Quoth Kara
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Hopefully she has access - regular access - to your children. It sounds like they need her very much right now. And if you love her, then she has to be the sort of person who will answer that need.
She'll be good for the kids, and they for her.
If you are permitted contact with her, then do just that - contact her, make the apology, and ask her to help the children as much as possible. Or get your lawyer to do so on your behalf (in a friendly-sounding letter, not a legalese one!)
As for me, I'm just numb. I can't feel anything right now. When I am able to feel again, it's not going to be pretty. I anticipate a lot of tears. For the children, not myself. The thought of what she's putting my children through makes me sick. This isn't going to keep me down though. It's not even gonna knock me down. I don't feel it right now, but I'm too strong for her to hurt me anymore.
Emotional numbing is a well-known phenomenon. It happens when the stress levels are too high for the mind to cope with: the body sends out neurochemical signals to shut down certain emotions.
This only goes on for a certain amount of time. When it comes crashing down, it is likely to come out in strange ways. Possibly nightmares, possibly a tendency to find yourself freaking out over nothing, or having panic attacks, or ... well, could be anything.
When the emotional numbing ends, PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE lean on your counsellor. It's what he/she is there for. (You are also, of course, welcome to lean on us. But I always find it helpful having a counsellor as well as friends.)


Your ex ... it's like a train wreck... 
if you want one. 

] and insisted that they get married as soon as the divorce went through.
some people make their own pies-in-the-face! (ie revenge on them is as easy as literally poking at them)
wardsagainstthedevil*
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