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Just because he might like to remarry doesn't mean you have to. It also doesn't mean you have to end it. Enjoy your 1-2 nights a week together, and then ... enjoy your Bridgerton.
I think it sounds wonderful. Here's what I think. Men want to get married again so they can reduce their mental (and emotional) load. Women don't want to get married again so they won't increase their mental and emotional load. And housekeeping load. My grandmother had a boyfriend for 20-30 years after my grandfather died. Her beau wanted to marry, but she said no thank you. But they stayed together, saw each other, had companionship. But she wasn't doing his laundry or cooking his dinner! Be who you want to be. Do not be pressured into HIS needs and wishes at the expense of your own. |
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^ great advice. my in-laws never remarried either - just lived together or in different states.
Financially too messy with kids on both sides. I think it's a great balance, see him when you want or not. He needs to work on himself and his hobbies, not pout like a child. |
Your thinking is wrong and invalid. Men today do their own laundry and cook. Get with the times. |
I completely understand. I am entering my 50s and I am in an LTR. I am extremely sensitive to any hint of neediness on his part. I raised 3 boys and all of my ability to meet needs for others seems to have been sucked dry. And I am fine with that. |
She seems like a normal woman in her 50s. |
My bf does these things, yes. But there is still an imbalance of need. He definitely needs me more than I do him and it can feel draining. We are in our 50s. |
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My partner and I are in our 50s. He needs help in bed, sure, but the sex is still so good that I can't imagine wanting to watch Bridgerton (or anything else) instead. We can't see each other often due to distance and custody time so that definitely helps keep things exciting.
If other aspects of the relationship are satisfying (do you genuinely like him? does he support you? do you enjoy talking to him? is he an equal partner?), I'd try cutting back the time you spend together to the weekends and see if that gives you the space you need. If not, it's ok to prefer being alone to being in a relationship! |
This. I am 60, married, and have been very clear that I would never live with or marry a man again if I were to be widowed or divorced. I don't even want to handle my husband's mental load, no way would I do it for a man who's not even the father of my children. |
I'm 60 and my husband's sex drive is much lower than mine. His overall energy level is lower too. The answer is you find other outlets for that energy but if I were single, very high on my list would be sexual compatibility. I have plenty of friends for platonic companionship; I don't need a man to pay for me and my children are grown. If the sex isn't fantastic, why bother? |
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I think you're feeling guilty because you know, or at least think, he wants more. And you anticipate that some day he'll say, OK, when are things progressing?
He's a grown adult and it's his responsibility to say if the arrangement doesn't work for him. There's nothing wrong with wanting a companion a couple of days a week . . . that's what I am looking for too. But if he wants more then it's simply a matter of incompatibility. That's his call to make, though. |
Ha ha you must be under 35. 54 is not old lolol. |
No! I'm married to a medium guy who is devoted and trustworthy but I wouldn't have married him if he'd started out that way. Hold out! |
Late 40s woman here. I left a long term BF over that recently. Yes, he was keeping his place tidy but he would present it to me as some sort of achievement. I won’t even consider it worth mentioning to my BF how and when I clean my house. He, on the opposite, would elaborate and on one occasion invited me to come over help him clean his place. F..k it ! He was also emotionally needy, always talking about his problems and stuff and not overly concerned about mine. As if I had no problems in life whatsoever. It was all about him, his needs, his achievements. That gets tiring after divorce after years of this BS from exH. You see that right though |
Not men in their sixties who had SAHWs for decades before divorce or death |
My thinking is not wrong and invalid. My thinking is 100%. Yes, men cook and clean more than they ever did before - I'm not debating that. But you put men and women together in a house and studies show (don't ask me to cite them - the studies are out there, go find them) that women consistently do MORE housework. MORE child/elder care. MORE emotional load. More MENTAL load. Which is why you will find more (not all) divorced/widowed men looking to marry again and more (not all) divorced/widowed women looking for companionship 1-2 days a week. |