Seriously? Click on family relationships and see all the issues that come up in stepfamilies… |
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How old are you?
I would pick neither. |
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I think that in the Notebook those conflicts were an understandable result of class and family-created pressures. Also, he had no sense of entitlement. She learned that he put in the years to make good on the promise he made her and came back to him of her own volition.
Has your ex put in anything additional? Has he already done years of therapy? His trying to sweep arguments under the rug could be very problematic later. You definitely should end the current relationship. Continuing it is selfish and unfair to him and his daughter. I felt the same unwillingness to raise another person's child that you did before marriage, but unlike you, I did not waste someone else's precious time. |
| If you cannot choose between two guys, it means neither is right for you. Also, individually, neither does sound right for you. Ex--100% wrong. Not even a question. New guy--after dating a year, if he were right for you, I think you'd WANT to be a stepmom to his daughter. And your ex wouldn't even be tempting. Move on from BOTH and find the right guy. |
Why would you want to be with someone like this? And therapy with someone you dated? Please. Honestly, your current SO sounds too good for you and his daughter doesn't deserve to have a stepmother who will take the role begrudgingly. I think you need to cut the cord with both and keep dating. |
x1000 |
Agreed. Neither is a good fit. I'd keep looking, OP. |
Why would someone WANT to be a stepmom after only DATING a year? Who knows if she’s even met his child yet. |
| This is not at all a Notebook situation. You have an ex with a messy past with you and a single dad you are not so in love with. And your situation does not sound like it is class based family opposition like in the Notebook. Don’t romanticize your situation. |
Thank you. Six pages and nobody else thought this might be relevant? |
Why does this matter? Both guys seem like a poor fit at any age, unless you’re suggesting OP should settle for a mediocre marriage (and likely divorce) if she is over a certain age. |
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You want “boring” when it comes to marriage. And I mean boring in the sense of calm. You need to get into individual therapy to discover if you find him boring because there isn’t drama or if you just aren’t compatible.
My marriage is calm, but I don’t consider it boring. DH and I love just hanging out together. But life does get boring once you aren’t dating, in general. It’s less about what you are going to do on the weekends and more about laundry and grocery shopping. Ask yourself, who would you rather go grocery shopping with? Also life gets harder and more complicated as you get older. You want a boring calm relationship to be your steady center when life becomes a raging storm. Some more questions to ask yourself: If you were paralyzed, is this the guy you would trust taking care of you and to keep the rest of life running? If you died, would you trust this guy to raise your child and teach them the morals you want them to know? |
Said like someone who is not a stepmother. Step-parenting is 100x harder than parenting. Easily. I am a great, loving mother. But being a hood stepmother requires so much more than “positive, supportive, and nurturing.” You have to be prepared for your positive and supportive overtures to be met with hostility and hatred. You have to be prepared for the likelihood that your stepchild’s attachment to you is inversely proportional to how much drama the ex may inject into your life (because she may be threatened by a positive relationship with you.). You may have to be silent…a LOT..,when your spouse is screening up. You have to accept that your family finances and calendar are subject to the needs of your spouse’s ex. The intention to love the child is like 5% of the work. You can love the child SO much and have great instincts as a mom but be a terrible stepmom and destroy your marriage in your efforts to be a good stepmom. |
| If you're planning to have children of your own, keep in mind that a brilliant father will give you brilliant children. So much of your future life will be wrapped up in your kids, assuming you plan to have them. I know right now you're focused on your husband, but once kids are part of the picture, which guy would you want beside you too? |
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I love the notebook, but no to the first guy. He’s so volatile that he could go to therapy and then say he’s not in it and not propose or run hot and cold and have cold feet. So no. And all this before kids. No way.
Guy 2 sounds decent. How do you know guy 2 wants to marry you though? |