Anonymous wrote:She had every right to go on the trip. The anniversary could have been celebrated on a different day.
Anonymous wrote:She had every right to go on the trip. The anniversary could have been celebrated on a different day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op wasn't going on a girls' trip. If she was, her husband wouldn't have been invited. The trip is coed. This thread reminds me of the woman with the newborn who's husband wanted to go on a college reunion weekend. People all over that thread were saying he "shouldn't leave her alone with a newborn". OP knows that for whatever reason, her husband can't cope well with a young toddler and young preschooler. How is this any different then a woman who "shouldn't be left alone with a newborn?" In a perfect world, parents should be able to care for their offspring no matter the age of said offspring. Reality doesn't work that way. Toddlers are tough, they shit their pants, can't talk, and are incredibly mobile. They have the needs of babies and the needs of children, and they have these needs at the same time. I say this as someone who is expecting my second child and who is looking forward to it. Also OP's trip is scheduled when daycare will be open which means that her husband probably has to work during that time. I can see why he'd feel put upon. OP gets to go off on a coed vacation while the oh so dangerous husband is expected to miss a once in a lifetime trip, go to work, and be the sole parent on deck. Add to this, he was given the fuck buddy treatment for an anniversery. 24 hours at the beach is barely any time at all. That's what you do for a guy or girl you're fucking but don't really care about. An anniversery is just a day, but so is the day your mortage payment is due. Skip it and when your bank calls, tell them "it's just a day"
The genders of the people who were going on this trip doesn't make one iota of difference.
The fact that it coincided with the date of their anniversary doesn't matter for shit to me.
I never heard OP state that her DH felt that he could not handle a weekend with the children. You are the one raising it as an issue. Maybe it's your issue. But I've yet to hear that it pertains to OP's husband.
Anonymous wrote:Op wasn't going on a girls' trip. If she was, her husband wouldn't have been invited. The trip is coed. This thread reminds me of the woman with the newborn who's husband wanted to go on a college reunion weekend. People all over that thread were saying he "shouldn't leave her alone with a newborn". OP knows that for whatever reason, her husband can't cope well with a young toddler and young preschooler. How is this any different then a woman who "shouldn't be left alone with a newborn?" In a perfect world, parents should be able to care for their offspring no matter the age of said offspring. Reality doesn't work that way. Toddlers are tough, they shit their pants, can't talk, and are incredibly mobile. They have the needs of babies and the needs of children, and they have these needs at the same time. I say this as someone who is expecting my second child and who is looking forward to it. Also OP's trip is scheduled when daycare will be open which means that her husband probably has to work during that time. I can see why he'd feel put upon. OP gets to go off on a coed vacation while the oh so dangerous husband is expected to miss a once in a lifetime trip, go to work, and be the sole parent on deck. Add to this, he was given the fuck buddy treatment for an anniversery. 24 hours at the beach is barely any time at all. That's what you do for a guy or girl you're fucking but don't really care about. An anniversery is just a day, but so is the day your mortage payment is due. Skip it and when your bank calls, tell them "it's just a day"
Anonymous wrote:Op wasn't going on a girls' trip. If she was, her husband wouldn't have been invited. The trip is coed. This thread reminds me of the woman with the newborn who's husband wanted to go on a college reunion weekend. People all over that thread were saying he "shouldn't leave her alone with a newborn". OP knows that for whatever reason, her husband can't cope well with a young toddler and young preschooler. How is this any different then a woman who "shouldn't be left alone with a newborn?" In a perfect world, parents should be able to care for their offspring no matter the age of said offspring. Reality doesn't work that way. Toddlers are tough, they shit their pants, can't talk, and are incredibly mobile. They have the needs of babies and the needs of children, and they have these needs at the same time. I say this as someone who is expecting my second child and who is looking forward to it. Also OP's trip is scheduled when daycare will be open which means that her husband probably has to work during that time. I can see why he'd feel put upon. OP gets to go off on a coed vacation while the oh so dangerous husband is expected to miss a once in a lifetime trip, go to work, and be the sole parent on deck. Add to this, he was given the fuck buddy treatment for an anniversery. 24 hours at the beach is barely any time at all. That's what you do for a guy or girl you're fucking but don't really care about. An anniversery is just a day, but so is the day your mortage payment is due. Skip it and when your bank calls, tell them "it's just a day"
Anonymous wrote:Hi, OP. I just want to say that I've read everything and I am divorced from someone similar to your husband. Our relationship was awful. It was a combination of both of us being naive in relationships (mine from inexperience personally and his from poor examples at home) and poor communication skills on both of our parts. Still, I am not an abuser and he is.
I've spent a lot of time in counseling, learning about myself and working on being the best parent I can be. I'm several years out and it was, hands down, the hardest thing I've done. To this day, I'm not sure my parents or friends understand (and most haven't tried to understand). But in reading your post...I want you to know that I was where you are and it's no way to live. My ex brought out the absolute worst in me. I said horrible, hateful things to him and I can honestly say, I wanted him gone. I don't wish death on him, even now and even though he's still a vile human being. If he disappeared and my kids wouldn't miss him, no biggie for me. My kids would miss him, so for now, I just hope someday he turns a corner. His well-being is no longer my problem. I'm living for myself and two kids. That's enough.
Intimidation, threatening, etc. are forms of abuse. I'm similar to you in background and personality, from what I've read. I was surprised to find myself in such a bad relationship, but I was. After years, I'm now in a fantastic relationship. Is he perfect? No. But...in a million years he would never talk to me like my ex did, would never even think those things...and I can't see ever feeling hatred towards him like I do my ex. Healthy relationships do exist. Hard to imagine where you are now though.
I'd simply be asking myself one question at the moment -- what is best for your kids? I want to show my kids the best example that I can, and I know my marriage was going to set them up to be abusers themselves, to hate me for being so spineless, or just miserable adults who don't understand what a functional family looks like. I wasn't about to let that happen, so I decided to be the adult for both parents.
My ex tells a different tale, but our kids are great. Happy, healthy kids. This is all that matters to me. I do have my self-respect back and I can get all sorts of depressed if I think about certain parts of my marriage. One foot in front of the other moving forward -- how I choose to live. Good luck to you, and don't let some of the PPs make you doubt yourself even more. Keep going to the counseling sessions.
Anonymous wrote:This is what I was trying to say. No one on this forum should be pretend to know what is best for OP and her family.
The domestic violence nuts think it is abusive not to say "please" and "thank you" and the time and to always use you indoor voice inside of the house.
Then there are people jealous at OP's education and professional accomplishments that think now is a good time to take her down a peg. They may actually overlap with the aforementioned group (one of which got her degree from her mom and Lifetime TV!)
Then there are people who do not understand that an anniversary is just a day, like any other day. They do not understand that there is nothing sacred about birthdays, anniversary dates, Valentines Day, Mother's Day, etc. They have been conned by Hallmark and cannot comprehend why anyone might want to do something other than what convention dictates.
And then there are those calling OP a bitch for calling the police.
As for the people telling her to get out: Are you going with her? Are you leaving your spouse? I don't think so. Think of that before you tell OP what a terrible person she is if she does not do what you think she should do.