Anonymous wrote:Husband has problem. Seems mental. Can't figure it out. He was just fired. He is emotionally and otherwise unavailable to himself or me. I need a divorce and have children. Has anyone said enough in their fifties, become a single parent and live to feel better and enjoy life after the upheaval of divorce? Is there a way to divorce without upheaval? Husband seems willing. TIA.
. DH tried to kill me and threatened often...you try to live with that pal.Anonymous wrote:Its marriage people. Its never perfect and you are supposed to love, support and care for those you marry who are going through any kind of illness or loss. Not cut and run. Scumbags.
Anonymous wrote:Is it better? Yes, but...
After years of worsening mental health issues that my ex refused to treat, I left with our three kids. He had numerous job losses, there was chaos at home, increasing emotional distance and general under functioning. During our divorce (which was awful), I learned the full extent of his financial and emotional (and sexual) irresponsibility, which I will be dealing with for years. Luckily, he did not fight me on custody. But he barely pays child support, and is not a co-parent in any sense of the word.
It is a relief to not have to deal with a passive aggressive partner, and it is a relief not to over-function for him anymore. It is a relief not to worry about the next disaster. But I've lost my house, my retirement, and my credit is in tatters. And some days, rebuilding a life for myself at 50 while holding it together for my kids seems like an insurmountable task. So while I'm not doing the happy dance, or rolling around in alimony, or patting myself on the back for coming out of this with a nice fat bank account, at least I know what I'm dealing with. And I've got my kids, my health, a place to live, some friends, family, work, and I'm even carving out a social life again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its marriage people. Its never perfect and you are supposed to love, support and care for those you marry who are going through any kind of illness or loss. Not cut and run. Scumbags.
16:12 here. ITA. I held on as long as I could. Probably longer than I should have. I supported, cared for, and loved my ex. I did everything I could to keep our family together. My ex was the one who cut and run. And abandoned his kids (and me). So yes, scumbags exist.
Anonymous wrote:Its marriage people. Its never perfect and you are supposed to love, support and care for those you marry who are going through any kind of illness or loss. Not cut and run. Scumbags.
Anonymous wrote:Its marriage people. Its never perfect and you are supposed to love, support and care for those you marry who are going through any kind of illness or loss. Not cut and run. Scumbags.
Anonymous wrote:I divorced at 52, it has been a huge relief, but not during the process, which was contentious. Be happy if you have 10% of the friends you once did. I came out the other side doing quite well, because my BIL is an accountant and advised me to leave emotion out and conduct the settlement like a business arrangement, which makes a huge difference financially.
Anonymous wrote:I divorced at 52, it has been a huge relief, but not during the process, which was contentious. Be happy if you have 10% of the friends you once did. I came out the other side doing quite well, because my BIL is an accountant and advised me to leave emotion out and conduct the settlement like a business arrangement, which makes a huge difference financially.
Anonymous wrote:is there hope he will find something else that is better fit? I ask because my husband was fired in sept. he found something that is a much better fit within a month. it was a miracle. i was not hopeful. he is a different person now and our marriage is much better as a result