Just five days after I asked for the separation, he showed up on my front patio unannounced and forced his way into my home. He had just flown into town, and being an Air Marshal who always wears a gun strapped to his chest, I could tell that he was packing by the bulge under his shirt. He paced through my home, yelling and at times talking irrationally. Twice he said that we should go into the bedroom and have sex, that it would be “good for both of us.” Terrified, I cried and begged him to leave. He yelled at me and said he would leave when he was ready to leave. He continued to pace and yell. Sobbing and shaking uncontrollably, I finally called the police. I had never called 911 before in my life, but I was so frightened that he would physically hurt me or worse. Later, when the police officers removed him from my property and encouraged me to file an Order of Protection against him, I was completely beside myself.
Order of Protection
I soon discovered that filing an Order of Protection against my husband was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done. It was devastating to think that I had to go to that extreme measure to keep myself, and my children, safe. Especially when I was trying to keep myself safe from the one person who I thought had my best interests at heart. Someone I had trusted and opened my entire life to. Someone I believed in. To have to cope with the fact that my husband never really loved me at the same time when I was also dealing with having to file an Order of Protection against him was beyond devastating. It was also an extremely lonely place to be.
Read more: Dr. Donald G. Dutton explains that personality disorder is the cause of domestic violence
My Order of Protection case itself ended up being a lengthy, stressful ordeal. Along the way his attorney was very persistent about proposing a settlement since he would have been fired from his Air Marshal position if the Order of Protection remained upheld. In the end, I chose to settle and ended up with an even greater and longer lasting protection through a Court Order attached to our divorce decree, in addition to reimbursement from him for all of my divorce and legal fees. Presently, he can’t even enter the state where I live and can never contact me or my children forever.
Affairs
During this ordeal, I started writing a blog as a way to release the painful feelings I was coping with while also speaking out to help other women going through the same kind of situation. Ironically, my blog has enabled women from his past and present life to find me online.
Horribly enough, I discovered that for most of the time we were together, he was having an affair with a married woman. This woman was shocked to find my blog and to learn of my existence. She emailed me the story of their affair, and I learned that while he was in the process of marrying me, he was simultaneously trying to convince her to leave her husband for him. I have no doubt that there were other women in his life at that time as well. The combination of his vicious abuse and his disgusting betrayal have been horrendous to deal with.
On top of all this, I contracted a sexually transmitted disease from him that has since been resolved through medication. It was discovered while we were married, and yet his response was to call me a f–king wh-re and accuse me of having an affair. He refused to believe that he was carrying an STD, which I’m sure he continues to spread around.
I am speaking out and sharing my story with the hopes that I can reach other women who may be hiding in the shadows with their own stories of abuse. I appeared on local TV news segments, as well as in our state newspaper. It’s terrifying to “come out” publicly with my story, but I’m hoping that by doing this I’ll make it a little easier for the next woman. The only way to eradicate domestic violence is to lean on each other, stand up, speak out and educate. The main thrust of my message is: You are not to blame and you are not alone.
Learn more: Beyond Betrayal: How to recover from the trauma
Lovefraud originally posted this story on Oct. 13, 2010.
Dear Tormented –
This man exhibits a true Jekyll and Hyde personality – scary. I am sorry that you had the experiences that you had, realizing how terrifying some of them were for you. I’m thankful that you share your story (hard as it is), giving hope to others who are in abusive relationships (turning your negative into a positive for the rest of humanity). Peace to you.
Dear Tormented,
Thank you for sharing this story here and for “coming out” I can only imagine how terrifying that must have been. Finding out that we are no alone in our encounters with abusive people I know from personal experience is very validating and helpful.
Your story is truly scary, and especially to know that that creature (I won’t call him a man) is still out there with a gun “protecting” the public from people just like himself.
It is also truly scary that people like him, and Ted Bundy and the BTK killer, can present a facade of normalcy, or even as “good guys” when in fact, they are anything except!
Your comment about being too naive and too trusting I think mirrors most of us (former victims), but you were also in a period of especially high vulnerability that first year or so after the divorce, in an employment slump, and how were you supposed to recognize those “red flags” as “signs of trouble?”
It is difficult to comprehend why he would marry you, while at the same time trying to get a married woman with whom he was having an affair to leave her husband for him. WHY? WHY? It doesn’t make ANY sense to a “normal” person. It sounds INSANE. And, it think because even WE can’t come up with a MOTIVE that sounds even slightly rational, other people outside of this kind of insane relationship don’t “believe.” Even our attorneys sometimes find it incredulous that we could be telling such an “insane story” and it is ACTUALLY TRUE.
As I sat here and read your story (believing every word) I was AMAZED that you indicated that the police you called to throw him out of your house believed YOU and not him! So many other people here have indicated that in similar situations of domestic violence the police actually sided with the abuser!
Though I have yet to come “out” of the abuse closet nationally, I have done so locally and I too found it embarrassing to admit I was a VICTIM. Yet, the ABUSER bears no shame. What is wrong with that picture? LOL
Thank you again for sharing your story, and I do not doubt for one moment that you were tormented by this man. I’m glad you escaped and glad that you had the courage to come forward to help others. God bless you.
@’Good Guy’ Gone Terribly Wrong”
Oh my heart goes out to you and I send you love, peace and blessings.
This is a shocking story, thank God you got out when you did!And very brave of you to “come out” and let other abused women know they are not alone.
My ex did beat me up, but seldom emotionally abused me. I had far worse emotional and even physical abuse from my teenaged daughter.”Good girl gone wrong?”
I read her diary one time,{know I shoudnt have} and shed written.,
“My Turd- faced C—t of a so-called Mother!”
She was violent, abusive , hateful, and full of rage. Where Oh where was my sweet pre-teen? Gone forever it seemed.
So its not only husbands and wives who abuse, adult kids can do it too! Your right, when I DID call he cops, they believed my ex and my teenager, not me!
Love,
Mama gem.
Umm fishy hoping for a little bite! Don’t go there people!! Let fishy find another pond!!
Mama Gem,
I truly understand daughter wise. I will share this incident with you – my daughter went out partying all night while we sat in the emergency room with her year old son – she knew we had rushed him there and she didn’t bother to call or show up for 12 hours. When she finally showed up at our home, she had bruises on her face including a black eye. I refused to turn over her very sick baby to her (she was still obviously under the influence of SOMETHING), she waited several hours, went to the local police station, showed them the bruises, and told them I had beat her up and kidnapped her child. They believed her…. I understand and I am so sorry.
Love – MiLo
MiLo and Gem, there is an old saying around here “the last liar doesn’t stand a chance,” so unfortunately, it is the person who tells the FIRST LIE that gets the BELIEF of the people they are lying to, and then it is up to YOU to prove that they are lying.
WRONG!!! SOOO WRONG! Tell a lie and get believed, tell the truth, and no one believes you! Been there and done that! That is why I guess I am so ADAMANT about liars and lies, and won’t tolerate it. The only “lie” I think is acceptable is when I ask if “these pants make my butt look big?” and you LIE and smile and say “No, of course not!” THAT LIE you can tell, all the rest, forget it! LOL
@....... Soapers
to a ‘good guy’ gone incredibly sarcastic….get a life..yawwwwn!
Milo and Oxy,
They are pieces of work, alright!!
Yea, people would RATHER believe their lies than our truth, but sooner or later it all backfires on them. Two of my Grandkids are now starting to “see the Light”, re their Mum.Remember the boy who cried “Wolf! Wolf!” Eventually a REAL live wolf ate himup. Good riddance, I say!
I called the cops when my spath D started to throw Encyclopedias at my head like they were confetti. Went next door in my nightie! The police came, my ex said,
“Youve got it all wrong, officer!My wife is insane, SHE beats up my daughter. And she{Me} is a prostitute, on the game.”
“Say no more, Sir, we understand!” they said, and left me with them!
When I reluctantly returned home{after making a bid for freedom,}, still with an eggshaped purple bruise on my face where my ex had beaten me,, my ex said,
“Were going to have to knock Mum back into line, arent we girls?” {I kid you not!} Took me another 2 years before I finally managed to get out of that hellhole, of 3 spaths,{my ex, and 2 girls.}
Love,
Mama Gem.I met an old friend a year later who told me hed called in to see me, and Id fled. He told me,
“It was like the Light had gone out of that house. And you, M, were the Light.”
Dear Gem,
The hardest part I think is not fleeing for our lives physically, but putting them out of the space in our heads and hearts even after we are physically safe from them.
I’m glad your grandkids are getting the idea about their mom. That is the greatest gift she has given them….as harsh as that sounds, at least they have seen the truth about their egg donor. It hurts, but better that they should learn it now than to try to please her for the rest of their lives.
You and I both have had difficulty validating the truth we see, the truth we KNOW. It isn’t easy to accept that we tried to see a different “picture” for so long…but we finally are seeing the truth. Validating that truth as truth! It doesn’t matter what they say or the neighbors or anyone else–we know the truth, and that is all that we need! It is nice if others see it, but it isn’t necessary for others to agree or to see it. We can validate it ourselves! You are super Gem!!! Keep your chin up! You escaped! You see the truth, you don’t have to wonder any more “did I do right?” “Is there something I could have done to save them?” you know the answers. You KNOW them. That is what matters the most! Their apples didn’t fall far from their tree (father). (((hugs)))))