Lemonpie, abuse can look like a lot of different things. My WS was abuse during his affair and for the first year or so after dday1, and I didn't think of his behavior as abusive because I had a very narrow definition of the word in my head. Then I read this list, and I realized that he fit the profile after all. Abuse can look a lot like being angry, controlling, demanding, and/or insulting. It leaves you feeling terrible about yourself.
This list is from a safe house alliance, and it's a checklist for women to evaluate if their male partner/spouse is still being abusive:
- Has he Learned to treat your opinions with respect, even when they differ strongly from his?
- Is he accepting of your right to express anger to him, especially when it involves his history of mistreating you?
- Is he respecting your right to freedom and independence? Does that include refraining from all interference with your friendships and giving up the demand to always know here you are and whom you are with?
- Has he stopped making excuses for his treatment of you, including your behavior as and excuse for his?
- Is he being respectful about sex, applying no pressure and engaging in no guilt trips?
- Has he stopped cheating and flirting with other women, or using other behaviors that keep you anxious that he will stray?
- Does he listen to your side in arguments without interrupting, and then make a serious effort to respond thoughtfully to your points, even if he doesn’t like them?
- Have you been free to raise your grievances, new or old, without retaliation from him?
- Has he stopped talking about his abuse as if it were an accident and begun to acknowledge that he used it to control you?
- Is he actually responding to your grievances and doing something about them (for example, changing the way he behaves towards your children)?
- Has he greatly reduced or eliminated the use of controlling behavior (such as sarcasm, rolling his eyes, loud disgusted sighs, talking over you, using the voice of ultimate authority, and other demonstrations of disrespect and superiority) during conversations or arguments?
- When he does slip back into controlling behavior. does he take you seriously when you complain about it and keep working on improving?
- Is he being consistent and responsible in his behavior, taking into account how his actions affect you without having to constantly be reminded?
- Is he acting noticeably less demanding, selfish and self-centered?
- Is he being fair and responsible about money, including allowing you to keep your own assets in your own name?
- Has he stopped any behaviors that you find threatening or intimidating?
- Has he significantly expanded his contribution to household and child-rearing responsibilities and stopped taking your domestic work for granted and treating you like a servant?
- Has he begun supporting your strengths rather than striving to undermine them?
Taking out a loan without telling you is financial betrayal. Demanding to know what your parents said about him is him trying to control you. It's natural for you to get angry when someone hurts you - anger is a healthy response to that. You're in a toxic relationship with someone who cannot/will not stop hurting you.
Have you read the fear vs. reality thread in the Divorce/Separation forum? It might help you gain the strength you need to protect yourself and your children from this cycle of emotional abuse that you are currently in.