Anonymous wrote:The old adage about second marriages is true.
I would be regretting building a life with him. You can’t make someone love you. You can’t make someone choose you. He didn’t want to be lonely, which is understandable, but it does suck for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares, you’re dead , you wouldn’t know where you’re buried or who’s buried next to you
In this scenario you are not dead, your husband is and his wish was to be buried with his first wife.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares, you’re dead , you wouldn’t know where you’re buried or who’s buried next to you
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The circumstances are not clear in your post but it seems that both (first wife and child) died together? That leaves trauma for life. If I married someone who has lived through such trauma, then yes, I’d get it. Or it could be a mercantile consideration, they bought a plot so he has space there so wants to be buried there cause he paid for the space. It depends on the reason, but ultimately it’s husband’s wish.
So you would be buried by yourself? Assuming your kids would be buried elsewhere with their spouses. so basically you were just chopped liver and a warm body. I guess it's true what they say about never being the second wife.
He would be getting cremated, and some of his ashes could be buried next to her, the rest would be with me.
You have a very odd way of determining the value of relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The circumstances are not clear in your post but it seems that both (first wife and child) died together? That leaves trauma for life. If I married someone who has lived through such trauma, then yes, I’d get it. Or it could be a mercantile consideration, they bought a plot so he has space there so wants to be buried there cause he paid for the space. It depends on the reason, but ultimately it’s husband’s wish.
So you would be buried by yourself? Assuming your kids would be buried elsewhere with their spouses. so basically you were just chopped liver and a warm body. I guess it's true what they say about never being the second wife.
He would be getting cremated, and some of his ashes could be buried next to her, the rest would be with me.
Anonymous wrote:The circumstances are not clear in your post but it seems that both (first wife and child) died together? That leaves trauma for life. If I married someone who has lived through such trauma, then yes, I’d get it. Or it could be a mercantile consideration, they bought a plot so he has space there so wants to be buried there cause he paid for the space. It depends on the reason, but ultimately it’s husband’s wish.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming their deaths occurred 40 + years ago and he had been married to you longer than his first wife and you and he had more children together?
Hypothetical question based on watching an unsolved murder story on Youtube.