Acapella,
I'm so sorry for your pain right now. It's so easy to question yourself when everyone around you is dysfunctional. You then seem like the one who is strange, thus abnormal. But you are not. You've just had the bad luck to have been raised by and married to narcissists. And you know that by staying close to them, you start to believe what they tell you and start to lose hope in yourself, and anything better out there. This is what happens.
I too (finally) questioned whether anyone really had a good relationship, and if mine with my N husband was so bad. The way I found out that there DEFINITELY ARE good, healthy, "feel-good" relationships out there was by asking people who did appear happy with each other about their marriages. "Why do you feel happy when you're with him?" "Do you really like spending a lot of time with her?" "Why do you like spending time with her?" "How do you handle differences of opinion and fights?" "Why did you choose him to be with over other people you dated?" "Are you still really "in love" with him?" What does that feel like?" "How does he make you feel - accepted and strong, or like you're struggling?" "Why do you think they say marriage is so much work? What kind of work?" It's hard to just ask these random, intimate questions of people, especially if you don't want them to suspect how awful your own relationship is. I was lucky, because I was able to ask my brother and sister and several family friends about their marriages when I finally opened up to them about the awfulness (word?) of my own. It was sooooooo revealing, helpful, and even insipiring - gave me hope that I someday could have a relationship like they'd described.
Acapella, please don't give up hope of getting out. I think I remember from your posts that you are planning to leave when you get a job. Have you thought about stopping volunteering temporarily to devote more energy and time to the job search? Or, do you need the volunteer work to help keep you sane right now? Have you tried medication to give you the extra boost and confidence to get out of any depression that you may clinically have? And, the confidence and boost to get out of the relationship if you really want to?
I was in your shoes and sort of still am, but I did get a job and have moved out, into my own place. And, told my husband we are separated. The first night in my own place, I had spaghetti. This small thing was so big in my book bc he always hated when I ate spaghetti bc I used a spoon to help twirl it with the fork and he bothered me until I stopped using it telling me it was pretentious, and even threw the spaghetti up to the ceiling, bowl and all. But I digress. Anyway, the point is, that it's true as so many others have posted about, that when you get out and can breathe again, and live how you want, in big and in the tiniest ways, you feel so strong, and relaxed. Yes, there is relaxation. There is freedom. There are good relationships. But even before you find another relationship that is good, you can find good feelings being by yourself.
Keep strong. Congratulations on declining that 3 hour drive. We've all been there in the same kind of being-used- and- then- tossed- when- we- won't- jump- to- be- used- scenario.
Keep working towards finding the truth about what else is out there. Keep up your strength. You'll have time to rest and revel in happiness once you get out and find yourself. Then you can find happiness with someone else, because it certainly is out there.
Good luck to you. And take care of yourself. You deserve the best, even if you don't have the strength right now to believe it.