Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He is obviously going to jump in 100% and take care of the kids, support his ex physically/emotionally through chemo, be her friend, and do whatever he needs to do.
He should, obviously, take care of the kids, but he has no obligation to support his ex physically and emotionally and be her friend. That ended when the divorce was final.
Wow. Basic human decency toward his kids mom. He probably still feels some love/affection for her even if they weren't the right match. He has no legal obligation. But he might feel that he WANTS to do this for his ex and his children. But a huge, beautiful gift.
Anonymous wrote:Ask him what he needs/wants. Be open and flexibile to change. He might THINK he needs XYZ now, but in a month he might actually find out that he needs ABC. That's OK.
Don't get jealous or insecure. Be kind and generous at all costs. Send her food and flowers with your BF once in a while.
You know what? You'd do the above for your co-workers so do it for somebody important to your BF.
Have you heard of the ring theory? Your BF's ex is in the middle. Your BF might be a ring around that. You are a ring outside that. You always support inward, and dump outward. So your BF will be unconditionally supporting his ex. He might "dump" (emotions, chores, anger, etc) outward (toward you!). You are there to support your BF (he's a ring inside yours) and you will dump out to another friend or therapist (or DCUM) as needed. But your complaints do not go further into the ring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He is obviously going to jump in 100% and take care of the kids, support his ex physically/emotionally through chemo, be her friend, and do whatever he needs to do.
He should, obviously, take care of the kids, but he has no obligation to support his ex physically and emotionally and be her friend. That ended when the divorce was final.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mother of his children has cancer and you want to abandon him? He should dump you.
op: no, I don't want to abandon him at all. I just wonder if he wouldn't feel like he has the time to be in a relationship with everything going on, and if that would be added pressure on him.
Anonymous wrote:
He is obviously going to jump in 100% and take care of the kids, support his ex physically/emotionally through chemo, be her friend, and do whatever he needs to do.
Anonymous wrote:The mother of his children has cancer and you want to abandon him? He should dump you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t see what the first option accomplishes, because it’s basically saying that your not in this relationship for the rough times and aren’t interested in being there for him. If you think the relationship has long term potential, the only option here is to stick by him and support him through this. If you don’t think this relationship has long-term potential, it’s better for both of you to just make a clean break.
op: I do think it has long-term potential. He has said before that he never wants to let anyone down, and get stretched thin sometimes, so I just don't want to put any pressure on him to nurture our newish relationship. Currently, we go out 2-3x/week to dinner, clubs, etc.
Anonymous wrote:The mother of his children has cancer and you want to abandon him? He should dump you.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t see what the first option accomplishes, because it’s basically saying that your not in this relationship for the rough times and aren’t interested in being there for him. If you think the relationship has long term potential, the only option here is to stick by him and support him through this. If you don’t think this relationship has long-term potential, it’s better for both of you to just make a clean break.