Anonymous wrote:Absolutely a red flag. It's one thing to seek therapy to resolve a problem, another to not be able to function without being in therapy. And if someone needs so much therapy that she can't take some time off of dating to do it, then she probably is far too traumatized to be a good partner.
Plus, I would never date someone taking psychotropic meds. BTDT, will never do that again!
Anonymous wrote:Yes, of course. Mental illness is a disease like any other. But making a life with a sick person is harder than making a life with a healthy person.
Anonymous wrote:Men are such backward simpletons, it's unbelievable.
Not a red flag flag. It would be a problem if she didn't get help. The stigma in this country for depression is so bad, men on wall street use prostitutes to talk to after a bad day over a friend or counselor.Anonymous wrote:Brother starting dating a new girl and within the first few weeks, she said that she needed to discuss her feelings with her therapist. She is on some meds and sees a therapist. She also seems to have a lot of issues and baggage. She is mid 30s. DH and I think these are all bad signs and think brother should move on.
Would you think someone on meds and seeing a therapist regularly would be a red flag?
I feel like it should be all fun and good times in the beginning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, of course. Mental illness is a disease like any other. But making a life with a sick person is harder than making a life with a healthy person.
Thing is so much of mental health doesn’t show up until later in a marriage because people mask it. OP’s brother’s GF isn’t, so maybe that is a positive. She is working on it before the marriage. Hard to know. Is she independent and functional?
Anonymous wrote:Yes, of course. Mental illness is a disease like any other. But making a life with a sick person is harder than making a life with a healthy person.