Superesse, I haven't gone back to my attorney yet. I consulted one back in Feb 2023, after dday2, but I haven't talked to her since. I will add it to my list for part of the move out process, though right now, we are not filing for a legal separation. It's more of a trial separation. I'll be coming back "home" on the weekends with our teen. I'd like to try that for a couple months and see how things go, and since it'll take a couple months to move out, that gives me some time to think about next steps. In the meantime, I've always been the one handling our finances, so I'll continue to do that. I'm not too worried about financial malfeasance form WS. He is currently semi-retired (as am I), and he knows that overspending will mean he has to go back to full time work.
Depending on how I feel in a few months, I'll look into whether legal separation or even divorce makes more sense. My current thinking is that if I decide I want a divorce (or legal separation), it's better to pull the trigger in June, after the school year ends, so that teen has a couple months to process the trauma before she starts 11th grade. Otherwise, I feel like if I can tolerate the situation better once I have my own place, we can ride out the status quo until she graduates from high school.
Who knows what will happen. After the past 4 years, between the pandemic, my long covid, and all the ddays, I have no idea what life will "gift" me with next. LOL Maybe the teen will just come out and ask me one day if her dad and I are splitting up. She's not super communicative, but she is perceptive and intelligent. She's gotta have some clue by now that things aren't right, and part of me wonders if she handed me this opportunity because she suspects the truth. Regardless, her mental health is so much better than it was a year ago, and I'm grateful for that. I'm not going to upset that balance for her if I can help it.