Exactly. Give this more time. |
| I can't tell you if this new bf is The One for you. But just remember you are not choosing ONLY between these 2 men. You are rejecting your ex because a hot/cold relationship does not work long term (this is clear, do not pick him). Then, you evaluate how you feel about your current bf. If you don't want to marry him, move on again to SOMEONE ELSE. Not to the ex. |
PP here, You sound bitter. If they’ve known each other for a year, he’s older, and he has kid to think about he wouldn’t be wasting his time on someone that isn’t a serious contender. |
I’m married with 3 kids and not bitter. I just love the Notebook and the fact that OP is considering her situation a real life Notebook situation is laughable. If she just posted the dilemma, it would be like any other relationship post. |
I haven’t met his kid yet because she lives in a different state. He got offered a job out here about 8 months ago that offered him a lot more money, so he moved out here. He and his ex wife decided it would be best for their child to finish out the school year then move out here to all be closer together. He flies out twice a month to see her. |
Sorry, you’re right. You’re not bitter you just have a stick up your a$$. She already said knows life isn’t like a movie. She simply torn between an old love that was tumultuous and new love that is seemingly the better fit. That’s it. Nothing more, nothing less. |
She gets a letter from an ex and has a boyfriend whose daughter she hasn’t even met. Do you really think she is close to really marrying either one? I’m just calling a spade a spade. |
| OP needs to talk to a therapist about why she's still hung up on the ex whose behavior has been demonstrably toxic. I also hope new guy isn't actually close to wanting to marry her without having yet introduced his child to her. |
OMG, really OP? Are you dense? This guy is not divorced. I don't care what any legal piece of paper says he is not divorced from his wife. The two of them are making decisions as a couple on where the wife (and child) will live so they will "all be closer together." I understand that people need to cooperate to coparent, but the way you phrase/present it makes it seem far beyond the norm. I hope you are ready to meet not only his child, but his so-called ex-wife who will probably be enmeshed in his life once they are geographically "all closer together" again. |
this, actually went to a therapist twice with a boyfriend of 3 years (we were both in our early 30s). So pointless. I made up my mind to leave without any input or revelation from therapy. Best decision and now married to an actual grown up. |
This, totally this!! Especially if he is military, law enforcement or intelligence. OP—time to pay for an extensive background check on this guy. I’d bet money that they won’t find a divorce decree. |
This isn't the Notebook, it's just trying to rationalize settling with one v. the other. Don't settle, OP, you can do better. |
| Sounds like with the second guy you have peace. Choose him if you feel a choice needs to be made. Also, while therapy is important, it's not a cure-all. You could go through therapy w/the ex and he could still be a hot mess. Has he had any individual therapy? Because it seems to me that after all that time of being apart he had ample opportunity to get himself together. Instead it seems he's wasted time and has come up with this, "let's fix US!" solution. Choose the first guy. |
This was not my experience as a stepmom at all (I'm divorced and he's an adult now). There was no "stink" of being a stepmom. We had a great relationship when he was younger, but I also didn't interfere w/the choices his parents made for him. At the end of the day, I wasn't his mother. He had a mother and she did a great job raising him as his primary caregiver. |