Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are not great reasons to put your kids through the trauma of a broken home. There are a lot of polite lies about this (“better to see mom happy!”) but the reality is ugly. Dad’s rotating new girlfriends, blended families, lack of stability shuffling btw houses.
So many people are saying they knew at 40, went thru it at 60 and wish they did it earlier….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Therapy for yourself first.
2. If he's a good dad, then perhaps you both can negotiate/settle custody amicably.
3. I would caution waiting because if you are already not talking to each other when you're in the house, your kids as they get older will pick up on the tension, if they haven't already. That is not healthy. If you can turn this into a low-conflict parenting marriage, that's one thing, and I would have gone for that in my situation, but there was abuse in mine, so it wasn't an option. But if you are fighting on and off, your kids will notice. Then it's better to settle apart. You can make it so you see the kids most days.
Thank you, I am already in therapy. I don’t think it’s just the communication… for my 40th birthday, I wanted to go out of country to resort, kids were 1.5 and 5, but he wanted to do Airbnb since it’s more exciting and fun… We had two little kids, relaxing at the resort would be the right option… and it was for my birthday… anyways, I couldn’t get him to agree to an all inclusive, so we ended up not going. For my big promotion at work, I organized a party, when I asked my hubby to help, he said that I am not allowing him to eat and acted like a guest versus a host… while I was organizing games, etc. When my youngest daughter was having anaphylactic reaction, he argued with me about calling 912 hoping Zyrtec would work, he only apologized a year later… when I am sick and stressed bc of work, he won’t comfort me, so I feel like I have lots of responsibilities and zero help or consideration for my well being…
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but in this situation I would stay. And get individual and couples therapy. And make him do more work on the home
Anonymous wrote:Me meme. I I I. I doubt that you are as flexible and tolerant as you believe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You will be paying tons of alimony
It’s really unfair, since I am the one who supported him thru college and we took care of kids 65/35%. Kids always need mom, at least when they are 3 and 7, and they are both girls.
Welcome to the table! It’s been this way for men always. Why should it be any different for women?
Because men are usually not the ones who take care of kids in addition to building their career. As I mentioned it is 65% on me to take care of kids on a daily basis. I am the one who keeps track of their activities, schedule their activities, do 70% of pick up and drop off, sleep with them and take care of them when they are sick… My husband is not a stay home dad… he has been going to college and then building his career, while I was taking care of kids 65% of time and advancing as well…
Anonymous wrote:1. Therapy for yourself first.
2. If he's a good dad, then perhaps you both can negotiate/settle custody amicably.
3. I would caution waiting because if you are already not talking to each other when you're in the house, your kids as they get older will pick up on the tension, if they haven't already. That is not healthy. If you can turn this into a low-conflict parenting marriage, that's one thing, and I would have gone for that in my situation, but there was abuse in mine, so it wasn't an option. But if you are fighting on and off, your kids will notice. Then it's better to settle apart. You can make it so you see the kids most days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but in this situation I would stay. And get individual and couples therapy. And make him do more work on the home
+1 It seems that the main issue in your relationship is communication. Therapy may help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tried to wait it out. I was in a very different situation and had been forced out of my equal paying career and we had a literal $1m difference between our salaries, with ex as the high earner. He was originally just tense, grouchy, etc like yours but slowly that evolved into mean and then clearly mentally ill. And the little he did with the kids dwindled down to nothing because his job always came first.
I thought I could make it until at least the oldest was 18. But then DH filed out of the blue after a major promotion that made our split assets and savings look like nothing.
If you can I would try a post-nup and I would also think about whatever I could do to avoid upsizing any real estate holdings. We had just bought a new, more expensive house before exDH filed and it will never sell and most of my liquidity is stuck in it.
How much is your house? It’s hard to believe with $1M difference in salary, he has no other holdings… I heard of you are together for 20 years or more in VA/MD, and your partner makes at least twice more, you would get alimony for life.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but in this situation I would stay. And get individual and couples therapy. And make him do more work on the home
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are not great reasons to put your kids through the trauma of a broken home. There are a lot of polite lies about this (“better to see mom happy!”) but the reality is ugly. Dad’s rotating new girlfriends, blended families, lack of stability shuffling btw houses.
So, how do you have sex with someone, you are not interested in? This is like waiting for a bomb to explode, him or me meeting someone and divorce becoming ugly…. Also, once we are together for 20 years, I would owe him alimony for life ( VA law).
Anonymous wrote:These are not great reasons to put your kids through the trauma of a broken home. There are a lot of polite lies about this (“better to see mom happy!”) but the reality is ugly. Dad’s rotating new girlfriends, blended families, lack of stability shuffling btw houses.