Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither. Keep looking. Don’t settle.
If she wants someone who can bring her peace and she admittedly likes him, how is she settling?
She already says guy #1 is boring and isn't interested in being his kids stepmom. Yikes. That doesn't sound like someone in love.
I didn’t say he was boring. I said I can see myself getting bored with him sometimes but it could remedy that by nudging him to do some exciting things. Also, I never said I didn’t want to be her stepmom. I said I would never date a man with a child but I clearly liked him enough when we met to let that rule go. I did however say I was scare of being a stepmom because I’m not a parent myself and I’m afraid I’ll screw up.
If #2 is so great and you're in love with him.... why would you even contemplate #1? You know the drill already.
You can love two people at the same time. I’ve been there before. It’s a head versus heart thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What did you and ex fight about?
Over nothing really. If he was upset he wouldn’t know how to communicate that and instead he would be dismissive and escalate the issue. I wouldn’t engage at that point because he was too hot headed. Then he’d act like nothing happened and try to sweep it under the rug. I told him he needed therapy.
And you want to go back to that because…? You’re dreaming if you think therapy will fix it.
My sis in law married a.guy she thought she could fix. Spoiler alert, she couldn't. He's now in prison for what he did to his next girlfriend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What did you and ex fight about?
Over nothing really. If he was upset he wouldn’t know how to communicate that and instead he would be dismissive and escalate the issue. I wouldn’t engage at that point because he was too hot headed. Then he’d act like nothing happened and try to sweep it under the rug. I told him he needed therapy.
And you want to go back to that because…? You’re dreaming if you think therapy will fix it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither. Keep looking. Don’t settle.
If she wants someone who can bring her peace and she admittedly likes him, how is she settling?
She already says guy #1 is boring and isn't interested in being his kids stepmom. Yikes. That doesn't sound like someone in love.
I didn’t say he was boring. I said I can see myself getting bored with him sometimes but it could remedy that by nudging him to do some exciting things. Also, I never said I didn’t want to be her stepmom. I said I would never date a man with a child but I clearly liked him enough when we met to let that rule go. I did however say I was scare of being a stepmom because I’m not a parent myself and I’m afraid I’ll screw up.
If #2 is so great and you're in love with him.... why would you even contemplate #1? You know the drill already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither. Keep looking. Don’t settle.
If she wants someone who can bring her peace and she admittedly likes him, how is she settling?
She already says guy #1 is boring and isn't interested in being his kids stepmom. Yikes. That doesn't sound like someone in love.
I didn’t say he was boring. I said I can see myself getting bored with him sometimes but it could remedy that by nudging him to do some exciting things. Also, I never said I didn’t want to be her stepmom. I said I would never date a man with a child but I clearly liked him enough when we met to let that rule go. I did however say I was scare of being a stepmom because I’m not a parent myself and I’m afraid I’ll screw up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither. Keep looking. Don’t settle.
If she wants someone who can bring her peace and she admittedly likes him, how is she settling?
She already says guy #1 is boring and isn't interested in being his kids stepmom. Yikes. That doesn't sound like someone in love.
Anonymous wrote:SOunds like a lot of excuses being made for first guy. I'd guess if you stay with #2 you'll cheat. You already say he's boring. Let him move on, he's a dad. You owe him that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither. Keep looking. Don’t settle.
If she wants someone who can bring her peace and she admittedly likes him, how is she settling?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your ex is trouble. It will always be a struggle with him and there’s no reason to put yourself through that. The answer is steady guy or as yet unknown future guy. Your options aren’t limited to the two of them.
Why be so negative? Therapy could definitely help them. I think all couples should go to counseling.
Ugh you likely have not been in that type of tempestuous relationship. Full of arguments, anxiety, blame shifting - and almost guaranteed cheating is inevitable because of the outsized sense of entitlement a person like that had. Hard pass.
Inevitable cheating? Again, so negative. Stop projecting.
Look at how this OP describes this guy - hot headed, poor communication skills, disappears from her life and then later, when he knows she’s serious with someone else, swoops back in and says hey let’s get back together and get married. That’s quite a sense of entitlement. But sure, if you think his overtures of attending therapy for addressing what sounds like a dumpster fire of an interpersonal relationship may be sufficient, let’s hope that’s right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What did you and ex fight about?
Over nothing really. If he was upset he wouldn’t know how to communicate that and instead he would be dismissive and escalate the issue. I wouldn’t engage at that point because he was too hot headed. Then he’d act like nothing happened and try to sweep it under the rug. I told him he needed therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your ex is trouble. It will always be a struggle with him and there’s no reason to put yourself through that. The answer is steady guy or as yet unknown future guy. Your options aren’t limited to the two of them.
Why be so negative? Therapy could definitely help them. I think all couples should go to counseling.
Ugh you likely have not been in that type of tempestuous relationship. Full of arguments, anxiety, blame shifting - and almost guaranteed cheating is inevitable because of the outsized sense of entitlement a person like that had. Hard pass.
Inevitable cheating? Again, so negative. Stop projecting.
Anonymous wrote:Neither. Keep looking. Don’t settle.