Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re teaching your kids what to put up with in their marriage by staying together.
No. You’re teaching your kids that life is not always perfect but when we make major commitments we stick to them.
So you would rather see your kids "honor their commitments" than be happy in their marriages? How sick.
DP but absolutely.
Actual abuse is one thing, but parents f—king up their kids’ childhoods because “I’m NoT hApPy” are immature narcissists.
Because once you have kids your commitment isn’t just to your spouse anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just decided to be the best wife that I can, even if it doesn’t feel genuine. I kiss him hello and make food he likes to eat and point out the good things he does to the kids, so they know what to emulate. I ask for help when I need it, and I am really specific on what it is that I need from him. I say please and thank you, and I give a lot of blowjobs.
If I’m going to continue to be his wife, I might as well be good at it. Just because he’s a crappy spouse doesn’t mean that I have to be.
This is kind of gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re teaching your kids what to put up with in their marriage by staying together.
This.
+2. The advice I'd give in this situation is to pretend the husband isn't there and do everything on your own, but then why stay married? For the income? Is that what you want your kids to learn?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re teaching your kids what to put up with in their marriage by staying together.
No. You’re teaching your kids that life is not always perfect but when we make major commitments we stick to them.
So you would rather see your kids "honor their commitments" than be happy in their marriages? How sick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A little old but such a great honest thread. This culture really advocates divorce readily so great to see different sides representing here.
All this thread shows me is how much women sacrifice and degrade themselves to keep their families intact, myself included.
I see that too - a lot of minimizing and excusing emotional abuse. The lack of emotional authenticity is mind blowing, along with the willingness to degrade themselves to “keep the peace.” How did this become the advice for abused women? Just go along with it, cook his favorite food, praise him, engage in physical intimacy with a man you hate just so that … What? What is the end goal?
Because an abusive dynamic is so much more complicated than love-hate. Many of us don’t hate these men at all. I love my husband but I know he loves himself most. Because our friends and family are pushing us to “stay for the kids.” Because we know we won’t have any help or support as a single mom.
I love my husband and I don’t hate having sex with him, but in my mind I understand that if I don’t have sex with him, he will eventually become cold and distant, prefer pornography, and eventually turn emotionally abusive. He's never going to ask me what’s going on or show concern. He’s not even aware that he does this. He also refuses to have sex in a way that is totally pleasurable to me, so I am accepting mediocre sex because I don’t hate it, but it also makes my life smoother.
You are recognizing that you are being abused. What you do with your life is your choice but advising other women to submit to this kind of treatment is just wrong. Don’t do it.