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What you owe people about your past is whatever you want to tell people. The will to secrecy on your part has me a little concerned, though. It seems to be based on a good idea to protect yourself. As an empath and rescuer, you are always in danger of becoming part of the problem, as a partner in destruction. Along with congratulations on your new commitment, I would say that the best way for you both to go forward is to meet with a couples therapist and suss out ways for you to be supportive to each other without repeating your past. Just a suggestion.
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I imagine I would have shared my history with a prospective new husband from the beginning of the relationship. He must know about your first marriage and your sons, just not the 2nd and abusive marriage. Wasn't your history before meeting him part of getting to know each other? Did you make up an alternate version of your marriages or did you just omit them? How you have portrayed your history might influence what you tell your current husband now. A whole missing and abusive marriage might come as a shock to him and make him question your trustworthiness, although if he is a kind and loving man, he will probably accept your history and your pain and try to comfort and reassure you.
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Isn't 20/20 hindsight wonderful.
Have you ever seen one of the pictures that is made up of hundreds of other pictures/photos? Up close all you can see are the smaller individual pictures. It is not until you step back and look at the whole thing that you see another picture.
That is what most lives are like.
We live in the now, seeing what is going on now. It is not until we step back and look at what has happened that we see the larger picture that is our life. Some people never see it. Some people see it to late. And for some it takes years of therapy to see it. All those little pictures make us who we are. And it is constantly changing as we add new "pictures"
You can share whatever part of your life you want to share.
You are under no obligation to do so.
But it is part of who you are.
Every life we touch and ones that touch us has an effect. It might be a ripple or it might be a tsunami most are in between.

Now to grief.
No one can tell you how or when to grieve.
Some grieve before death
You may have grieved before. Grief for a life, marriage that should have been but wasn't. (have you ever asked yourself if he had not died would you have remained married to him?)

You share what you feel like sharing.
How much does your husband know about your late?
Do not feel guilty (we use that so much and it is the wrong word to use)

From what you have gone through I hope you have found a gentleman that you will grieve when he dies, or one that will grieve when you die. Sounds odd when I write it out but what I mean is that I hope that you have both found each other and that you are good to and for each other.
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Katefalc Mar 2022
Awesome answer and beautifully written.💜
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What’s the point? I would say, only if it makes YOU feel better. Has your current husband ever ASKED? If you’re happy, why not enjoy and move on? Maybe you could benefit from therapy? You have nothing to be guilty about. You deserve to be happy. Best wishes.
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