Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. And in hindsight I wish that I had just ended it then.
So true
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Kids are hard. This is an extremely common time for divorce thoughts. If you work together and make serious tradeoffs about how to care for your kids, careers, etc, you can pull through. Divorce cures a bad marriage, not a hard life.
What kind of trade offs do you mean?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes we had a lot of extenuating circumstances and completely disconnected which led to N emotional affair. Separated, got lawyers involved, saw how it messed up the kids. Dated each other again, realized we never stopped loving each other we just got smacked down by life, realized what we had to lose, tried some counseling and decided to overcome our childhood traumas and learn to communicate and be emotionally connected in ways we had never done before. Got back together and had one more baby and we are very loving and appreciative of what each other brings to the table and let the small stuff slide.
This is so beautiful! I’m really happy for you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes we had a lot of extenuating circumstances and completely disconnected which led to N emotional affair. Separated, got lawyers involved, saw how it messed up the kids. Dated each other again, realized we never stopped loving each other we just got smacked down by life, realized what we had to lose, tried some counseling and decided to overcome our childhood traumas and learn to communicate and be emotionally connected in ways we had never done before. Got back together and had one more baby and we are very loving and appreciative of what each other brings to the table and let the small stuff slide.
I'm happy for you. We're dealing with an emotional affair and lack of overall intimacy, and I just don't see the light at the end of the tunnel. But we have a child and we genuinely care for each other. I just feel as though it may never be enough.
Anonymous wrote:Yes we had a lot of extenuating circumstances and completely disconnected which led to N emotional affair. Separated, got lawyers involved, saw how it messed up the kids. Dated each other again, realized we never stopped loving each other we just got smacked down by life, realized what we had to lose, tried some counseling and decided to overcome our childhood traumas and learn to communicate and be emotionally connected in ways we had never done before. Got back together and had one more baby and we are very loving and appreciative of what each other brings to the table and let the small stuff slide.
Anonymous wrote:Yes we had a lot of extenuating circumstances and completely disconnected which led to N emotional affair. Separated, got lawyers involved, saw how it messed up the kids. Dated each other again, realized we never stopped loving each other we just got smacked down by life, realized what we had to lose, tried some counseling and decided to overcome our childhood traumas and learn to communicate and be emotionally connected in ways we had never done before. Got back together and had one more baby and we are very loving and appreciative of what each other brings to the table and let the small stuff slide.
Anonymous wrote:We did, similar situation (no cheating or anything) but we just weren't making each other happy. Kids were 9 and 6 at the time. We had a lot of conversations about what we each felt would help and managed to work things out. Hope you're able to do the same, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Kids are hard. This is an extremely common time for divorce thoughts. If you work together and make serious tradeoffs about how to care for your kids, careers, etc, you can pull through. Divorce cures a bad marriage, not a hard life.