If they truly believed this they should get their kids away from the crazy mom. But we all know it's bs. |
| My dad did. I haven’t seen him since his brothers funeral when I was maybe 12 or 13. And at that point I hadn’t seen him for like 10 years prior. Haven’t even spoken to him since. I know the general area he lives and I keep in touch with other family. Apparently he has FB so could contact me if he wanted 🤷♀️ |
Doesn’t Germany pay for college? |
College is free but parents must cover living expenses of young adults up to the highest level of education achieved by the parents. Eg if exH has a grad degree and kids want to get there, the father has to support them in grad school |
I am so curious how he managed to get you to marry him. Did he just conceal all of this? |
Hard no. This is crazy. |
| Unsurprisingly, no men who did this are responding. |
| I know I will get slammed, but most of these marriages are dead and transactional by that point anyway. It’s rarely a shock to anyone, and in retrospect, often a blessing. |
Yeah and a lot of women prioritize the man they're currently having sex with over their kids from a previous marriage. That's why kids getting molested by stepdads is very common. |
Honestly, I'm baffled myself how I fell for it. My self-esteem is great. What I think happened: 1. He actually did years of therapy and knew all the right things to say. I do believe on some level he wanted to change. But all therapy really did was give him a bunch of buzzwords to make it sound like he had changed. However, since he did therapy before we met and throughout the duration of our relationship, I took that as a sign he was committed, was improving, and was serious about me. 2. We had intense physical chemistry. I'm not usually a slave to pheromones or my hormones, but yowza. Hard to explain if you haven't experienced that yourself. 3. We had a ton in common, more than I'd had with anyone prior. We actually made great friends, and everyone always says to marry your best friend. 4. I actually did break up with him multiple times over the fact that I wanted marriage & kids, and he didn't. I'd end things cordially, saying what we wanted wasn't in alignment, he'd come crawling to me a couple weeks/months later saying he'd been reflecting on it, talking to his therapist, etc, and realized he actually did want to get married and have a family. And he *would* follow through on whatever he promised. I also think a lot is messaging from the media and pop culture that if a man wants you, he will change for you. I've since learned that no, people don't ever actually change. They may try, they may seem to, but you can't undo decades of habits and patterns. |
The reality is that their subsequent wives - for example, you - pressure them into having kids even though they already had kids and didn't really want more. You knew this, and you did it anyway. You could have found a man who didn't have kids already and genuinely wanted them, but you didn't. What happened to you and your poor kids is 100% on you. |
Marriage shouldn’t stop a father from being a father. If his marriage dissolves he’s no longer a husband, but he’s still a father. That isn’t an excuse for dead beats. |
So many midlife crisis end that way—that snap out of it and it’s too late. They caused too much trauma to the people they loved. |
+1000 |
The reality is that those same men have the ability to say no. They have the ability to get a vasectomy or wear a condom. These are not helpless puppies, they are grown men, and if they truly are so helpless that they cannot say no to people, they certainly should not be in any positions of power or leadership, and really should be a under a conservatorship because they are unable to advocate for themselves. |